It occurred to me yesterday that I’ve been writing a lot about the dangers of letting price competition damage your positioning and your margins, but I haven’t written much about the mechanics of protecting, and even raising your prices in markets like the one we’re in. So, today I’m going to share with you a specific example of how to enhance your margins.
First, you need to understand that you there are only two sales conversations you can be in:
When your sales process is focused on your solution, it is difficult to impossible to escape “what’s it cost.” The reason for this is:
Let me share a real life example to illustrate my point. At Imagine, we solve sales problems. We could easily be compared to a variety of training "solutions," but a) what we do isn't really training, and b) that would badly commoditize us.
Instead, we help our prospects and clients first understand their problem and understand the cost of the problem. In our business, like many of yours, we face a challenge that the difference between our approach and our competitors is not huge. We're all saying many of the same things. These little differences, however, are huge when in comes to the results companies can enjoy.
So, to gain the price advantage that our results create, we must enable our clients to uncover just what the value difference is. That's precisely what "pricing problems" and monetizing value does. Here's how we do it:
Baseline Scenario
Let's say that your sales team produces the following:
The Little Difference
Let's say that as a result of working with us you improve your results by just 5%. Now keep in mind, that a 5% difference is virtually imperceptible. But, this virtually imperceptible difference can lead to extraordinarily valuable results this 5% difference means:
I ask you, what would that be worth?
With the problem fully understood and, more importantly, the cost of the problem clear, the proper context has been created to enable you to effectively discuss the appropriate solution (yours) and to have the solution properly valued.
My be is that your business and your approach create such value for your customers/clients. However, if you don't build out your business case to enable customers to understand the value of your difference, it can't be valued and your profits will suffer as a result.