Sunday 28 June 2009

The Death Of Time-Based Billing

Please consider this.

Far too many businesses operate a policy of 'cost-led pricing', whether this is the cost of materials or the notional cost of their time. This is the accountancy view and is held to be mainstream, and it pervades thinking at all levels of most businesses. The alternative, economists' view of 'price-led costing' is thought to be heresy.

Value-based pricing theories are largely ignored by Business Schools and MBA courses! But the only thing any business can charge for is the derived value as perceived by the customer, so why persist with ego-centric pricing policies?

It is perfectly ethical to charge different customers different prices for different value received.

Customers who are charged according to value received are highly delighted customers. Customers who are quoted and charged a fixed price are highly delighted customers. Customers who are charged according to value are high paying customers! Prospects who are quoted according to value are highly likely to become customers.

But you need to address more than just your pricing. You need to conduct a 'value conversation'; you need to ensure your prospects understand fully what purchasing from you involves; you need to make your proposal around value based pricing; and you need to gain the prospect's agreement to your suggestions. In short, you need to address the entire 'sales conversation', but it all starts with establishing the value to the customer of the results of their purchase. It has absolutely nothing whatever to do with your raw material costs, hours 'worked', overheads, lifestyle ambitions or accounting practices!

Win-win means just that! It means that the customer believes they are getting high value for a very reasonable investment, and the supplier believes they are being well rewarded for whatever they are supplying. If either belief is missing, the result is not win-win.

I presume you would like most of your sales conversations to end with "That's a bargain! How soon can you deliver?" whilst at the same time earning a highly profitable price/fee. Value based pricing or pricing by value, call it what you will, is the technique that will enable you to achieve this sort of win-win outcome.

David


Learn more about these techniques and how to apply them in your business by booking your place on my 'Pricing By Value' Workshop which runs in Cambridge on July 7th

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