Blog Index

How to Approach Increasing Your Prices in Response to Inflation: Mark Stiving and Steven Forth in conversation

Steven Forth

Many are debating the implications of inflation for price increases. In this podcast, on Mark Stiving’s popular Impact Pricing Podcast Channel, Mark and Steven debate how we should respond to inflation and what it means for pricing.

Listen to the podcast here.

One perspective is that inflation creates a context where price increases are expected, justified and will be accepted. Large organizations like IBM have used higher costs as a reason for broad price increases.

At the same time though, Microsoft has found buyers becoming cost conscious over the past few months, putting price pressure on popular bundles with buyers opting for cheaper more targeted packages.

What is the right pricing response?

Ibbaka’s point of view is that any pricing actions should be

Surgical and depend on how much value you are creating for customers (V2C) and how much value the customer is providing back (LTV)

Dependent on how well your customers are doing and how they are responding to the changed economic conditions

Based on a long-term plan for how pricing will set up your business for when the economy recovers

Some further thoughts on this can be found in these posts.

Before taking pricing action manage discounting

Customer segmentation for price increases

Other people on the Ibbaka team, Ed Arnold and Karen Chiang, have also been featured on the Impact Pricing Podcast Channel.

Other Ibbaka podcasts with Mark Stiving

Pricing for NDR (Net Dollar Retention)

Executing on usage based pricing

What to price? What to optimize? How to optimize? Three key pricing questions

When and how to change your pricing metric

How to introduce usage-based pricing

New skills for usage-based pricing

Value paths are the key to usage-based pricing

Pricing under uncertainty and the need for usage-based pricing

Enabling Usage-Based Pricing - Interview with Adam Howatson of LogiSense

Usage-based pricing a complement and not a substitute