Value Is Everything
Value- It is a word we have used hundreds of times. The
definition of value (there are several) as it relates to economics: “a measure of the benefit that may be gained
from goods or service” or for marketing: “the difference between a customer’s
evaluation of benefits and costs.”
It is significant that both definitions imply some finite
mathematical calculation- “difference.” Or “measure.” In some cases this may be
immediately quantifiable, in other cases true value can only be known after
benefits are given or revealed.
Neither of these finite measurable is the case in the
apparel world. Other than the difference of the same item from one store to the
next (or one web site to the next), most of value perception in apparel
purchase decisions is subjective. There are a lot of abstract comparisons to be
made:
1.
Price of not same but similar item in same shop-
2 pair of jeans, for example. Same content, different price. Based on what do
you make purchase decision?
a.
Brand perception
b.
Price
c.
Aesthetics- hand feel, colour, FIT.
d.
Whether this is a need purchase or impulse. If
value comparison not clear in your mind, you can choose to do nothing.
2.
Price of similar items in different shops-All of
the above, plus the “believability” factor- Do you believe the sale is real,
and will the price be reduced 5 minutes after you walk out the door?
3.
Magnitude of discount or comparative price
value- IF you felt the original price was a good value, a smaller discount will
get your attention. IF you felt the original discount was too high or just a
template for further discounts, you will need a higher discount to overcome
your price objection.
4.
Function/urgency for the purchase- Interview
suit vs. sweatpants. Again, price will be a consideration, but there is much,
much more in the decision based solely on PERCEPTION- of the brand, the item
itself and how you perceive it makes you look, etc.
So yes, you can calculate the price difference in price
between item a and b that you are considering to purchase, but is that the
major factor in purchase decisions? It is not. I believe;
1.
The final decision is based on VALUE, not PRICE.
Price may figure in the decision, but in almost every case it is not the deal
maker or breaker.
2.
There is a complex set of PERCEPTIONS combined
with calculations which tips the scale toward purchase. Most especially this is
the case because pure mathematics cannot provide the answer. These perceptions
are as strongly related to the seller as they are to the item itself.
Value is critical in another area: human resources. If you
pay $100,000 per year to an individual that can run an entire business for you
(virtually mistake-free), versus paying $50,000 to 3 individuals who do the
same job (at that level, expect mistakes and omissions), you are not paying too
much- you are creating VALUE. Now let’s
say you populated an entire office with this type of individual, you have the
perfect scenario: a. your business is run smoothly and efficiently b. your
expense is minimized and c. your fixed cost is insulated for business downturns
OR may not need to be increased when business grows.
Not everything takes a village, and, if you operate under
the principle of Think Big but Be Small, you have every chance to have a
low-cost, sustainable business and a damn good staff (whom, if you keep paying
well and empowering to operate as they are capable of, will probably stick
around)
All over the world today, companies are guilty of hiring
lower-paid staff (maybe due to inexperience rather than incompetence) rather
than spend more on someone who can do the job with maturity as well as
anticipate or handle problems, thus reducing cost and risk. The consequences
are far-reaching, and we see companies get into trouble and even disappear, but
nobody changes the way things are done. Why?
The fish stinks from the head. Management is responsible and
guilty. What is the main reason for this? As always, fear. Fear of change, fear
of risk, fear of changing the way things have been done since forever. Clearly,
this fear is brought on by the prospect of holding the bag if change doesn’t
work. But, with all due respect, that makes no sense. Why? Because if you do
nothing, you are holding a worse-smelling bag than if you tried and it didn’t
work out as planned. That being said, if you think it through and hire the
right people, simplify and streamline your procedures, there is no reason it
shouldn’t work. I have done it repeatedly and it has never failed.
I always love the idea of Creative Destruction, which finds
its roots in the Hindu Trinity: For something to be born, something must die
(Hindu: typically Brahma the creator, Vishnu the
preserver, and Shiva the
destroyer/regenerator- see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trimurti
) What that means for us, for it is eternally true and we see it in our world
and markets in vivid color, anybody or any business that fails to change with
the markets or the world cannot be regenerated, thus dies (see: Sears). So the
choice is simple: change or die. That is a no brainer for me-you?
Another relevant cliché: lead, follow, or get out of the
way.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments will be moderated and deleted if they are not relevant (showing you read and understood) the post and commented accordingly; IF you comment and attach your own link in the hopes that someone will click, this violates the purpose of me giving FREE information to the world. Say something relevant or BE DELETED. . This is a blog for people who care about the world situation, not to promote their own businesses.
IF you have nothing to say, say nothing. IF you have anything to say, say anything. IF you want to advertise yourself, pay Google to do so. Your opinion (genuine) will always be published; your insincerity will not. So say something!
IF you have nothing personal to say, say nothing. At least not here.
My issues are relevant to all of you, because I know you: Indonesia, China, Russia, I know all of you. Advertise somewhere else, improve the world HERE.
Feel free to comment, not advertise