Radical is Value-Based Pricing
Value-based pricing aims to price offerings according to the value customers’ associate with the offering in comparison to its alternatives. This is a pretty well accepted definition of the concept. Pretty well, but not completely, for this definition leaves out a word most people want to associate with every pricing concept: cost. To not explicitly include costing information in approach pricing challenges is a radical idea. Is it possible? Is this a good idea? What does this imply for business, economics and public policy?
In no less than a few hours after posting a definition of value-based pricing devoid of the word “cost,” David Nyy, Director of International Sales & Marketing at Celanese won the award for answering the brainteaser of “what word was deliberately not used in conjunction with the definition of value-based pricing.” Not that he disagreed with the omission — just that he noticed it wasn’t mentioned (I actually believed he was amused).
Since that moment, some individuals commented that the omission of costs in defining an approach to pricing was a serious lapse of thought, other individuals thought it was appropriate, and some others found it to be it was a very broad definition which they could customize for their specific needs, audience, or address their concerns. Who was right? What does this do for us? What does it imply?
Can Value-Based Pricing Really Be Defined without Mentioning Costs?
From a definitional stance, omitting cost information in defining the concept of value-based pricing is most definitely possible.
Not that techniques that drive a firm towards value-based pricing should never include costing information, for many of the best value-based pricing methodologies are deeply rooted in costing information. Many, but not all.
Nor should firms always sell offerings at the price identified by value-based pricing. They may choose not to sell the offering at all because the price customers are willing to pay is below the costs to deliver. They may choose to sell the offering at a lower price than that identified through value-based pricing in the strategic belief that, long-term, the firm will gain a competitive advantage, perhaps in a different market, by penetrating the current target market or maintaining current market share. They may even choose to price it higher than that identified through value-based pricing for legal, psychological, industry development stage or other reasons.
But value-based pricing is not cost-based. These two concepts are different.
Yet while value-based and cost-based pricing are conceptually different, they do share some techniques and structures. Some of the specific formulas, software, methodologies and processes used in cost-based pricing can also be used for value-based pricing. Some, but not all.
(To use a metaphor, a hammer can be used to shingle a roof or hang a picture. The aims of “hanging a picture” and “shingle a roof” are different, even though both aims share the common tool of “hammer.” Moreover, “hanging a picture” may require a level while “shingling a roof” may require knee-pads. Hence some tools will be shared though the aims are different, others will not.)
Hence, yes it is obviously possible to define value-based pricing without explicitly mentioning costs. It has been done. (See What Is Value-Based Pricing?)
Why Is It Good to Separate Value-Based Pricing from Costing?
Value-based pricing allows executives to separate the questions of “what price can we get for this offering?” from the question “what will it cost to produce?” And yes, this is a good thing.
From a process and decision making viewpoint, pricing is not the same as costing.
Pricing, under a value-based approach, is an exercise of asking and answering — “What will this customer pay? What will other customers like that one pay? What will different market segments pay? Can prices be structured or managed to vary between customers in proportion to what they will pay? Which product-market segment parings generate interesting revenue streams?” These are hard questions. They are fundamentally questions about the world external to the company, the world of its customers.
Note these questions are very different from costing questions. “What is the variable cost? What is the marginal cost of one more unit? What is the expected incremental cost of adding a new line? How would costs be effected if more capital expenditures were undertaken to improve productivity? What does the firm’s actions look like from an activity-based costing viewpoint?” These too are hard questions, but they aren’t the same as value-based pricing questions. They are fundamentally questions about the world internal to the company, the world of its employees, facilities and suppliers.
The pricing community has documented methodologies and approaches for addressing these pricing questions from a value-based viewpoint, but these techniques don’t always need costing information. And many times, the costing information needed for doing a good value-based pricing exercise is only minimal or rough approximations of the true costs. Sometimes, accurate costing is required, but not always.
(In fact, many highly profitable firms in fields fueled by intellectual property don’t even consider costs when it comes to pricing.)
By separating the challenges of costing from pricing, executives are positioned to make better decisions about both. They can kick-off a pricing exercise without conducting a costing exercise, or vice versa, thus isolate and optimize the process for each issue without undertaking a massive information gathering effort. This is clearly a good thing form a “management decision-making effectiveness and efficiency” viewpoint.
Moreover, executives may lower costs without a commensurate price decrease or raise prices without a commensurate cost increase. When they do, they are turning a suspected competitive advantage into a tangible economic outcomes. This too is a good thing. If prices and costs are completely correlated, competitive strategy would be reduced to a trite exercise and all economic profits would be impossible. The creative-destruction engine of capitalism which enables growth of human potential would be destroyed, and firms may have little incentive to do better.
What Does Separating Pricing from Costing Imply?
If firms adopt value-based pricing as they have observably been doing, we may find the correlation between prices and costs becomes broken, at least in some industries. This has some radical and serious implications, many of which are currently unresolved.
