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Pricing with Confidence: 10 Ways to Stop Leaving Money on the Table

Pricing with Confidence: 10 Ways to Stop Leaving Money on the Table

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Authors: Reed Holden, Mark Burton
Publisher: Wiley
Category: Book

List Price: $29.95
Buy New: $12.77
You Save: $17.18 (57%)

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Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 10 reviews
Sales Rank: 59049

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 240
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.3 x 1.1

ISBN: 0470197579
Dewey Decimal Number: 658.816
EAN: 9780470197578
ASIN: 0470197579

Publication Date: February 25, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Perfect Condition. Unread paperback copy. Ships Quick!

Also Available In:

  • Kindle Edition - Pricing with Confidence: 10 Ways to Stop Leaving Money on the Table

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Bad pricing is a great way to destroy your company’s value, revenue, and profits. With ten simple rules, this book shows you how to deliver both healthy profit margins and robust revenue growth while kicking the dreaded discounting habit. The authors destroy the conventional wisdom that you have to trade margins for revenues and show you how to fully exploit the value your company offers customers. This is a proven plan for increasing sales without sacrificing profits.


Customer Reviews:   Read 5 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Be Confident in Your Pricing   September 25, 2008
Noel Capon (New York, NY USA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Is your company working hard to deliver value to customers?
Are you facing increasingly tough competition, possibly from new competitors?
And are you struggling to address cost pressures from your suppliers?

If you answered YES to one or more of these questions then you probably need some help with your pricing. Many studies show that of all marketing variables, pricing has the most impact on the bottom line. But where should you look for advice so you can make your pricing decisions with confidence? The answer: Pricing with Confidence by Reed Holden and Mark Burton. Holden and Burton have written a highly readable, practically oriented book for making pricing decisions; their 10 Rules of Pricing can vastly improve your decision-making. Think about this question: Why is pricing so hard and why do most companies mess it up? Holden and Burton pose this question in their Introduction. Could your firm be one of those they are talking about? If you believe that pricing is hard in your firm and that you don't always get it right, then pick up Pricing with Confidence; you'll be glad you did.

Noel Capon
R.C. Kopf Professor of International Marketing and Director of the Executive Program in Strategic Pricing, Columbia Business School, New York, New York.



5 out of 5 stars Setting an optimal price where company profits are maximized is one of the most difficult decisions to make when starting a biz.   September 14, 2008
Jeff Lippincott (Princeton, NJ USA)
3 out of 3 found this review helpful


I liked this book a lot. I thought it was well outlined and well written. The book's overall message is that the small business owner should link prices to the value delivered. The reader should be able to optimize pricing for her services or products after considering the 10 rules of pricing presented in this book:

1. Generally, don't let the customer talk you down in price
2. Price your service or product at a level that a customer is willing to pay if they understand the value of your service or product
3. Know which of three pricing strategies you are using and stick to it
4. It's OK to negotiate price with customers, but make sure you win
5. It's OK to lower prices, but only in order to increase profits
6. Expand your offerings so you aren't locked into one price for one product
7. Great pricing will often force your competition to react to your pricing
8. Your company's sales force has to be expert at why and how you priced your services or products
9. Set prices based on value - not on cost-plus
10. Always keep in mind you are in business to make a profit without leaving money on the table

I loved the instruction that the author provides regarding how an owner of a small business has to be willing (and able) to fire unprofitable clients and customers. Business people who compete on price are playing a fool's game. Smart business owners understand that value is the basis for business exchange and that to be successful at business one must FULLY understand value. This book puts forth a pretty good effort to help the reader fully understand value, or at least how to go about fully understanding value after doing a little investigation and research of the market.

Pricing goods and/or services is far from simple. And setting an optimal price is one of the most difficult decisions to make when starting a business. Furthermore, as a business grows and matures pricing at an optimal level continues to be difficult. Prices never stay the same because demand never stays the same. To do this well one must know the market (competitors & customers), know the costs, know the perceived value, and know the actual value.

Getting a handle on all this is not particularly easy. This is especially true because customers are often times very hard to figure out. Some are price buyers, some are value buyers, some are relationship buyers, and some are poker-playing buyers. Knowing these four types of buyers is a heads up for the small business person. But he or she still has to read the customer and figure out which one of these four the customer is before negotiations can be performed in favor of the seller. Read this book and start on your path of being a better pricer of your services or goods. 5 stars!



5 out of 5 stars A Gem of a Resource for Small Businesses dealing with Big Business   September 1, 2008
B. J. Gorbaty
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

As a forum leader for a group of CEOs of small, growing businesses, we used this book to help us in understanding whether the pricing strategies each of our businesses used were optimizing their market and sales successes. Since many of these small companies compete with some of the largest players in their respective industries, it was revealing to each of them to see their realities detailed so clearly by the authors. It has led each of them to engage in more thinking and analysis relative to a pricing strategy that matches their value offering. This is a must read for any small business up against the big guys.





5 out of 5 stars Pricing With Confidence   August 7, 2008
David Phillips
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Pricing with confidence

I have heard Reed Holden speak in a number of venues. I was happy to hear he was contemplating a book on the practical end of the spectrum for a selling organization. This endeavor revolves around easily understood concepts that a selling organization can apply.

Reed constantly says "Don't be a victim", apparently a phrase he learned many years ago, which ties in with the thrust of the project. Don't be satisfied with what the market place gives you. You can price your product and the services you offer at a level consistent with the value you bring. Far from just cheerleading, you must have done your homework before hand and this will give you the confidence to overcome the objections you will receive.

In the book are simple methods to organize your thoughts to understand your value, which may change with different classes of trade. You can then set your price points and defend them successfully. If you are not successful there is a unique chapter to characterize the type of buyer you are facing. Price buyers, Value buyers, Relationship buyers, and Poker Playing buyers all have different agendas and your defense of your value may be valid, but not successful with each of the above types. Just the recognition of this is valuable to the salesman and may point to different strategies or more importantly not confusing strategies.

In my organization I know the publication is making a difference when a proposed price point strategy is being justified by a thought process described in the book. The sales person in the meeting is defending his stance among his peers who can be rather harsh to test his logic.

A good read that should be placed on the shelf for extensive use as a reference book.



4 out of 5 stars Pricing with Confidence   June 10, 2008
L. Benson
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Buy the book. It's a good read for sales, customer service and yes, even accounting.



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