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Trends & Insights    >    Publications    >    ACNielsen Insights Asia Pacific

Price and Profitability - What Your Brand Needs to Know About the Price of Profitability

Brand survival and profit
Fundamentally, a brand’s continuity depends on its ability to sustain itself over the longer term. This means that the profit it attracts by virtue of building its equity must be utilized in ensuring its sustenance. Therefore, almost all marketing activity centered around the four Ps of
marketing (Price, Place, Promotion, Packaging) carefully balances the resultant outcome on the fifth P – Profitability.


A brand’s profitability can be influenced by a variety of internal and extraneous factors but it is invariably linked to its pricing. Pricing is central to a brand’s marketing strategy: it cannot operate in isolation of other marketing activities and it is a primary driver of brand profit.

Shoppers: making sense of what they say

It is critical to understand how the ultimate arbiters of brand / marketing success, namely consumers and shoppers, view themselves. ACNielsen ShopperTrends, a study conducted across 50 countries, identifies what shoppers seek from retailers and understands their
shopping behaviour in conjunction with retailer brand equity. By intersecting what consumers
claim they want from retailers, with what actually influences their shopping behaviour, it is easier to pinpoint consumers’ propensity towards spiralling prices in the midst of an increasingly aggressive and price-focused trade environment.

Surprisingly, the difference between the factors that shoppers state are important versus what ShopperTrends has found to be important indicates that ‘low prices’, though claimed by shoppers to be a key determinant in driving choice, is relatively less so. Factors such as
‘Easy to find’, ‘Well stocked’, ‘Wide range and variety’ and ‘Selection of quality brands and products’ are just as likely to be true drivers of shopper choice. ‘Low prices’, on the other
hand, is seen to be a statement that is ‘said, but not meant’.


This conclusively proves that shoppers see competitive prices as a necessary or ‘hygiene’ condition amongst retailers and that ‘better prices’ per se is not necessarily a strong differentiator. This is because other retail characteristics are also important, and can help a retailer support a price premium versus the hard discounter. Factors such as range, availability, convenience, and quality, too, can have a bearing on a shopper’s ‘exercised’ choice. Additionally, brand owners can use their brands and their marketing investments to help retailers achieve differentiation in these areas.

Nevertheless, pricing is an integral part of creating value, sustaining shopper loyalty and ensuring brand profitability. It is for this reason that pricing strategy assumes the
importance it commands and must follow a specific and deliberate process before it takes its final form. This process calls for management decisions on product, pricing, distribution, promotion and personal selling, and in some instances, even customer service. This definition
implies that pricing is central to profitable brand marketing!

 





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