Client Stories
Value based pricing at Losberger De Boer
Losberger De Boer delivers top-class temporary and permanent space solutions for events, commercial, public, civil protection and defense use. The company wants to make the transition from cost-plus towards value based pricing and asked flowresulting for help/support.
What is value-based pricing?
Value based pricing is not an Excel-based optimization exercise. It touches upon a wide variety of topics, ranging from building deep understanding of what drives value for the customer to leadership behaviour. And ranging from communicating benefits in an effective way to customers (‘value selling’), to optimizing price setting procedures and incentive schemes for sales people.
In this post we share some insights of our journey that might be useful for other companies that embarked on the road towards value based pricing.a
Understanding what drives value for the customer
Value based pricing starts with understanding what represents value for the customer, as this drives his willingness to pay. So we started with an analysis of the market through a value lens. Key questions: what value does the company provide to the customer, how is value perception varying between market segments, how is the clients’ context impacting the value that he attributes to specific aspects of the company’s offering?
Together with the sales teams that serve specific market segments, we investigated what criteria customers take into account when making a purchasing decision and how they weigh the different criteria. Beforehand we asked the sales reps to write down what they thought would be the research outcomes. It is always insightful to become aware of your assumptions and to validate these, as in most cases we find significant gaps between perception and reality.
Setting the price
Part of Losberger De Boers products are standardized, but a big part of the company’s activities is related to tailor made solutions. How to set prices when every ‘product’ is different? We developed a price logic that structures the decision making process of setting a price.
The price logic is made of three parts.
Based upon the price logic, we developed tooling to structure the price setting process, provide price setting guidance and facilitate an evaluation framework. Sales people were trained in using the new methodology, in live training sessions and tailor made e-learning. This clearly helped to professionalize the price setting process.
Value selling
What if your company’s offering is superior to that of your competitors, but your client does not see the difference? A lot of product focused organizations show a strong tendency to continuously invest in product improvement, which is a great thing in itself. But are your customers aware of these improvements, and are they capable of estimating how they benefit from it? The best companies don’t sell features, they sell benefits.
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