Posts Tagged ‘Slashes’

What Are The Best Pricing Practices For Small Business During An Economic Slowdown?

In an economic slowdown your pricing is determined by factors like input cost of production or distribution channel cost etc. ….. which are primarily working on market factors. Generally one should be working on a reactive strategy of open price …. which allows for revision in product pricing over a shorter time period instead of quarterly or yearly market driven slashes or increases.

The important consideration is to try to maintain sales, even if some of them yield marginal or no profit (i,e, break even). In other words, so long as you are covering your costs, particularly fixed costs, then there is value in doing so.

However, unless you wish to become the low-cost leader going forward, then this low pricing may create a precedent which customers expect to continue, and it also may devalue the brand.

So pricing strategy must be decided carefully, with all things considered, including unintended consequences. And it may be better to have various incentives rather than simple price cuts in order to sustain sales.

In the article “Pricing in an Inflationary_Downturn”, McKinsey recommends the following actions:

-Watch for sudden shifts in price structure
-Adjust to changing customer needs
-Monitor customer-level profitability
-Update price sensitivity research

Many companies across the nation are on the verge of closing their doors and some have already started liquidating their inventory.

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Article Title: Avoid These Common Mistakes

Every site you submit articles to may have different editorial style guides. Here are some helpful tips to help you get your EzineArticles submission accepted faster:

1. Double-check spelling and word usage in your article  title.
2. Commas are allowed, but only in the middle of a title.
3. Do not put a period at the end of your article title.
4. All colons (:) and semicolons (;), long and medium  dashes, pipes (|), and slashes (/) are to be replaced  with two short dashes (–), or changed to word  equivalents.
5. Ampersands (&) and parentheses () are allowed.
6. Quotation marks are allowed to emphasize a part of  a title, but not the entire title. Please remove quotes  around the entire article as they are superfluous and  of no benefit to the author or reader.
7. Microsoft Smart Quotes: Please remove them. They break  RSS feeds, emails, etc.
8. Never put an article number in the title of an article.
Example: [Wrong] Dog Grooming Tips-Article #3
Example: [Right] Dog Grooming Tips

Tip: The reader is most likely not privy to how  many articles you may have written on a  subject. It also creates useless title bloat.
9. Never purposefully use commonly misspelled words in  your article title to try and gain traffic from humans  who misspell words in their searches. WHY?

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