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Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

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Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model
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Page 1: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Ron Baker, FounderVeraSage Institute@ronaldbaker Value

Pricing as a Business

Model

Page 2: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

What is a Business Model?

How your firm creates value for customers, and how you

capture that value.

Page 3: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

“Disruptive threats come inherently not from new technology but from new

business models.”

Andy Grove, Founder, Intel

Page 4: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

The Firm of the Past

RevenuePeopleHours Efficiency Hourly

Rate= x x

We sell time

Page 5: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

The Firm of the Future

Profit Intellectual

Capital

Effectiveness

ValuePrice= x x

Our customers buy intellectual

capital

Page 6: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

A 1% increase change in, yields

- Fixed Costs

+ Revenue - Variable costs

+ Price0.0%

2.0%

4.0%

6.0%

8.0%

10.0%

12.0%

2.7%3.7%

7.3%

11.0%

1.5%2.5%

4.6%

7.1%

McKinsey AT Kearny

Page 7: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

1% Increase Price = Increase Operating

Profits

1% of revenue = 1%WindfallCurrent profit

Page 8: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Price for profit.

Innovate for growth.

Page 9: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

“The single most important decision in evaluating a business is pricing power. If

you’ve got the power to raise prices without losing business to a competitor,

you’ve got a very good business. And if you have to have a prayer session before

raising the price by 10 percent, then you’ve got a terrible business.”

Warren Buffet

Page 10: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

What are you really selling?

What are your

customers really

buying?

Page 11: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

“The customer never buys a product. By definition the customer buys the satisfaction of a want. He buys value.”- Peter

Drucker

Page 12: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

“When it leaves the factory, it’s lipstick. But when it crosses the counter in the department store, it’s hope.”

Charles Revson, Founder, Revlon

Page 13: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.
Page 14: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.
Page 15: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

It’s to increase profits.

The default purpose of

marketing is not to increase sales.

Page 16: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Cost

$0

$5,000

$10,000

$15,000

$20,000

$25,000

$30,000

$35,000

$40,000

Page 17: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

The First Law of Pricing: All Value

is Subjective

Page 18: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Confusing Cause and Effect

Page 19: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

A Tale of Two Theories

The Labor Theory of Value

The Subjective Theory of Value (Carl Menger, William Stanley Jevons, and Leon Walras)

Page 20: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Salaries + Overhead + DNI Expected Hours

= Hourly Rate

Precise, but precisely wrong

Page 21: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Cost-Plus Pricing

Value-Based Pricing

Customer Value Price Cost Service

Service Cost Price Value Customer

Page 22: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Eight Steps to Implementing Value

Pricing

Page 23: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Implementing Value Pricing

Eight Steps at a Glance

1. Conversation with Customer

2. Pricing the customer, not the services (CVO/Value Council)

3. Developing and pricing options

4. Effectively present options to customer

5. Option selected codified into an FPA

6. Proper Project Management

7. Scope creep, utilize Change Orders

8. Conduct Pricing After Action Review

Page 24: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

“Language was invented to ask questions. Answer may be given by grunts and

gestures, but questions must be spoken. Humanness came of age when man

asked the first question. Social stagnation results not from a lack of answers but

from the absence of the impulse to ask questions.”

Eric Hoffer, Longshoreman

Philosopher

Page 25: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Implementing Value Pricing1. Conversation with customer

Not:“What do you need?”

But rather:“What are you trying to accomplish?”

Page 26: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Implementing Value Pricing1. Conversation with customer

Listen > Talk

Opening: “Mr. Customer, we will only undertake this engagement if we can agree, to our mutual satisfaction, that the value we are creating is greater than the price we are charging you. Is that acceptable?”

Page 27: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.
Page 28: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Spiritual Value

Specialist expertise/knowledge

Unique social capital

Brand/reputation

Unique result—creativity & innovation

Reducing risk (Guarantee)

Pleasant experience (MOTs)

Make the Customer “look good”

Relationship

Knowledge elicitation

What else?

