12 Keys for Successfully Selling at a Price that is Higher than your Competitors’ – April 2010 Master Negotiator

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“In business, you don’t get what you deserve, you get what you negotiate.”

-Dr. Chester L Karrass

One of the most frequent questions we are asked is how to negotiate when it appears that the only thing that matters to your counterpart is a low price. As a sales person or negotiator, your success, and your company’s success, depends on your ability to convince your counterpart that the value your product or service provides is worth the higher price.

In this issue, we will outline 12 keys to successfully negotiating in a price war. Please feel free to contact us with any negotiation questions or article ideas. We’ll do our best to address them in upcoming issues. (peter@peterstark.com)

Remember, almost everything in life is negotiable.

Peter B. Stark & Jane Flaherty


Negotiating with a counterpart who places high importance on a low price is always difficult. This problem is amplified when your counterpart is talking to multiple competitors and your product or service has a reputation for having high value in the marketplace. Typically, when your product or service is recognized for having high value, you can charge a higher price. Competitors who are recognized as having lower value in the marketplace tend to compete by charging a lower price. Most people buying a product or service want the highest quality and best value at the lowest price.

Our clients have found the following 12 keys helpful in successfully negotiating a price that is higher than that of their competitors: even in situations where it appears that the only thing that matters to your counterpart is a low price.

  1. Build your confidence. Part of the reason your product or service is worth more is because of the service and support you and your team provide. If you don’t believe that your product or service is worth more, then it will be difficult to convince a customer that paying more than your competitors is a good thing.

  2. Develop a positive vision. You have to believe that you are going to win this sale, and that it is going to be in the customer’s best interest that you do so. If you feel you are going to lose on price, you already have. Get excited about putting together a plan, with options, that will lead to a successful outcome. This one may be tough, but you have to believe in a positive outcome.

    An important part of your positive vision is to remember that you have more price power than you think. If the client still returns your phone calls and emails, or agrees to meet with you, you have power. If you had no power, they would simply place the order with the competitor at a lower price.

  3. Ask great questions. Sales people who lack confidence tend to ask closed ended questions that yield short answers with little information. Control the conversation by asking great questions that uncover a customer’s true needs and the importance of value to them in this negotiation. Ask great open-ended questions, then listen.

  4. Make sure you are dealing with the decision maker. If price is going to be the deal maker or breaker, there is no sense dealing with the monkey when the organ grinder is sitting in the next office. Competitors who steal business tend to do it by gaining direct access to the decision maker, while the incumbent maintains their existing relationships with the user buyer with whom they are most comfortable. The incumbent is then left playing a challenging game of good-guy, bad-guy with the user and economic buyer/decision maker. That game is highly effective in forcing you to lower your price.

  5. Understand the true needs of your buyer. There are two types of needs. Explicit needs like price, quantity, quality, features, terms, warranty and delivery. Then there are implicit needs like the buyer’s reputation, credibility, and the need to look good to their boss and peers. Implicit needs almost always override explicit needs in determining the outcome of a negotiation. If implicit needs did not override explicit needs, we would all be driving Yugos: the lowest priced car ever sold in the United States. If the thought of buying the lowest price could impact your credibility and reputation, almost always, you are quite excited about paying a higher price.

  6. Remember, people hate giving up value! Everyone hates to pay a high price but they hate giving up value even more. Don’t ever lower your price without taking away some value at the same time. If you lower the price, but don’t adjust the value, the customer will continue to ask for an even lower price.

  7. Strong relationships count. When you are in a business that has repeat or annual renewals, it is important to build strong relationships with key players throughout the year, even when you don’t need them. If you only have a relationship with the user buyer, and the economic buyer decides to get involved in the negotiation, you do not have the relationship or the credibility to negotiate a higher price. Wal-Mart has made billions by rotating buyers, giving them high goals to gain price reductions with sellers they have very limited relationships with. When there is no relationship, it is harder to support a higher price.

  8. Treat your counterpart the way they want to be treated. If your buyer’s negotiation style is a driver or a director, then trying to dump 87 pages of data down their throat to support the value of your product or service will not work. The driver/director ignores your data and flips to the last page with the price. Conversely, to give a one page overview of your product/service to a highly analytical user buyer is going to decrease the amount of trust they have in you and what you are selling. Design communication that is aligned to your client’s behavioral style.

  9. Know your competition better than your customer. If you don’t know your competition, then you tend to take anything your buyer says about your competitor as true. To successfully defend a higher price, you need to know your competitors, and you need to know the truth. Do your research in advance: not being the best prepared undermines the value of your higher price.

  10. Focus on value first, brand second. Some people feel that the reputation of their brand deserves a higher price. Although the reputation of your brand may hold power, when it comes to price negotiations, the value that your brand brings to meet the implicit and explicit needs of your buyer holds even more power. Whenever possible, get the prospect to tell you about the value they have received from your product or are expecting to receive from your product versus your competitors.

  11. Develop options. When it comes to selling at a higher price, options help to change the buyer’s question to, “How will they use us?” Not, “If they will use us.” By adjusting price and value and developing a variety of options, you will find it easier to defend a higher price.

  12. Sell the problem, not the solution. Almost always, there is a reason for your higher price. Most sales people try to sell the solutions of their product or service. It is much easier to defend a higher price by selling the problem. If you buy the lowest priced back-up system and it fails in a catastrophe, what impact is that going to have on you and your company?

