The Effect Of Competition On Pricing Strategy

The effect of competition on pricing strategy covers the second of four posts on pricing strategy. It answers the question How do competitors price similar products and services? and How do their strengths and weaknesses compare to yours?

What Is The Price Range Of Products Like Yours?

All products have a price range from the lowest price to the highest. For some kinds of products, that range is broad while for others it is narrow. The effect of competition on pricing strategy requires that you consider this price range and where your price should be within that price range according to your product’s strengths and weaknesses compared to competitors’ products.

Effect of competition of pricing strategy table

How Your Price Compares Determines Your Price

If you have the most strengths, you can price your product on the high end. If your business and product have few benefits compared to competitors’, your price needs to be on the low end. So the effect of competition on pricing strategy requires an analysis of your and your competitors’ strengths and weaknesses.

Other Product Considerations

You need to know how your competitors’ quality, price, service, payment terms, location and reputation differ from yours. Because these all relate to benefits for customers.

Perhaps one of your competitors is a large corporation that sells a similar product to yours, but sells in volume for a much lower price than you can sell your product and still make enough profit to stay in business.

So what do you offer that will enable your product to compete? Perhaps your product provides better quality or you provide better customer service. Maybe you can offer better payment terms to induce your customers to buy. If so these become your benefits to customers. They are competitive strengths that effect your pricing strategy.

How Does Your Product Compare?

So how do you compare to your competitors’ in strengths and weaknesses? You can visualize how you compare by making a table like the “Table To Illustrate The Effect Of Competition On Pricing Strategy” above.

Include at least your major competitors in the columns and a list of potential strengths and weaknesses in rows. Then put a plus, minus or check mark in each column across the row for each competitor and for your own business or product.

If a pricing criteria is a strength use a plus. If it’s a weakness use a minus. If it just meets expectations, use a check mark. You can even go so far as to assign a number to each mark to get an overall score for your product and each of your competitors. For instance you could assign a three for each plus, a two for each check mark, and a one for each minus. Then add the scores for all pricing criteria to indicate each one’s competitive strength. Or you can just look for places where you are strong and your competitors are weak.

Using the table, it’s easy to see which characteristic best separates you from your competitors, or in marketing language, your distinguishing characteristic. For instance in the “Table To Illustrate The Effect Of Competition On Pricing Strategy” above the business owner beats all major competitors on features and service.

That’s where the business owner has a plus, but the competitors have a minus or check mark. So this business owner’s distinguishing characteristic should be one or both of these criteria, and should determine pricing strategy and marketing activities.

Delving Further Into Your Product’s Strengths

If you also have a features strength, you may want to do the table again for individual features to determine exactly which features offer your customers the most benefit and then make that your distinguishing characteristic. Remember customers aren’t interested in features. They are interested in what a feature does for them or the benefit related to the feature.

If you presently don’t have a strength where your competitors are weak, determine if you can realistically and profitably develop a strength in that area. If you decide you can, then include the development of that strength in your pricing strategy and consider it in all your business and marketing decisions.

In this way you can consider the effect of competition on pricing strategy.

If you’re an Internet marketer, I recommend Nichebot for gathering information on your competitors. You can read a brief review that I recently wrote about Nichebot for another post.

To learn more about Marketing Your Small Business, you can get my free report on market segmentation by completing the form below.

Or you can get a DVD on Marketing Your Small Business by just paying shipping and handling.

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Posted 5-13-08: The Effect of Competition on Pricing Strategy

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