Showing posts with label Prices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prices. Show all posts

Monday, 4 June 2018

How to Significantly Increase Your Prices,Without Losing (All of Your) Customers

I have the answer to all your business problems and prayers. There is one really easy think you can do to go from struggling to making consistent and significant profits. It’s so simple anyone can do it, even you. But you probably won’t do it. You’ll know you should, but you’ll still have doubts. I’ll reveal this in a moment.
I’ve helped hundreds of thousands of start up and scale up business owners in the last 11 years, and most of these people initially think you can’t just increase your prices overnight. Why?
  • They think they will lose most of their customers
  • They think their customers will complain
  • They don’t think it is fair to their customer loyalty
  • Other fear they don’t yet know is real
They only think of the cost of increasing their prices, and not the cost of NOT increasing their prices. After all, Apple and Rolex seem to have no problem with it.
So consider these 8 points and then test the following 7 points to significantly increase your prices (or face the costly consequences)

1. 10-20% swing won’t impress you much

If you had assets or investments, and they went down 10-20%, you probably wouldn’t go into a fit of panic or rage. Sure, you wouldn’t be happy, but you could probably handle it and control your emotions well enough not to make fashion selling decisions. If they went down 50% that could be a different story. And in reverse, if they went up 10-20% you probably wouldn’t be overly manic, excitable and plan your retirements. So a 10-20% value (or price) swing wouldn’t likely bother you too much. And so it likely is with your clients and customers if you increase your prices. Would a tenant move out for a 10% rent rise? Probably not because inconvenience and removals could cost years of that extra rent.

2. Most of price rise is profit (overheads covered on current pricing)

Most people don’t realise that if you have a 10% profit margin (let’s say you make £10 on every £100), if you increase your prices by just 10% (assuming no extra overhead) you double your profits with such a small price increase. All your overhead, staff, loan, premises, stock and more costs are currently covered (or not quite) by your current pricing, so all (most) of the price increase is profit.

3. Inflation

Every 15 years or so inflation halves the relative value of money. This means your prices need to have risen around 100% in that time, to not have risen at all in relative terms. So every 15 years you need to 2x your price to 1x your price. If you don’t meet this rise, your suppliers will and the costs or goods and services to you will rise, but your prices won’t and your profit will get eaten two ways, lower pricing and increased cost, which is the direct opposite of what you want to do.

4. Would you really lose all your customers?

If you increased your prices, would every single one of your customers really flock to your competitors? Really? Sure, you might you lose the demanding ones; the ones who want £10 for £5, but that could be a good thing (next point). Not all customers cost you the same overhead, because some customers are a huge drain on your time, resources, staff, customer service, refunds and cost you a LOT more than others (even in commodity based business). one customer could cost you 5 or 10x what another does, and as such the least demanding one has a huge profit margin and the most demanding one has a negative profit margin. So you know what you’ve got to do.

5. You won’t be able to grow or sustain your enterprise

If your margin isn’t good, because prices are too low (or costs too high), then you can’t sustain your business, and it will go bust, and the very customers you wanted to give a bargain or great service to end up losing out. Or future customers lose out. There HAS to be fair exchange, balancing the selfish and the selves, the profit and the service, the price and the value. That means depending on your business niche and scale between 5% and 50% net profit margin sustainably, even and especially through leaner times.

6. If prices are higher, service & value are better

Or at least they should be. if you have fair profit margin you can give a better service, reinvest to innovate and improve your product, and overdeliver. Price is what you pay, but value is what you get. You get less complaints and more gratitude the more value you can offer, and you can’t do that without any margin. Rolex put their prices up regularly, sometimes as much as 10% in a year. The Daytona has almost doubled in price in the last 8 years yet the waiting list to get a new one is 9 years or more.

