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« Verizon and AT&T «
» Value – A Reflection of You? »

Best Advice I Ever Got

Best Advice I Ever Got
At least once a year review your customer list…
…and refer the 20% least profitable to your competitors.
Break the bonds of industry pricing!
Get compensated well for the value you provide.
How costly is the wrong customer?  The cost is much greater than the lower margins you get from these customers.  It’s not unusual your staff to spend 20% or more of their time trying to appease customers who really don’t value what you have to offer.  So besides suffering lower profit margins, you’re spending an additional $20,000 out of every $100,000 of salary to try to please people who can’t be satisfied.
If your staff’s time were spent finding new ways to serve customers who value what you offer, you’d have the opportunity to increase both revenues and margins.  These additional revenues and margins fall directly to the bottom line because they’re achieved without adding staff.
The profits you gain by ridding yourself of the wrong customers and replacing them with ideal customers can be used to attract and retain top talent.  A McKinsey study, The War for Talent, showed that an “A” player costs 20% more than a “B” player, but produces two to three times more.  That’s a heck of a return on investment.  You can’t get this return if you’re wasting profit dollars on customers who don’t value what you offer.
It’s counter-intuitive, but referring business to your competitors can be a great way to strengthen your business and position your company for a brighter future.
For more information on how you can command higher prices for your products and services, please post your questions or comments below, send me an email @ dale@furtwengler.com or call me at 314-707-3771.

To see how counter-intuitive thinking can be applied to other business issues, visit The Invaluable Leader blog at www.furtwengler.com/theinvaluableleader/.

At least once a year review your customer list…

…and refer the 20% least profitable to your competitors.

How costly is the wrong customer?  The cost is much greater than the lower margins you get from these customers. It’s not unusual your staff to spend 20% or more of their time trying to appease customers who really don’t value what you have to offer.  So besides suffering lower profit margins, you’re spending an additional $20,000 out of every $100,000 of salary to try to please people who can’t be satisfied.

If your staff’s time were spent finding new ways to serve customers who value what you offer, you’d have the opportunity to increase both revenues and margins.  These additional revenues and margins fall directly to the bottom line because they’re achieved without adding staff.

The profits you gain by ridding yourself of the wrong customers and replacing them with ideal customers can be used to attract and retain top talent.  A McKinsey study, The War for Talent, showed that an “A” player costs 20% more than a “B” player, but produces two to three times more.  That’s a heck of a return on investment.  You can’t get this return if you’re wasting profit dollars on customers who don’t value what you offer.

It’s counter-intuitive, but referring business to your competitors can be a great way to strengthen your business and position your company for a brighter future.

Discover how easy it is to command higher prices for your products and services, call me at 314-707-3771.

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Tags: counter-intuitive pricing, price management, Pricing, pricing for profit, pricing for profitability, pricing management, pricing strategies, pricing strategy

This entry was posted on Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010 at 6:00 am and is filed under Marketing, Pricing, Sales. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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  • Dale Furtwengler

    Break the Bonds of Industry Pricing

    Get compensated well for the value you provide regardless of what your competitors or the economy are doing. Call me at:

    314-707-3771

    Pricing for Profit
    gained international acclaim with its initial release in 7 countries - the U.S., Canada, U.K., Italy, France, Germany and the Netherlands.

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