And last but not least:

Celebrate your success! You won’t win them all but with these 12 strategies you will win a lot more price wars. Start celebrating your success!

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Everyone Loses in a Price War – January 2010 Master Negotiator

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“Nowadays people know the price of everything, but the value of nothing.”

-Oscar Wilde

As we learn about the current price wars going on between competing retailers, it is easy to be reminded of the above Oscar Wilde quote. Retailers who constantly lower prices to beat competitors may bring more traffic to stores, but does this really bring any long-term value to their bottom line or are they discounting themselves into oblivion? This is something that you should heed if you ever find yourself in a negotiation situation involving a price war with a counterpart.

In this issue, we will provide you with some ammo in case you ever see a price war coming your way. Please feel free to contact us with any negotiation questions or article ideas. We’ll do our best to address them in upcoming issues. (peter@pbsconsulting.com)

Remember, almost everything in life is negotiable.

Peter B. Stark & Jane Flaherty


The question we are asked almost as frequently as, “How do you negotiate with a bully or shark?” is, “What do you do when the only thing your counterpart cares about is price?” What makes the situation even worse is only having one strategy in your tool bucket when you reach a roadblock in your negotiation; lowering your price. Negotiating solely on price is a long-term losing proposition, unless you have a huge cannon and losing money or operating on extremely low margins does not hurt your ability to operate as a strong, sustainable business.

The greatest recent example of two companies that are in a price war, without their counterparts even asking them to lower their prices, are Wal-Mart and Amazon. Wal-Mart started the war when they marked down the prices of their top ten best-selling books to $10.00. Amazon, determined not to be beat, matched Wal-Mart’s price. In turn, Wal-Mart lowered their price to $8.99. Then Target joined in by selling their top ten best-sellers at $8.99, forcing Wal-Mart to lower their price to $8.98.

Keeping in mind that retailers can buy books from the publishers for one-half of the retail price, it becomes apparent that, by lowering their prices to $10.00 and below, all three of these retailers were losing money on every book they sold. The retailers are probably thinking, “If we are losing money on each sale, let’s lower the price even more to increase sales and steal our competitors business.” This makes no business sense. In a price war, almost always, everyone loses.

The good news for Wal-Mart, Amazon and Target is that they all have big cannons and these sales leading to losses will not hurt their business. It is important to note that these three giants actually had a goal: entice new, on-line shoppers interested in the top ten best-sellers, and introduce other items to them which they, otherwise, may never have been exposed to in brick and mortar stores. Indirectly, this price war helped Wal-Mart, Amazon and Target, but I will bet that anyone smaller who tries to participate will lose this price war in a big way.

A second retail arena where we see constant price wars is in the electronics industry. Just ask a former Circuit City or Good Guys employee; they will agree that very few people win long-term in a price war strategy.

So, what can you do to effectively compete in an environment where it seems like the only thing that matters is price?

  1. Recognize that people seldom buy things solely based on price. If it was really true, we would all be driving YUGOs and the YUGO car company would still be in business. Although the entire auto industry is in a world of hurt trying to sell based on huge price incentives, over the last 18 months it became obvious that sometimes people are unwilling to buy even when you lower your prices to well below your costs. The positive example is that most cars are bought, not because of their price, but because of the implicit needs they meet for the buyer. Many a car salesperson has closed the deal by simply saying, “You look really good in that ride.” Focusing on the value that your product provides for the customer, rather than boasting low prices, will give you a competitive advantage.

  2. Realize that very seldom does your counterpart hold all the price power. Many salespeople have told us that if they want to make the sale, they have no option but to lower the price. We always respond by asking, “Does the counterpart call you back, return your emails or agree to meet with you?” If the answer is yes, you have more price power than you think you do. If you did not, the counterpart would instantly call your competitor and place the order with them. It would be your counterpart’s most productive and profitable call of the day. When your counterpart continues to talk with you about price, they are telling you that you have something of implicit value to them other than price.

  3. Differentiate or die. If everything is truly apples to apples, and there is zero difference between you and your competitor, then you are right, the only thing that will differentiate you is a lower price.

  4. Innovate if you want to be a price winner. One of the companies that I resisted supporting for most of my life was Apple. They were so innovative that I did not fully understand their products. I was an idiot. Then I had kids. Through my kids I was introduced to iPods, MacBooks and so on. The reason the new generation loves Apple products is because they are so innovative and so cool. When a company is so cool and innovative that a customer cannot buy any other competitor’s product and achieve the same experience, price is not negotiable. Last week, I took the kids to the Apple store. It was packed! Not one person was asking for the sales price or a discount. After we bought the new MacBook Pro, they slipped it into a plastic backpack so we could walk though the mall advertising to everyone that we just paid full price and loved the experience.

  5. Practice détente with your biggest competitors. Let your competitors know that if they lower their price to try and steal business, you will lower your price as low as you need to go not to lose. If both competitors have the price cannon faced at each other, each will be less willing to play the price war game.

  6. Concede small. If you are going to concede and lower your price, in the opening round of the concessions, concede small. Your first concession sets the stage for all future rounds of concession.

Do price wars work? Yes, if you are Wal-Mart, Target and Amazon. For the rest of us, put these six strategies into action and play a different, more profitable game.