PrintE-mail

How To Discount Without Discounting

What's Really Scary About Discounting


Why Discounting Sends Clients To Your Competition

Seven fire trucks.
Six hours of belching smoke.
Scurrying firemen scurrying around, desperate to contain, and
eventually outfox the flames.

And what happens right after your local mall has had a huge fire?


Why a fire-sale, of course

On Sunday morning, in the middle of the year, it was like being in
the midst of the run-up to Christmas.
Cars jammed the parking lot.
Scores of bargain-hunters descended on the stores.
To prevent a riot, and a stampede, several stores literally shut
their doors.


All this chaos over a discount

But one look at the discounted goods would tell you just why there was a discount.
Shoes were soiled.
Bags covered with soot.
Clothes had the distinct 'fire-look' about them.


So what's wrong with your products or services?

Nothing, you say. So why on earth are you planning to give a
discount?

So what if the client asks for a discount? Have you had a fire? Are
your products/services sub-standard in any way?


Now no one has to tell you that discounting is plain stupidity

Because the moment you discount, you're cutting your own throat. You're in effect saying your goods and services are not worth the price on the sticker.

And it's stupidity because most clients are not even looking for a
discount. You just happen to be doling it out, so they're merrily
taking the discount.

What the client really wants is value for money. Value for money
can be quite easily created by 'unbundling' and 'bonuses'.


What's really scary about discounts isn't the 'dumbness' of it all

The fact that you lose money on every transaction, is really your
business. The scary part is the brand you're creating.

Yes, brand. As in branding. As in permanent logo in customer's brain. And that discounting literally drives your customers to the
competition.


So let's pick on a couple of wine brands in your local supermarket

Let's say Brand A is $20, but regularly discounts their product to
$12. Then let's pick on Brand B. Which is priced at $20. And the
price never seems to come down.

In your brain, what's the price of Brand A?
And what's the price of Brand B?

It might well be $20, but your tendency is only to buy Brand A,
when it comes down to $12, because otherwise there's an inherent pain of loss in our brains. We can't bring ourselves to pay $20 for what we perceive to be $12.

But surely I'm out of touch with the wine-industry, you think.
Surely the wine bottle needs to get out of the winery, and into the um...hands of customers.


Well here are some sad, but true facts all the way from wine country in France.

Take two wineries in the Bordeaux district of France. Alfred
Tesseron's wine is now fetching $60 a bottle. In the year 2000
(which was wine of spectacular vintage), he got just $15 a bottle.

In the year 2004, his wine was earning $30 a bottle. And Alfred
hasn't even started to bottle this year's wine, and is already
getting 400% what he was getting seven years ago.

Just an hour's drive away in the nearby village of Margueron, gloom and doom abounds. Due to a glut of Bordeaux in the market, the cheaper wine isn't moving at all. You'd think discounting and cheapness would sell. And yet, brands such as Chateau Cheval Blanc, and Chateau Lafite-Rothschild from the 2005 vintage, are flying off the shelves at $700 a bottle, while the discount wine companies struggle.


You see what's happening in Bordeaux?

Well, it's happening in your home town too. You think that
discounts are what customers really want. And so you discount.

But inevitably you get stuck in a vicious cycle that's impossible to
loop out of.

And all the while, the customers are lapping up your products only when you offer a discount, and go elsewhere and get their products at full price at the competition.

If your real aim is to create value, there are tons of methods that
will cause your customers to buy.
Discounting is not one of them.

Which of course, brings us to a tricky question.


Should you never discount at all?

What about the one-off discount here and there? Does that hurt?

There's no such thing as never. I'd always advise you to give a
bonus instead of a discount, because bonuses have a perceived value that don't require you to undercut your products and services.

But yes, under certain strategic conditions, you may still need to
discount e.g. You want to fill a training room with clients (and
not have an empty room), then you may find it prudent to discount (if only for a fixed period). You may be keen to create a sample of your offering, knowing fully well that the back-end sales will make up for it, then a discount is a clearly strategic decision.


