Monday 17 September 2012

Increasing sales using your price



In my last blog I spoke about increasing sales and all the elements that make this up. One of them is pricing and for most of us pricing is difficult. Do you use the following method to price? – more expensive than the cheapest competitor and less expensive than the dearest competitor.

Is that the way to do it? I don’t think so…. we rarely make buying decisions based just on price. If that's the case we wouldn’t buy pre-packaged lettuce (300% more expensive that washing it yourself!), we wouldn’t buy Coca Cola (Pepsi was the preferred option in taste tests!), we wouldn’t buy new cars (we all know 2nd hand cars offer better value for money!).

So if you don’t buy on price why do you assume your customers buy only on price? I’m afraid it’s all in our mind, so we really need to expand our thinking on this one. After all if you put your prices up by 10% how much more profit would you have in your business? If your sales are £100,000 then that’s another £10,000 in profit. Now you may lose some customers but how many would you need to lose before you made no extra profit?

You would still be less busy for the same profit. What changes could that allow you to make in your business? What other opportunities could you take?

I’m not suggesting you just put your prices up, there are lots of different ways of doing this successfully and this blog is just too short to go into them. I do have free webinar you can listen to that takes you through how to do this. To register go to pricing webinar

Next blog I’ll reveal how getting your existing customers to do one thing could solve your sales problems for ever.

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