Rick Baker Thought Posts
Left Menu Space Holder

About the author

Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

E-mail me Send mail
Follow me LinkedIn Twitter

Search

Calendar

<<  December 2024  >>
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
2526272829301
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
303112345

View posts in large calendar

Recent Comments

Comment RSS

Is your gross margin growing?

by Rick Baker
On Feb 15, 2013

Is your gross margin growing?

I'm assuming you have a concrete definition of gross margin, you measure performance against a gross margin target/goal, and your gross margin contributes to growth of cash-flow.

Is your gross margin growing?

If not, Why not?

You may sum up your answer in 2 words - "competitive pressures", which typically involve price competition. Your competition is offering lower prices and you feel pressure to do something to react to the competitive pressure.

When your prices are under competitive pressure you often react 2 ways:

  1. You drop your price "to meet the competition" and 
  2. You hold your price and lose the client to the competitor who offered the lower price. 

When you drop your price in response to competitive price pressures and you keep the client, one of 4 situations exist:

  1.  You are still able to meet your gross margin target...and your cash-flow is not impaired

  2. You make a positive gross margin but it fall shorts of meeting your gross margin target...and your cash-flow falls short of expectations
  3. You make a negative gross margin...and your cash-flow is reduced
  4. You are not sure about your gross margin because you do not measure it...and you are equally unsure about your cash-flow.

When you hold your price and lose the client: sometimes they depart quickly, they slip away without fanfare; sometimes they leave following an agonizing energy-eating sales process. Either way, the client is gone. The gross margin you forecast is gone. And, the cash-flow you forecast is gone.

In all of the above scenarios your gross margin is not growing.

If the above scenarios are what you are experiencing on a day-to-day basis then your gross margin is not growing. 

And that's not where you want your business to be.

You want to make some adjustments so:

  • you have an accurate understanding of your gross margin
  • you know how exposed your gross margin is to price competition, the less exposed the better
  • you have strategies for growing gross margin
  • you communicate those strategies to your people, especially your sales people

Gross margin is intimately linked to Value proposition...Value as seen by your clients, that is.



Tags:

Leaders' Thoughts | Marketing | Questions?: The Art of Asking Good Questions | Sales

Add comment

biuquote
Loading

Copyright © 2012. W.F.C (Rick) Baker. All Rights Reserved.