Monday, February 6, 2012

Name your price

If you really think you have the answer to the customer's problem, and your answer is uniquely yours, then name your price. BTW, that answer may be a car, motorcycle or a solution.

Often the customer will then try to negotiate you against others who don't have the answer (but who are cheaper). You then have two choices: 1) stay firm or 2) reduce your price to the point where you can't provide the answer.

Name your price, not someone else's.

Barry LaBov
LaBov & Beyond
labov.com

2 comments:

  1. This is the Barry LaBov insight that I love! Quick, direct, and very thought provoking! As the man at the helm of LaBov & Beyond, I'm sure you have to deal with these kinds of situations all the time, and I give you all the credit in the world for standing your ground with your prices. I really like how you touched on offering the customer the solution they want, but you took it a step further. There is always going to be someone else out there, many times willing to do the same type of thing for cheaper. I love how you sell them on what you, and only you, can do for them. It's a model for success, Barry. Thanks a lot for the insight!

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  2. Chuck, thanks. It sounds easy but it's not. Once in a while you have an edge. Go for it.
    Barry LaBov

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