Organizational confidence in pricing is a necessity on the journey towards pricing excellence. Without it, companies face erratic discounting, misaligned goals and incentives within and across departments, and more. This webinar will highlight the importance of pricing confidence on firm preformance, as well as provide practical steps and programs your organization can design and implement to boost pricing confidence.
Stephan Liozu is our presenter.
Stephan Liozu (www.stephanliozu.com) is the Founder of Value Innoruption Advisors. He specializes in disruptive approaches in strategy, innovation and value management. He is also a PhD candidate in Management at Case Western Reserve University and can be reached at sliozu@case.edu.
3. Today’s Presenter
Stephan Liozu is President and CEO of ARDEX Americas, a
manufacturing business that has been serving customers in
North, Central, and South America for more than 30 years.
Stephan's executive specialty is the design of innovative and
differentiated business strategies for industrial firms, and the
implementation of advanced value-based pricing strategies. Since
2001, he has been a visiting professor in universities in Toulouse,
France, teaching "International B2B Pricing Strategies" and
"Innovative Strategies in Industrial Markets" and "Leadership
Development" to master's degree students.
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4. The Research Journey (2009-2012)
QUALITATIVE PROJECT 1 (2010)
44 Interviews in 15 Industrial firms across 10 US States.
Developed Initial 5 C model for the transformation to value-based pricing.
Confidence construct was part of the 5 Cs and was most unexpected finding.
QUANTITATIVE PROJECT 1 (2011)
748 survey respondents with pricing, marketing, and business professionals.
Validated the 5 C model and their impact on relative firm performance.
Organizational confidence positively and significantly influenced firm performance.
QUANTITATIVE PROJECT 2 (2011)
507 survey respondents with account, contract, and sales managers.
Research focused on antecedents and consequences of organizational confidence.
Organizational confidence positively and significantly influenced performance.
QUALITATIVE PROJECT 2 (2011)
16 in depth interviews with top pricing leaders in Fortune 500 firms.
Focusing on specific programs and projects to build organization confidence.
Designed the confidence-building training programs integrating all results.
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6. Organizational Mobilization For
Pricing Excellence
Champions at the top leading the transformation
Organizational Change requires organizational mobilization
Formal and informal organizational Capabilities
Organizational Confidence acts as the fuel of the transformation
Center-led management through specialized experts supporting
divisional decision making process and pricing projects
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7. Themes Emerging from Qualitative
Interviews on Organizational Confidence
Courage
Courage to resist to customer objections
Courage to increase prices when needed
Courage to stand firm in front of customer pressures
“We are worth it” attitude
Sense of Resilience
Ability to face uncertainty in the external environment
Persevere when experiencing failures of breakdowns with pricing programs
Ability to analyze failure, to learn from them, and to move on
Scientific and Fact-based Decisions
Use of scientific tools and models to support pricing decisions with internal stakeholders
Conduct all necessary research and testing
Reduce irrational perceptions and fears through training of the front line employees
People Development
Positive communication to energize teams
Special coaching and mentoring programs with the sales force
Strong alignment in the incentive programs around value and pricing excellence
People performance management process: talent management
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8. Some Symptoms of Lack of Organizational
Confidence in Value Programs
Erratic discounting behaviors and intensity in sales force.
Discounting in a nano second at the beginning of negotiation.
Claiming value orientation in strategic statements and not realizing it.
Creation of numerous new terms and conditions of sales.
R&D speak innovation, marketing speaks value, and sales speaks discounts.
Short term volume-driven pricing actions at the end of the quarter.
Misaligned goals and incentives systems across and within departments.
“Here is a book on value….go and get it done!!!”
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9. What is Organizational Confidence?
Organizational confidence is a generative capacity of an
organization to cope effectively with the demands,
challenges, stresses, and opportunities it encounters
within the business environment. It exists as an
aggregated judgment of an organization’s individual
members about their (1) sense of collective capacities,
(2) sense of mission or purpose, and (3) a sense of
resilience. In its most basic form, organizational efficacy
is a sense of “can do” (Bohn, 2001).
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10. How did We Measure Organizational
Confidence? (Adapted from Bohn)
To what extent do you agree or disagree with the following statements
about your organization. (1=Strongly Disagree to 7=Strongly Agree)
We can take on any challenge
Because our departments work together well, we can beat our competition
We are more innovative than most organizations I have worked in
Everyone works together effectively
People here have a sense of purpose to accomplish something
We have a strong vision of the future
We are very certain about what we will accomplish together as a company
We are confident about our future
We believe in the value of our products/services
We have the necessary courage to stand firm to customers’ pricing objections
We have the necessary courage to implement difficult price changes in the market
We have a strong sense of resilience with pricing
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14. Some Final Thoughts!
More than the sales force! (R&D, marketing, finance)
Effect of environmental turbulences (competition,
innovation, M&A, market cycles, etc.)
Break in investments and organizational discontinuity
(changes at the top, downsizing, re-engineering)
Confidence does not mean arrogance.
Confidence does not mean only high price or raising prices.
Mindfulness is critical (resilience, attention to details, learning from
failures, sensitivity to operations, deference to experts).
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15. Our Next Webinar – Sept 17th
• Brian Clarke
Vice President Pricing Evaluation
International Data Corporation
• Competitive Intelligence and Pricing
• September 17, 2012
12 – 12:30 pm ET
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16. Thanks for Watching!
Stephan Liozu
@StephanLiozu
(724) 203- 5404
www.linkedin.com/in/stephanliozu
sales@leveragepoint.com
webinars@leveragepoint.com
(617) 252-2876
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