But then, how does that differ from say: Getting a client?

Shouldn't you be able to give a discount to get a client's business.

You could.

But you have to be very careful about how you do go about
structuring a discount. If you're indeed compelled to give a
discount, make sure the client knows the reason--and that the
discount is a one-off.


A fire-sale may be fine for a one-off

But if you have a fire-sale on a constant basis, then seven fire
trucks, with scurrying firemen won't be able to save your business.

That rosy glow you see on the horizon--it's not a stunning sunset.

It's just another idiotic 'discount' business going up in flames.


Psychological Marketing Business Tactics: Small Business Ideas
Why Do Most Headlines Fail?
Sign Up for the PsychoTactics Newsletter and get access to a detailed report on "Why Headlines Fail (And how to create headlines that work)"

subscribe

Why people subscribe

"There are so many little things we have changed that I will be here all day.

Our business has grown and is still growing at an amazing rate, going from
£700 to £7200 for the same month last year, and we are improving month on month.

The Brain Audit, 5000bc and Alchemy Masterclass have changed they way we look at our customers and ourselves.
I must say that finding Sean and Psychotactics is like finding the pot at the end of the rainbow. You have to work for the pot, but its there."
Debbie Perkins
PAZON IGNITIONS
Sittingbourne, UK

I would recommend the Brain Audit/5000bc to anyone in business, whether they owned or managed a fortune 500 company, a small business and especially people in direct sales, or network marketing. If you need customers you need the Brain Audit!

There are many other marketing sites out there. However I haven't found any that make me laugh and teach me at the same time. I'm not just a fan, I'm a student.
Jody Steeg
Canada

"Sean, I love your stuff!
Hypnotic, man. Hypnotic"
Tom Asacker
acleareye.com

"It is amazing how marketing theory can be packaged to become a tool, or just exist as science. What I like best about your site is that each of your publications provides a step by step process to achieve success- true tools for practitioners"
Isis Carter
SCLabs, New Zealand

"I print out your articles every month and post it in our salesman break room. Its easy to apply what you are saying, because of the analogies you make. I love every letter."
Jason Blank,
ICWUSA.COM,
Medford, OR
USA

"Great articles. I like your common language way of explaining concepts. I don't have a lot of time in the day but I can always find time to
read your newsletter when it comes"
Mike Finch
ICWUSA.com,
Medford, OR
USA

If you haven't done so already: Subscribe
(That's a clue!)


P.S. If you like this article, feel free to share it with your own list, post it on your site, on your blog, or add it to your autoresponder. Twitter it, Facebook it, translate it. As long as you leave it intact and do not alter it in anyway. All links must remain in the article. No textual amendments permitted. Only exception is Twitter.

Any links to your own products or services, need to be done separate from the article itself, so that your audience can clearly tell it's your own link.

And include this at the end of the article.
©2001-2009 Psychotactics Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
Article written by Sean D'Souza.
Wouldn't you love to stumble upon a secret library of small business ideas. Find simple, yet electrifying ideas,on website strategy, marketing strategies, copywriting, public speaking, article marketing, sales conversion, psychological tactics and branding. Head down to http://www.psychotactics.com today and judge for yourself.

Useful Marketing Tool: Marketing E-Books
e book brain audit marketing strategy
The Brain Audit
~ Read What 800 people have to say about the Brain Audit~ Find out Why! Your marketing might not be zooming ahead because of a fundamental flaw in your message. Aren't you convinced you can generate 100% -300% more business results, if you did things just a little bit differently?
questionUnsure About Something?

If you have any questions that have been unanswered, please email me directly and let me know how I can help.
I'd be interested in getting your feedback.
The feedback that you give me, is strictly confidential.
Email me at sean@psychotactics.com
Report a bugWhat Bugs You?

Does anything on this website bug you? Nothing is too small or too big.

If there is something we can fix, we'd love to know. In fact, we will give away free product worth US$50 for the best BUG OF THE MONTH!
Click here to report a Bug!
Customise Your Page View