7. You will resent customers if your prices are too low

When I was an artist, struggling to sell my work and make any money, I had guilt around pricing my work. I’d sell my art for less than it, and I, was worth, then I’d be bitter towards my customers. But they aren’t going to offer you 50% more than you price your products. If you increase your prices you can always discount them. The low prices that cause resentment become a self fulfilling prophecy in that you don’t want to give service and gratitude, because you aren’t making any money. And none of it was their, or the markets fault.
So here are 6 ways to increase your prices and increase your profits without losing all your customers:

1. What about a higher end product?

Most people wouldn’t buy a £50k Toyota, so they created Lexus. Nissan created the GTR ‘brand’. Apple have the iPhone X. Giorgio Armani created Armani exchange at the lower end, and Collezioni at the higher end. If you are concerned about increasing your prices, create new models or even brands, to protect existing products and smash through price ceilings.

2. You doubt it, but you haven’t tested it. So test it

Unless you try, how will you ever know? Why not test a higher price point to a small segment of customers? You could sell newer or more expensive versions to proven, high paying customers, or even new ones. The market will tell you the optimum price, and sometimes that price is actually higher than you think. Low price means low value in the minds of many of your customers. You should always be testing new products and price points anyway, to innovate and grow through market and competitive forces. Do. Not. Wait. Or guess. Test.

3. Commodity or rarity?

Some people feel their product is commoditised, the price is set, and they couldn’t increase it as no one would buy their products. They could be in a very mature or competitive market. But even in those cases, you can usually find a way to increase profit margin. Airlines are price competitive, so different classes of travel and add ons were created. You could add bolt on services. Uber created Uber Exec and Lux. Or, you could simply move away from a commodity model into a rarity model, like Sunseeker, Ferrari or Audemars Piguet. You have a desirable product, finite supply and therefore virtually no price ceiling.

4. Invest in your brand & your equity (prices) rise

Market forces encourage reinvestment in quality and innovation to get the edge over your competitors and differentiate yourself in that marketplace. Do not get lazy or complacent, re-invest into improving and innovating existing and new products and services to increase the quality and value. As you do that will push the price up. But it only goes up if you push it up. ‘Brand equity’ is the goodwill value in your brand. how you do anything is how you do everything, so invest in brand value, reputation, customer care and service, as well as product improvements. Build your customer base and give value to your followers and fans, and they will be loyal in spending with you, even if you are more expensive.

5. Price escalation model

You could, if you are not that brave, increase your prices gently, around 5% a year. No one would likely bat an eyelid if it is that small and incremental. What’s stopping you? What’s the worst that would happen?

6. Increase VALUE first

Still here? Still not convinced to up your prices? Then try increasing value first, and you will see prices rise in alignment. You could offer extra care, add on services, better quality, or simply roll in all the above benefits in one go. But if you don’t then increase your prices you could have increased your costs and therefore reduced your margin.

7. Let your worst customers go

Not all customers have the same overhead costs. It is likely that 20% of your customers are causing 80% of your customer service, complaints and time drain. So let them go. Don’t offer them future products, let them expire gently. Once you do this your overhead will reduce and importantly, you will FREE UP time and space for higher quality, higher spending and less demanding customers.
As you raise your prices, incrementally of exponentially, your self worth rises in alignment. This in turn radiates gratitude from you to the customer, and back again. You then attract better people (staff, customers and partners) to your enterprise. That ‘goodwill’ goes back into the care or your product or service. And of course the reverse is also true.
What have you got to lose, other than your worst most demanding customers? TEST. Now. The answer to most of your business problems raised at the beginning of this article, and the easiest way to dramatically increase your profits is this: Put – Up – Your – Prices – Now.
Remember when a phone used to be free with contract? Now a new iPhone is over £1,000!
Source: http://unlimited-success.co.uk/blog/significantly-increase-priceswithout-losing-customers/

Thursday, 8 March 2018

Your Personal Wealth Diary

There is a difference between getting rich and having wealth. I want to teach you to get rich, but I really want to teach you how to get wealthy. You can get rich quick but nobody gets wealthy quick. Wealth is the abundance of something in such surplus, that no condition can destroy it. It’s abundant—you can’t get rid of all of it. There’s so much that no matter what happens around the world, it can’t go away. Making a lot of money is one thing—getting wealthy is something entirely different. How do you learn to do what wealthy people do? To start, stop saying things like, “Money won’t make me happy” because that’s false. People who are just getting by talk about money as though it’s a bad thing—but I promise you having buckets of money isn’t going to be a reason you’ll ever be unhappy. I want to outline the mistakes that most people make that the wealthy don’t.




