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Avoid Being the Dumbest Competitor

Written by: Dr. Rick Johnson

Article Overview: Pricing is the tip of the profit spear. It is often said that profit is made on the buy side of the equation in wholesale distribution. That is a true statement. However, it only holds true if you are disciplined enough not to give that profit advantage away during the quoting and pricing process. The Quotation - Pricing Process "Your customer has no need for you to make a ‘fair' profit unless there is no other distributor willing to take your place." This is quite a sobering thought, but one that we should keep fresh in our minds. Pricing strategy starts by providing guidelines for your quotation process. If we do not have a vehicle, a scorecard or some methodology to determine how we are doing then we are driving through a tunnel with our lights off. Not having a formal quotation process increases our chances of becoming the

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Avoid Being the Dumbest Competitor

Pricing is the tip of the profit spear. It is often said that profit is made on the buy side of the equation in wholesale distribution. That is a true statement. However, it only holds true if you are disciplined enough not to give that profit advantage away during the quoting and pricing process. The Quotation - Pricing Process

"Your customer has no need for you to make a ‘fair' profit unless there is no other distributor willing to take your place."

This is quite a sobering thought, but one that we should keep fresh in our minds.

Pricing strategy starts by providing guidelines for your quotation process. If we do not have a vehicle, a scorecard or some methodology to determine how we are doing then we are driving through a tunnel with our lights off. Not having a formal quotation process increases our chances of becoming the Dumbest Competitor in the market, giving away valuable margin.

Quotes have to be recorded with a timeline lifespan. Preferably, your IT system supports this activity and allows you to turn a quote into an order quickly and easily. If it does, chances are you can create a number of scorecard tools to determine what exactly is happening in your market from a competitive standpoint. These tools include:

• Quote kill rates

• Trend analysis on quote success

• Re-quotes and negotiated pricing

• Quote number tracking

• Follow up triggers

• Margin exceptions

• Number of quotes generated by sales rep

• Percentage of quotes sold by sales rep

• Lost business report

Quote kill rates and a trend analysis are two of the most important tools to understand the effectiveness of your pricing strategy.

Are you Market Based?

Quote Kill Rate = Total Business Booked/Total Business Bid

• Don't worry about month to month

• Look at trends to guide pricing

Month J F M A M J J A

a. QKR 12% 30% 20% 22% 24% 25% 18% 16%

b. QKR 12% 30% 20% 22% 24% 25% 29% 35%

• Really reduces wasted quote time - understand the math-analyze the type of business you are quoteing

If your kill rate is high it may indicate an opportunity to raise prices. If it is low you may need to lower prices. Of course you should investigate all factors before coming to that final conclusion. If you track your kill rate by month it can give you an indication as to what may be happening in the market. If your kill rate rises dramatically, again, you may be lagging in a market that is demanding a price increase. Conversely, if your kill rate drops dramatically, it may mean that market prices have dropped and you are not in sync with what is going on. Keep in mind this is an indicator that is telling you to investigate. Do not react impulsively without getting all the facts.

Negotiations

Contrary to some beliefs, negotiations in distribution are not about:

• Persuasion

• Closing

• Overcoming objections

• Compromising

• Accommodating

• Getting the order off the street

• Blowing away the competition

Negotiation in distribution is about the exchange of information and action planning that results in a mutually beneficial exchange of resources between two companies. There are five underlying facts you must understand when you are negotiating:

1. You are negotiating all the time.

2. Everything you want is owned or controlled by someone else.

3. There are predictable responses that you can count on in the negotiating process.

4. There are three critical factors in every negotiation - power, information and time

5. The proper mesh of personality types is important to negotiating success

Negotiating is not just about price. You negotiate many things with a customer including the rules of engagement; how you are going to do business together. The better your relationship the more predictable the responses both you and the customer perceive. However, you must never forget that the buyer you call on has most likely been trained in the art of negotiations. That is his job and his job has three basic elements:

1. Ensure a reliable source of supply.

2. Ensure quality meets requirements.

3. Without compromising items 1 and 2 above, minimize raw goods inventory and purchase price.

You should recognize that 90% of performance related buyer terminations occur for failure to perform items 1 and 2 and not because of the price he pays. That is a very important fact to remember when negotiating. Remember, the buyer has been trained to develop a rapport with you and then tell you your price is too high. Believe it or not, many professional buyers will keep a log on how you respond to the statement, "Your price is too high." That is why it is extremely important that you not only understand the difference between price and cost but that you also have the ability to educate your customer on the difference between price and cost. There are numerous classes available on negotiations. It is worthwhile to attend one.

Being sucessful at negotiation means you have to know your buyer's needs and goals. The only way to accomplish this is to ask open ended questions and having the discipline to shut up and listen. Skillful questioning and good listening skills will help you uncover the information you need. Specifically the objective of your questioning process is to:

Gain information --- Don't assume anything when you are negotiating a sale.

Check understanding and interest level --- Ask questions to uncover how knowledgeable your customer is technically. Can they understand your true value propositions?

Overcome obstacles --- Your major challenge is dealing with your own fear of rejection. It is easy to deal with this fear by lowering the price. That is the biggest mistake most sales rookies make. You must overcome your own fears by understanding all your value propositions including the personal value proposition you create in your relationship with the customer. Value propositions are provided by the benefits of the product, the company and you personally. Make sure you understand and are able to explain in detail all of them.

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Home > Human-Resources > Dr. Rick Johnson > Avoid Being the Dumbest Competitor
Article Tags: profit advantage, quotation, true statement, wholesale distribution

About the Author: Dr. Rick Johnson
RSS for Dr. Rick's articles - Visit Dr. Rick's website

www.ceostrategist.com - Sign up to receive "The Howl" a free monthly newsletter that addresses real world industry issues. - Straight talk about today's issues. Rick Johnson, expert speaker, wholesale distribution's "Leadership Strategist", founder of CEO Strategist, LLC a firm that helps clients create and maintain competitive advantage. Need a speaker for your next event, E-mail rick@ceostrategist.com.

Dr. Rick Johnson has over 35 years of experience in distribution sales and operations. Rick�s career can be broken down by decades. The first ten years of his distribution career were spent with the largest steel-processing distributor in the world (Joseph T. Ryerson). The second ten years began with Rick starting his own processing distribution center from scratch. In the first year, sales reached $1 million dollars and had grown to $25 million in its tenth year when Rick sold the business to one of the major national chains. The third ten years of Rick�s career dealing with financially troubled Turn-A-Round companies. After completing ten years of TAR work, Rick decided a decade of acting like Darth Vader was enough and became a consultant to the Wholesale Distribution Industry in 1999. Rick received an MBA from Keller Graduate School in Chicago and a Bachelor's degree from Capital University, Columbus Ohio. He also served six years in the United States Air Force as a survival instructor. Rick completed his dissertation on Strategic Leadership and received his Ph.D. in 2005. Rick is frequently published in numerous magazines including a column in Supply House Times, with over 250 different articles published to date. He�s also a published author with eight books to his credit.



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