스냅차트
68 Cents on the Dollar: Why Price Increases Leak Away
Leading B2B companies reliably convert price increases into real profitability.
스냅차트
Leading B2B companies reliably convert price increases into real profitability.
It’s one thing to announce a list price increase, another to actually pass it on to customers. Many business-to-business (B2B) companies end up giving back much of their price increases in the form of discounts, rebates or other forms of leakage. Realizing a price increase requires solid pricing processes, which most companies struggle to maintain. For every $1 increase in a list price over the previous year, the median company realized only 68 cents, according to analysis from PricefxPlasma™ powered by Bain & Company, which compares operational pricing data from a panel of companies. There’s a wide variation: The top quartile of companies realized 95 cents on the dollar, while the bottom quartile took 42 cents. Moreover, this yield is unrelated to the magnitude of the increase; companies with the largest list price increases gave back about the same in percentage terms as those with small increases. Four key components go into realizing a higher price:
Plasma is a powerful price benchmarking platform that analyzes your pricing practices across more than 30 critical KPIs, helping you make faster, better decisions and improve every facet of your pricing strategy.