You Can’t Bribe Your Way To Success

You Can’t Bribe Your Way To Success

Stop Offering Discounts & Make More Money because you can’t bribe your way to success.

Want to increase your business revenue?

Want to get rid of those annoying price sensitive customers who seem to be the biggest pain yet spend the least amount of money?

It’s a simple solution but it takes guts.

Stop discounting.

Enough with the coupons.

Say goodbye to the people who will only buy from you because of the deal you gave them.

What we as consumers really want is to trust you and your business.  Be honest.  Don’t lie.  The under-promise and over-deliver mantra is still a good rule to live by.

A friend of mine was in an auto accident recently.  He made the mistake of going to the autobody shop recommended by his insurance company. Ron’s accident was a bizarre one. A woman drove her vehicle over the front end of his. Kinda of crushed the engine area.

What happened next is exactly what you don’t want to do if you are in business.

  • The insurance company took nearly two weeks to send a claims adjuster to look at his car.
  • The car was towed to a body shop that fixed the exterior, but ignored the real issues and damage under the hood. Supposedly it was all fixed.
  • Ron then took it to an auto repair place for an estimate on the noises that were still there and the price tag was nearly $2000.
  • Ron went to get an estimate from the dealership he bought the car from and they told him his car was not safe to drive because the motor mounts were broken. So the original body shop and the auto repair shop BOTH missed this important safety issue.

Ron is going to insist that the car is repaired correctly or he is compensated fairly.  So far everyone he has dealt with from his insurance agent down the line have failed him.

Price wasn’t an issue.  Getting the job done right was all that mattered.

And that’s what all of us want, with a couple of exceptions.  There are always a group of people who are conditioned to be price shoppers and they are hard to convert.  Also, depending on the product or service, some things we want to buy cheap.

But if you think the only way you can get business is to have the lowest cost, most of the time you are mistaken.  If you need help figuring out why people should spend their money with you, let’s talk. I can help.

Stop Offering Discounts & Make More Money

Contrary to my thrifty consumer desires, I want you to stop doing something.

Stop offering discounts.

There are only certain specific businesses that should discount their stuff and only at certain times.  These are retailers but not all of them and not all of the time.  We’ll talk about them one day.

I subscribe to Groupon, not to buy stuff, but to find local businesses that are desperate and stupidly selling themselves short on how to be successful. 2015-12-27

Professionals should NEVER advertise discounts.

Think about it, do you want to go to a discount dentist or a discount lawyer, or a discount ________ (fill in the blank) ?

Or do you want to go to a Trusted dentist, Trusted lawyer, Trusted __________(fill in the blank) ?

I realize that there is a percentage of the population that are price shoppers but the problem is that unless there is a very good reason to be offering a discount in your advertising messaging, those discounted offers will damage your credibility and make you less trustworthy.

We needed a plumber to check out a problem that had us stumped last month.  When my wife asked who to call, I had her call the plumber I trusted.  It cost me $79 for him to offer a diagnosis and tell us that the faucet was getting old and that I should (and could) replace it myself one day.  He also told us what to do in the meantime to prevent the problem from reoccurring.

Who knows what another plumber would have done?  Tried to convince my wife that we needed $500 worth of repairs right now?  Maybe.  I’ve been through horror stories like that.

I had a dentist for awhile that was finding cavities that my previous dentist didn’t find and when I switched dentists again, the new dentist didn’t find the cavities my the other dentist warned me about. I had a gut feeling about the one dentist that was finding all these cavities and decided not to trust him, even when they offered special pricing to fix these problems.  Or maybe it was because they offered special pricing

Trust is more important than discounts in nearly any situation.  Part of that trust is that trusting that the company or the people are going to provide you with the value you expect for the price you agree to pay.  No one can put a dollar discount on that.  And you shouldn’t.

We will pay more if we trust you and that’s how you make more money.

Discounting Yourself to Death

We’re a week away from Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving.

I asked a few 20 year olds why it’s called Black Friday and the best answer I got was because it is pitch black outside when you visit the store at midnight or 5am to cash in on the savings.

Maybe, but no, wrong answer.

For retailers that sell goods to consumers like you and me and our families, Black Friday earned that nickname because it was the day that retailers finally started earning a profit. Legend was that they operated at a deficit until Christmas shopping season.  Operating at a loss is called in the red and operating at a profit is being in the black.

I say legend because it is nearly impossible for a business to operate at a loss for nearly 11 months.  But here’s the real problem that has been an issue for retailers for years now: Discounts.  price-tag

Retailers use discounts to sell stuff for a couple of reasons.  They discount stuff they want to get rid of to make room for other stuff they want to sell.  Maybe those pink lawnmowers weren’t a great idea after all, so instead of selling them at a profit, they get discounted to what the retailer paid for them, just to get rid of them.

Another kind of discount is just enough to make you and I consider shopping with them instead of the competition.  Pay full price for  a pair of jeans at Store A, or pay 15% less for the same jeans at Store B.

But Black Friday is terrible for retailers. And not that much fun for most consumers who are willing to shop those crazy hours with crazy people to get crazy deals.  It’s simply crazy.

Big Box Stores will always have lower prices than local retailers.  You as a local retailer can’t compete on price.  You may be tempted to sell something below your cost just to introduce someone to your store but it’s a scam.  The customer isn’t getting scammed, you are.

People who discount shoppers are not loyal to you, they are loyal to the discount.  I recently had a retailer that offered a free gift for people on their birthday which we offered to them via a personalized email.  Everyday they had new customers walk in, claim their gift and walk out with out spending a dime.  We did this for 3 months and sure they got plenty of foot traffic and new bodies in the store but the number of new customers was tiny.  We changed things up after that with a more focused approach and it’s working.

We’ve heard plenty of horror stories about discount sites like Groupon.  Often the retailer is unable to provide the goods or services and make any money because of the steep discounts and little money earned.  And buyer beware on the consumer side.  Here’s the fine print on a current offer for a mediocre restaurant:

Promotional value expires 120 days after purchase. Amount paid never expires. Must purchase 1 food item. Limit 1 per person, may buy 2 additional as gifts. Limit 1 per visit. Limit 1 per table. Valid only for option purchased. Not valid towards delivery or carry out.Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.  

A consumer pays $15 instead of $20 for this offer.  Not worth it in my book.

Bottom line is discounting is giving away money.  Your Money.  Your Profit.  It’s not an effective way to stay in business.  Want to stop the discounting game?  Let’s talk.