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The recession is nearly over … Long live the (weak) Recovery

December 21st, 2009 No comments

Economic recovery?

This article looks at the approaching recovery and suggests how your pricing strategy should be reviewed.

Hopefully we will see signs of recovery in Ireland next year – probably based on increased global demand, resulting in higher export sales from locally based multinationals and indigenous companies. Local consumption of goods and services will trail a little behind, and confidence will recover – let’s close our ears to McWilliams and the other prophets of doom.

Comments are welcome as always,

Best regards

Billy

Tim Smith of the Wiglaf Journal explains by most indicators, the major economies of the world are coming out of the deepest global recession in a lifetime.  Yet, the recovery is far from a return to pre-recessionary trends.  Executives might be hoping for return to strong growth, yet most should expect a tepid climate at best.

 

From a pricing perspective, the weak recovery will place pressures on firms to demonstrate that they are better positioned than their competitors to grow.  This demand for demonstrating growth, rewarded by higher valuations, may drive executives to grab market share through deeper discounts and promotions.  Alternatively, executives may be hoping to grab a higher value market segment by marching up the price to benefits map.  Yet, evidence indicates that executives should apply pressure to the marketing levers differently if they want to win in this period of a weak recovery.

 

Restrain those Discounts

First, executives must continue to restrain their discounts, if not decrease their discounting and price promotions during this period.

Research by Lodish and Mela in the HBR has indicated that companies routinely overweigh the importance of short-term gains and under weigh the importance of their brand’s value proposition.  “They … over-invest in price promotions and under-invest in advertising, new product development, and new forms of distribution.”

One of the challenges of heavy price promotions and discounts is that they train customers to buy on price, not on quality.  If the company spends most of its time communicating to customers that they have the lowest price, it is only natural for customers to become convinced that price is the most important decision criteria in making a selection. From a rational viewpoint however, price alone is not the appropriate buying decision metric.  The more appropriate metric is price to quality.  If an executive wants customers to buy on quality, then they better point out the value of their products and the deficits of low price / low quality offers.  For example: good walking boots last for years while bad walking boots last for months.  On a euro per month of wear, customers are usually better off buying quality boots.

 

Erosion of customer loyalty

A related challenge to industries plagued with heavy price promotions is the erosion of customer loyalty.  Customers trained to purchase on price promotions will also be trained to consider brands to be interchangeable.   From a customer value perspective, the costs of acquiring new customers are far greater than the costs of retaining a customer.  Executives should be wary of actions which reduce customer retention rates within their industry.

 

Finally, discounts, price promotions, and trade deals can all encourage unproductive economic activity.  At one point, it was estimated that one-third of all expenditures on trade deals were wasted through the effect of inefficient warehousing and distribution.  In tight economic times, neither manufacturer nor their retail partners can afford to waste money on storing goods.

Rather than pursuing a greater discount and price promotion budget, now might be the time to switch to value pricing and shift budgets towards branding, specifically online branding.

 

Focus On Low-Cost Targeted Solutions

During good economic times, a common business strategy is to add value to products at a rate faster than costs increase. During this weak recovery, this common strategy is unlikely to prove as profitable.  Customers simply don’t have the excess revenue and income to spend on unnecessary benefits.  Instead, firms should focus on uncovering quality solutions which satisfy a targeted need at a low-price.

 

Delivering target solutions

Excess capacity, slack labour markets, and overall uncertainty regarding future earnings of both consumers and industrial customers all imply that pressure will still be on low-price solutions to daily operations.  Rather than delivering gold-plated solutions, firms should focus on delivering targeted solutions for specific needs of customers to continue competing and surviving in a tougher economic climate.

Product development should continue to be undertaken, but rather than creating new products at the top of the price to benefit map, firms are more likely to profit from segmenting the mass market at the lower ends of the price to benefit map and delivering the specific products that this larger group of customers demand.

 

Recessions come and go.  Weak recoveries can turn into strong recoveries.  To paraphrase Winston Churchill:  Never, never, never, never give up.

Article by Tim Smith, Chief Editor, Wiglaf Journal

References

Leonard M. Lodish and Carl F. Mela, “If Brands Are Built over Years, Why Are They Managed over Quarters?” Harvard Business Review (July-August 2007): Reprint R0707H.

Paul Flatters and Michael Willmott, “Understanding the Post-Recession Consumer,” Harvard Business Review 87, no. 7/8, (July-August 2009):  106-112.

Google is set to launch a property dimension to its UK mapping system.

December 8th, 2009 No comments

Threat to Daft.ie?

Are the days of growth finished for Daft.ie,  will the housing sales and rental market now be controlled by home buyers and home owners? This new service will allow both estate agents and private sellers to put their property as an overlay on Google Maps.

The plans were outlined at a conference called Estate Agency Events last week, although Google has declined to give official confirmation.

Shares in the property portal Rightmove fell more than 10% as news emerged, the sharpest faller in the FTSE 350 index of companies for the day.

The new service is expected to launch next year and would be similar to a service Google launched in Australia.

 

Sarah Beeny

Sarah Beeny says Google will level the property playing field

That site allows estate agents to list properties for free, with pictures taken from its Street View service and listing details on a map.

Speaking to BBC News, Edward Mead – sales director for Douglas & Gordon estate agents – said that the new system would be a win-win situation for both Google and estate agents.

“The technology to do this is already in place and estate agents are a little busier these days, although transactions are still fifty per cent down on what they once were.

“So this service, which is free, will appeal to estate agents’ cost-cutting nature and given that sixty per cent of agents are one-off traders, this will have serious appeal.”

Mr Mead said that Google’s head of property and classified team, Ben Wood, briefed 30 of England’s top estate agents at Estate Agency Events last week, telling them everything about the system, other than an official launch date.

‘Hurt estate agents’

But Sarah Beeny, who presents Channel 4′s Property Ladder and also runs her own home sales property site Tepilo, told BBC News that the service could well damage estate agents in the long run.

“It will hurt estate agents and it will hurt property sites like Rightmove.

“If it does what Google says it will, then it brings the buyer and seller closer together and that could mean removing blocks in the way, and that could mean no longer having to pay extortionate fees to estate agents.

“It will certainly blow Rightmove out of the water. You can only get your property listed on that site if you are an estate agent – what Google will do is level the playing field and they are doing it for free,” she said.

 

For sale signs

The site would directly link property buyers with vendors

The news shook traders on the London Stock Exchange. At one point, shares in online property portal Rightmove fell by 13% over concern about competition from the world’s biggest search engine, although a late afternoon rally saw them close 10% down at £4.95 a share.

The firm remained bullish, despite the news.

Speaking to BBC News, the company’s commercial director, Miles Shipside, said his business was still strong and the site was still getting lots of traffic.

“It remains to be seen what actually happens,” he said.

“Google is a big name, but they don’t always manage to follow things through on a local level.

“We only list property with estate agents due to UK legislation. Agents offer very good value and charge very competitive rates compared to the rest of the world.

Billy Linehan of Celtar sees this as a threat to property websites and as another innovation that will change the shape of the housing market for sales and rentals.

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