Skip to main content

Challenge the prices you charge

Getting the price proposition of your business correct involves careful consideration of what your customers want to buy. For local shops this means thinking about what is important to the shopper.

If you are on a busy high street or near a train station, will shoppers value speed of service? So that if you have what they want and they can get it quickly they will not notice that it is 10p more expensive. If it is available and your service is good, what else do you need to consider? Keeping the shop clean and the lighting bright may be important in that it will help the shopper trust you as a supplier.

If you have a shop on a local estate, where shoppers appear to be price conscious, then your pricing policy may be more challenging. Obviously, you can price compare with Tesco and tell people where you charge the same price. It may not be a pint of milk for 45p. It could be McVitgies Digestives at 50p.

Michael Jackson, writing in Business XL, argues that "assumptions about products and services and what customers are willing to pay need to be studied scrupulously". When he launched Sage accounts software, his partner picked on a £99 price tag instead of the £200 that the existing market seemed to suggest. What they discovered was that at £99 many more people were tempted to try the product.

In your shop, there will be a similar equilibrium. To grow market share, you need to experiement with pricing and calculate the balance between the margin per sale and the rate of sale. With a mix of treat and top-up items, you have the opportunity to appeal to the different needs of the same shopper and this is a profit opportunity.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Busy street, empty shop, missed profits

True in part to my New Year resolution, I held a business meeting in an independent coffee shop today just next door to a Starbucks. The cafe was presented well and four staff were busy preparing for the lunchtime rush, at 11am. As my guests were late, I had a half hour overview of footfall on the street outside and in the restaurant. Six customers. Barely enough to form the queue in Starbucks or Pret-a-Manger just down the road. Plus one Italian girl who dropped off her CV. Some people stopped to look at the posters in the window and moved on. The owners seemed quite happy. When I left just after 1215, they were doing brisk trade. However, I have the impression that the business is not working hard enough. It could easily have managed 120 customers between 11 and 12, instead of 12. This is lost profit as the fixed overheads and staff costs are already in place. The owners are clearly busy - perhaps too busy to take time to look at the potential that their cafe has. What shou...

Three secrets of great merchandising

Look at the ceiling and top wall of this McDonalds restaurant. There is a picture of two good looking healthy people having fun and some bright primary colours. Ask yourself what is the purpose of this picture? In the latest issue of Retail Newsagent in a feature on merchandising, Andrew Knight of RI tells its independent readers that they need to think about using sharp pictures of non-packaged products linked to people consuming goods. Perhaps this has been taken to the next level by the fast food chain - that is selling the feeling of being happy and healthy rather than the products. A second, related tip from the same feature is made by most contributors - it is vital to keep windows clean and clear of clutter. "I believe that less is more," says Roli Ranger, a retailer from Ascot, Berkshire. He has posters for promotions in between the windows that are regularly updated and discreet signs in the windows. Third, a highly visible well-stocked promotion at the entranc...

Think before you delist your slowest seller

Retailers need to introduce new products to provide their shoppers with "good news" and to generate interest. But for each new product that you introduce you need to consider delisting an existing line. Easy, you might think. I will just print out the list of products in the category and take off the one with the lowest sales. However, if you do this research from the US suggest you might be wrong. What you need to consider is what sort of demand you have for each product, a white paper by Demand Tec, a US specialist software provider shows. It says that there are two kinds of sales: incremental sales, when products add to the total shopper spend and are not readily substituted by another item transferable sales, where shoppers find an alternative easily when it is not available. Using its software, it shows a category with 50 products from top seller to bottom seller. At the same time it also measures the incremental sales each product provides. The number 50 in ove...