BY Carol Tice| 23 hours ago|
It may sound odd, but small businesses are increasingly handing out pay raises. …
Apparently, the pay-raise trend is pretty widespread. A Pepperdine University/Dun & Bradstreet Credibility Corp. study showed 43 percent of small businesses have already hiked worker pay in the past year, and 42 percent said they plan to raise pay this year. …
This may be a critical time to raise prices for many businesses in any case, as prices are rising or remaining high for many basic materials.
With the economy still so uncooperative, how can you sell customers on a price hike? Here are five ideas:
Image via Wikipedia
Related: More Small Businesses Plan to Push Up Prices in 2012
- Offer valued-customer discounts. Take a page from grocery stores and offer one price for your loyal frequent shoppers, and a higher one for occasional users. That way you can start grossing more without alienating your core customer base. Don't make those customers haul around a loyalty card, either -- keep the information on who gets the good prices on file yourself.
Image via Wikipedia - Introduce new products. … What can you sell that your competitors don't? Add fresh items that can't be easily price compared and you can charge a better markup on them.
Related: Four Rules for Pricing Products
- Review and retool your product assortment. Do you know which of your products has the lowest margins, and which has the highest? … Then drop slower-moving, low-net products and add more high-end ones. Also review competitors' pricing to see whether some products are priced unnecessarily low. Small, strategic increases on a few popular items can add up quickly, while customers may barely notice the difference.
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