Page 29: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Implementing Value Pricing2. Pricing the customer, not the services

Role of the Value Council

1. Ensuring that the firm prices on purpose.

2. Constructing and experimenting with various value-based compensation agreements.

3. Assuring continuous learning and teaching the importance of pricing for value.

4. Dealing with price objections from customers.

Page 30: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Implementing Value Pricing2. Form a Value Council and appoint a CVO

Role of the Value Council (continued)

5. Keeping the firm focused on tracking customer results instead of firm inputs.

6. Establishing customer selection/deselection criteria.

7. Conducting “after action reviews” at the end of major projects.

8. Providing education throughout firm

Page 31: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Implementing Value Pricing3. Developing and Pricing Options

Page 32: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

The Second Law of Pricing: All

Prices are Contextual

Page 33: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.
Page 34: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Behavioral Economics

Page 35: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

1 Yr Sub Price Mkt Share

Web only $59 16%

Print only $125 0%

Print & Web $125 84%

1 Yr Sub Price Mkt Share

Web only $59 68%

Print & Web

$125 32%

42.8%

Page 36: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Anchoring

Page 37: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Framing

Page 38: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Implementing Value Pricing3. Developing and Pricing Options

The Six Ts of Options

1. Turnaround Time

2. Terms

3. Talent

4. Technology

5.Tailoring

6.Transference

Page 39: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Hours x Rate Fixed price Change orders Service guarantee Price guarantee Payment terms Unlimited Access

Value Price Premiums

Page 40: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Implementing Value Pricing4. Effectively present options to customer

Presenting your pricing

1. Present your most expensive option first; this is your “anchor price.”

2. After stating your price(s), shut up.3. Use the word “price” instead of “fee.”4. Use the word “agreement” instead of “contract.”5. Use the word “fair,” as in “Is this a fair price to you?”6. Remember to negotiate value, not price.7. Place a timeline on proposals; no price should last forever.8. Finite number of price objections—shouldn’t we have

answers?

Page 41: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Implementing Value Pricing5. Fixed Price Agreement (FPA)

Elements of an effective FPA

Memorializes the meeting of the minds

Specifies scope of work

Includes deadlines, delivery dates, and other milestones

Details customer’s responsibilities for providing information

Includes payment terms

Establishes parameters for Change Orders

Bundles Unlimited Access

Includes service guarantee and price guarantee

Page 42: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Implementing Value Pricing6. Proper Project Management

Effective PM

Scope of work

Who performs work

Resources needed

Capacity planning—forward looking, not backwards

Customer responsibilities and commitments

Deadlines—duration, not time spent

Page 43: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Implementing Value Pricing7. Change Orders

Page 44: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Firms that Value Price

Have a clear purpose, strategy, and position

Have made pricing a core competency

Have excellent project management skills

Understand they sell intellectual capital, not time

Only work with customers who value them

Routinely fire low-value customers

Maintain minimum prices

Don’t treat all customers equally

Have appointed a value council and/or a CVO

Have replaced timesheets with Key Predictive Indicators, PM, AARs

Page 45: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

At least 84% of us are copying,

not innovating.

If you just copy, you will always be behind.

Page 46: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Don’t solve problems; pursue opportunities.

Peter Drucker

Page 47: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

www.journalofaccountancy.com

June, 2009Pricing on Purpose: How to Implement Value Pricing in

Your Firm

November, 2008The Firm of the Future

April, 2010Project Management for Accountants, by Ed Kless

Simon Sinek, www.TED.com

Page 48: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Thank You!

[email protected]

Phone: (707) 769-0965 Twitter @ronaldbaker

VeraSage website/blogwww.verasage.com

Page 49: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Implementing Value Pricing8. Conduct a Pricing “After-Action Review”

After-Action Review Questions

How could we have enhanced our customer’s perception of value?

What were the business results and performance against key metrics?

Did we have the right team on this assignment?

How high were the costs to serve?

Did we stay within time and budget parameters?

Could we have captured more value through higher price?

If we were doing this type of assignment again how would we do it?

What are the implications for the way we design and deliver our services?

What could we do better next time?

Page 50: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

Simon Sinek, Start with Whywww.ted.com

Page 51: Ron Baker, Founder VeraSage Institute @ronaldbaker Value Pricing as a Business Model.

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