For instance, what does accounting and finance look like if prices and costs become unrelated? How should firms project future revenues when prices vary between customers dramatically? How can investments be made when the underlying revenue of firms are generated through prices which are predictable only with large uncertainties? Even moving from the metric of “price” to “average selling price” helps, but it doesn’t address all the issues of potential price variance or potentially high fluctuations in revenue generation. Will real-options analysis be adopted by firms doing value-based pricing when considering new business development and product launches? How will that be managed?
Or, from a sales and marketing viewpoint, can firms do value-based pricing without undertaking value-based selling? Is this just another hoopla about gouging customers, or does it work towards better supplier-customer relationships? What role do sales-persuasion techniques have in a value-based pricing world?
And, what does economics look like if prices and costs become unrelated? Does this change the expectations of supply curves in microeconomics? Does the paradigm that contrasts perfect competition with monopolistic competition, oligopolies and monopolies really make sense in a value-based pricing (can we at least change the name of one of these entities to let it cover the concept better)? What happens to the “law of one price” in a value-based pricing world? Are we creating the new field of nanoeconomics: the pricing of offerings at the firm level which leads to the pricing of offerings at the microeconomic industry level?
Or, how should the adoption of value-based pricing affect public policy? Who defines the difference between exorbitant prices and appropriate prices? Should regulators really allow firms to practice value-based pricing in the expectation that competitive dynamics will, in time, unseat the current leader and change price expectations? Will the people accept such a turbulent and creative world, or will the calls for manageable predictability and security destroy the acceptance of the process and its outcomes?
These are not easy questions.
Are We on This Path?
Insight to value-based pricing working is proven by its increasing adoption by firms. And yes, value-based pricing can be meaningfully defined without mentioning costs. These are good things, yet their implications have not fully been resolved nor uncovered.
There is more work to be done. We may be able to define the concept, but we clearly haven’t understood all of its nuances and implications yet. What an exciting field to be in.
Human and Digital Intelligence Futurist /Advisor /Explorer /Innovator /Writer, enabling High Level Leaders to Shape Integrative, Ethical, Truth, Wise and Resilient (Sustainable (Circular)) Futures in Segment Markets
9 年What comes to mind is Amazon whose stock price is not related to its earnings as it not even profitable and Best-Buy which has a Price to Earnings ratio of 12x and respective market capitalizations of 134 billion and 12.6 billion. Best-Buy's business value proposition is based on direct customer contact and personal approach, by touching the product and get a sense of comfort with the services a knowledge offering of the Geek team. Clearly the investor community is giving Amazon a free ride which can only be attributed to assumed future value, as even NPV does not make sense, admirably Best-Buy has not gone the route of bookstores like Borders where Amazon has managed to provide a better value proposition - after all the rating ability of amazon and suggestions sucks in more purchasing than floating around in a bookstore not really knowing what you are looking for. So to summarize even though Best-Buy is forced to think of costs due to asset intensive business it is actually thinking of value to beat amazon which cannot really provide a touch experience or a level of confidence for support, also Best-Buy has an online store too. It would be interesting to see what type of company Amazon lands up being and if they can find new value propositions for customers in other areas than books, delivering, rating, and web-services - do they really provide a differentiated service?
Pricing Methodology, Tools & Analysis
9 年Fantastic article Tim. I provide advice and tools for tender response pricing and I believe that both approaches provide extremely valuable data points upon which to make decisions. However, I often refer to a cost-based evaluation of a specific tender as a 'business case' as that is what it really is. An internal determination of what the price would be on a specific deal at a desired profit margin. Compare that to what the value the client would accrue as a result of using your services. More evidence to help make a better decision. Of course, when involved in the tender process, there is often (not always) the opportunity to directly discuss value with the potential client and gain an a very strong understanding of their business. A lot different to a consumer market yet so few organisations take advantage of this opportunity.
Resource Advisor
9 年Thanks, Tim...great piece and thoughtful discussion. And I very much agree with Mark's key point that it is incumbent upon the company to fully understand - even more than their customers do - the value their product or service offers relative to the competition, and to price customers accordingly.
Tim - As always a thought-provoking piece. Absolutely agree on your main points about separating costing from value-based pricing activities. When it comes to implementing a go-to-market strategy each can influence the other but they can and should be viewed separately at first. I do question one of your statements on the nature of value-based pricing. You say "Pricing, under a value-based approach, is an exercise of asking and answering — 'What will this customer pay?'" I disagree with this. Pricing under value-based approach uncovers what the customer should pay given the value of one offering relative to competitive alternatives. This change in the question then opens the door to value-based marketing and selling techniques as the logical follow-on questions are..."Relative to what they should be paying, what is the customer actually paying? If they are paying less, what activities does a firm need to undertake to close that gap?" Is the firm doing a lousy job in communicating and proving value to the customer? Does the customer recognize that while the value is there, the price is easily negotiated by a sales force that is unwilling or unable to stand their ground? These questions then link back to your rightful questioning of some of the core economic underpinnings of pricing as they imply that customer willingness to pay is a function of perceptions of relative value and negotiating power - both of which can be changed. In fact it is incumbent upon selling firms to seek to change these perceptions to their advantage.