#1 Not Using Debt—You’ve been told don’t use it, never use it, it’s evil. My boy Dave Ramsey says all debt is bad debt. If you do your homework and don’t just listen to the popular thinking that debt is somehow killing everyone, you’ll understand there are different kinds of debt.   There’s time to use debt and there’s time not to. When do you use debt? There’s no always in anything. All big companies use debt. Debt can be used to expand a business. Debt is my ability to go into the marketplace and produce more income, not buy more things. I never use debt for consumption. Consumption is things like groceries or cars. Not all debt is created equal.   I use debt to build income. Debt is me going to the bank to borrow money to build my business. Look at Apple, they have $270 billion in cash. They borrow money from Japan. Why? Because they can use debt cheaper to explode income, to invest in equipment, and to do research to blow up their top line. I have over $200 million in debt. I’m not paying it—the tenants who live in my apartment buildings are paying down my $200 million debt while I get the write-off from the interest they are paying. So when do you use debt? When it makes you more money, when you get a write-off, and when you can expand your business. Don’t believe that all debt is bad—get wealthy by using debt smartly. 




#2 Money Shortage Mindset—If you were brought up poor or middle class you have a certain mindset. You believe that there is a shortage of money. Money doesn’t grow on trees, right? Well, there is more money on this planet than there are trees. You can print money faster than you can grow a tree. Money, here in the US, was actually printed from a cotton bush. By definition a bush is a tiny tree. That paper was cotton, so it’s not true that money doesn’t grow on trees. Money is everywhere. Go outside and look around—the cars, the buildings, the people wearing clothes and ties, the retail centers, and the purses. There is no shortage of money. If you were brought up poor or middle-class you were brought up by people that believed money was in shortage. Turn the lights out, eat all your food, save the pennies—look, a penny is a PENNY. Fix this money shortage mindset. Start looking for money. See how much money is around you. There is abundance and opportunity everywhere. Get wealthy by seeing abundance. 




#3 Looking at Prices—You know the old saying that if you have to know the price you can’t afford it? That’s actually not true.   Why are you looking at prices? If you’re looking at price you already have deceived yourself. Price is not your problem.   The price is not what you are buying. I did this for years—I’d go to a restaurant and look at the prices on the menu. Do you think the super wealthy worry about the price of a steak or a cup of coffee? Wealthy people don’t worry over price. They aren’t worried over a $30 book or a $1000 program. Their attention is focused on success. Be focused on your income. The average American makes $52,000 a year where the average cost of living is higher than $52,000 a year. 76% of all Americans live paycheck to paycheck in the wealthiest country in the world. It’s no different for a person in America than it is for a guy in India making $2 a day. Neither has enough income. It’s no different. All the attention is on what things costs. Shift your attention away from price because price is not your problem. The problem is you don’t make enough income. Looking at prices is an indication that you’ve contracted financially. Get wealthy by focusing on your income, not prices. These are just a few ways you can get started on the road to wealth. This is not a get-rich-quick scheme where if you start doing these things you’ll be a millionaire next week. These are rather broad principles that you need to embody if you ever want to become wealthy. Have you dreamed of becoming not just rich, but even super rich? Quit focusing on prices, refuse to see money as a shortage, and know that not all debt is bad. Get on Playbook to Millions for much, much more to get you on your way to your first million. People are doing it, when will you? The reality is there are two options, invest in yourself or give up on ever being wealthy. Which will it be?




Source: https://grantcardone.com/blogs/grantcardone/your-personal-wealth-diary

Saving for the Future While Paying Off Debt

How can you save for the future when you're still paying off the past?