Price increases from several of your suppliers! Your customers won't like that. How do you manage to pass
on that price increase without losing business or giving
away margin dollars?
This is becoming a major issue for distributors. The economic pendulum has
inevitably reached its apex and begun to swing back in the other direction.
In many industries the pressure to reduce prices is coming to an end, being
replaced by upward pressure on prices. Unfortunately, many sales forces are
peopled with individuals who have never lived through a time of price increases.
They have no frame of reference from which to view it, and no experience on
which to draw.
Anxiety abounds: "Will the customer refuse to accept it? Or solicit
prices from a competitor? Will I have to give away gross margin and absorb
the price increase in order to keep the business?" These kinds of doubts
lead to anxious and intimidated sales people, declining sales and shrinking
margins.
Not a pretty picture. Yet, as in any sales problem, there are a set of proven
practices and strategies that will make this process of managing and communicating
price increases less threatening. Here's a series of ideas to help you effectively
manage price increases.
Set up the situation.
The announcement of an 8% price increase on a major product line shouldn't
come unexpectedly out of the blue. Of course the customer is going to react
strongly to the suddenness of the information. Nobody likes to receive
price increases, and even worse, nobody likes to receive them without any
indication that they are coming.
Don't let that happen to your customers. Don't wait until the price increase
is a fait d’ accompli to inform the customer. Weeks before, have a
conversation with that customer about the trends in the economy toward more
price increases. Share the big picture with him. Then mention other price
increases that you have received in the past few months. Be specific with
names of manufacturers and products to which he can relate. Mention the soaring
price of oil and the inevitable downstream effect that has on all kinds of
products. Mention that you are expecting an increase from XYZ component or
manufacturer.
Build into your customer the general expectation that prices are going to
go up, so that when the deal happens, he isn't blind sided by the information.
Prepare with details and substance.
You don't want the customer thinking that it's just
your word that the prices are going up. Bring
the details. Have a copy of the letter from the
manufacturer indicting the price increase. Be prepared
to communicate specific details. Don't say, "Transportation charges have gone up about 20%." Instead
say, "Due to the rising cost of fuel, our inbound freight
charges have been increased by 19.1% from one truck line and
18.6% by another. Here's the letters from each of them informing
us of the increase."
This is a great time to have the manufacturer's rep come with
you. Let him/her communicate the bad news to the customer,
while you look grave, concerned and sympathetic in the back
ground.
It's always a good idea to have someone else, other than you
and your company, as the source of the price increase information.
This conveys to the customer the fact that you are not raising
prices; you are reacting to your prices being raised. That
is a significant message to get across.
Try to inform your contact's boss of the price
increase.
You want to avoid this scenario: You pass on a price increase to your key
contact. He/she is fully aware of your need to pass along the increase. However,
when he tells the boss about the price increase, the boss, who doesn't know
all the details, reacts by directing your key contact to shop for a better
price, or refuse to pay the higher price.
Instead, you be the bearer of the bad news to the boss. Handle the sales
call in the same way that you did with your key contact - lots of detail,
with a third party being the source of the price increase information.
The result may or may not be the same, but at least you haven't put your
key contact in the difficult position of defending his decision to continue
to buy the product from you.
Give at least 30 days notice.
Don't ever communicate a price increase after the fact. And don't wait for
an order to say, "Oh, by the way, the price of that is now...." Instead,
give the customer 30 days to enter the information on their computers,
to adjust their purchase orders, and to consider alternatives.
Take the initiative and offer alternatives.
If you sense that the price increase is going to prompt the customer to search
for an alternative, take the initiative and offer an alternative. Do a
little research. If the company is buying the high priced option, and that
is going up by 6%, as you transmit the details of the price increase, suggest
that he may want to review a less expensive alternative. Have the alternative
product ready to discuss with the customer.
This does a number of things. It communicates to the customer that the price
increase is a done deal - the only option is to buy a product of lesser quality.
There is no option to beat down the price increase. So, you get the customer
thinking of alternatives.
Secondly, it allows you to decipher the mind of the prospect. If given the
option of considering a less expensive alternative, if the customer shows
no interest in the option, it's a good indication that he's going to accept
the price increase, and not shop around.
Third, if the customer bites on the less expensive alternative, then you
are still in the game. It's better to retain the customer with a less expensive
alternative, and maybe loss a little sales volume and gross margin dollars,
then it is to lose the customer and walk away with nothing.
Make it easy for the customer to implement the
price increases.
Make it easy for him to input the new information on his computer, to adjust
his purchase orders, to note his requisition cards. The easier it is for
him to implement the mechanics of the price increase, the more likely he
will do it. If the customer is buying 15 items in a line from you, don't
just say the prices are going up by 6%. Instead, give him a spread sheet
with each of the item numbers on it, the old price per unit, and the new
price per unit.
Be confident and matter of fact.
Price increases are a fact of life at certain points in the economic cycle.
Nobody likes them, but no one customer can stem the tide. So, your customer
has to adjust to the fact of rising prices, just like you and your suppliers
do.
Understand that. Be confident in it. If you are tentative, timid and intimidated
by the price increase, you'll stimulate lots of push back from the customer.
That push back is doomed to take up a lot of your time and the customer's
time. You'd both be better off just accepting the fact of life that prices
are going up, adjust, and go on with your business.
Remember, no one likes price increases, but they are a fact of life.
Dave Kahle is a consultant and trainer who helps his
clients increase their sales and improve their sales
productivity. He speaks from real world experience, having
been the number one salesperson in the country for two
companies in two distinct industries. You can reach him
at The DaCo Corporation, 3736 West River Drive, Comstock
Park, MI 49321Phone: 800-331-1287 / 616-451-9377; Fax:
616-451-9412; or info@davekahle.com; www.davekahle.com
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