negotiation with the bride on wedding album package

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I take great photos but what should I charge for them? Article 3 – Value Added Pricing.

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Hi all … Here is the last of my 3 articles on Pricing and what you should charge for your great photos.  This articles deals with the concept of value added pricing. This strategy is widely promoted in the B2B (Business to Business) Sale, particularly in the delivery of complex systems. It is based on the principle of fixing your price based on the value it delivers your customer e.g. Let’s say you develop a specialist purchasing software that can save the potential customers company 200,000 a year. At what price do you pitch your solution? 5000, 50000, 100000 what about 200,000 over 3 years? They save 600,000 over 3 years less the 200,000 they pay you, meaning the still have a net saving of 400,000. Could you sell this system at this price? Why not?, is every one not a winner at this price. This method of determining prices needs highly trained sales people and the more complex the solution the more effective it is. So as photographers what can we learn from value added pricing strategies and how can we used value added pricing for a wedding album or indeed a quality portrait?

Well let’s think about this one… what is the value of quality wedding photography? … Precious memories that will not be repeated again … a timeless keepsake reminder of the day a woman dreams about since being a little girl … and if that was not enough probably the only memory spark she will have of one of the most hectic days of her life … Think about it, If you are married how much of your wedding day do you actually remember? If you are like most I have talked to … very little. So in fact your great photos are in fact priceless … I have spoken to many a bride after getting lousy photos taken by unprofessional photographers who still cry when they think about their wedding album keepsake.

While you may not be able to use value added pricing strategy to fix your price at crazy figures you should be able to use the principle of value added pricing to justify why you charge the price a professional album sells for. Why not show the bride the difference between what you supply and an amateur will supply… Show her the value of what you as a professional provide. Use effective questioning to determine her budget and show her how you add value to ensure she has quality lasting memories forever of her dream day which is typically a forgotten haze without the memory spark of quality photography.

I hope you have gotten something from my 3 articles on pricing and I look forward to your comments and suggestions. If there is a sale’s or marketing topic you would like me to address please post a moment here or email me at pvphotoman@photovalue.com.

PV Photoman

I take Great Photos but what should I charge for them? – Article 2 – Competitor Analysis Pricing and what will the customer pay.

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

Hi All Again. Following my last article answering the above great question… here is the second article on pricing in the series of three. Hopefully at the end of these articles you will have all the possible pricing strategies

So the second pricing strategy is Competitor Analysis Pricing. Competitor Analysis is a tool often used in strategy development particularly with the Strength & Weaknesses dimensions of the SWOT analysis tool. Strengths and Weaknesses are internal business considerations targeted at your internal company. To qualify to be a “Strength” it must be something that you are better than your competition at… For example Ryanair are known to have a much lower cost base than much of their competition and is therefore a definite Strength.  For something to be a weakness again it should be measured against the competition… Right now Willie Walsh the CEO of British Airways probably regards the unionised culture within BA as a weakness when comparing BA to Ryanair. I hope this explains the S&W parts of SWOT. So what has this to do with pricing?

Well often some companies do “Competitor Analysis Pricing” by looking simply at what their competition charge for something and then just matching or indeed beating it. Have you done this? … I have in the past … and what a fatal mistake when done on its own.  Why is it a fatal mistake on its own? Well it takes no account of measuring your actual costs which could result in you selling below cost … Even worse what if your costs were higher than your competitors and you pitched your prices lower? What then … Well you could start a price war against a competitor who can beat you in this price war will eventually put you out of business.

Another strategy often employed is “Asking the customer what they are willing to pay?” Again accepting these prices without knowing your costs or indeed your competitors pricing can cause you to do work at a loss or again significantly undercut a competitor and start an unnecessary price war. I am not saying not to ask the customer what they are willing to pay as this can be a great way to identify their available budget but make sure if you ask them this that you know what you can offer them for this price and still make a profit.

The above of blindly just doing something reminds me of something my Mother used to say when I used to use my Brother as an excuse to justify doing something wrong … My Mother used to say “If my brother jumped off a cliff would I jump off after him” … Guess she didn’t know I was a superhero who could fly … eh!

Next week we will discuss Value – added pricing in the last of these pricing articles.

Bye for now

PV Photoman

The Lifetime Value (LTV) of a Bride to a photographer?

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Doesn’t every profession have its sayings and unique lingo that mean’s something to that profession. So when the marketers talk about LTV or Lifetime Value of a customer … what do they actually mean? Well my understanding of LTV is … how much a customer or opportunity may be worth to you over their lifetime. What relevance is that to me … Sure most brides get married just once or maybe a second time? … I hear you say … and I agree.. but what LTV means is what other opportunities might arise and how do you place yourself so that you can get further business from each opportunity you create and therefore maximise the LTV from your customer base…  and ensure a bigger pay packet from each of your customers.

OK before we start on these possible opportunities to maximise the LTV …just one thing… The hardest and most costly part of getting a new customer is acquiring them in the first place … so we should absolutely do everything in the most professional way we can to ensure we get repeat business from them … another reason to maximise the LTV… OK but how? … Well here are a few ideas and I am sure you will have many more … If you do please add them as a comment on this blog so everyone can benefit from them.

Idea 1 – How many of you give each Bride and Groom a voucher of a sitting for their first child? OK not everyone have Children but allot do. At what stage in a person’s like is spent most on Photography and by whom? … Have you guessed yet? … After the birth of the first child and by the new proud Mother … It might take a few years for this to come to fruition but I bet the Bride/New Mother will remember she has the voucher you gave her when they collected their album and that she uses this voucher as the reason why … in her negotiation with her husband … that there should be professional photography done.

Idea 2 – Leading on from Idea 1… when they partake of this ‘first child’ sitting and order loads of framed pictures … bet they do … what do you do … Well depending on their religion or practises is there anything there you could give a voucher for? You know your culture and religious practise best so think about that one… and yes of course you give another voucher for the possibility of another new child sitting… or family portrait … or first birthday … or anything else you think is worth a try.

Idea 3 – What is likely to be another major event and not trying to be morbid or anything but probably death of someone close to your past customer. In fact I know a Photographer who at every wedding takes a very good shot of any grandparents at the wedding … What I hear you say … well yes it makes perfect sense after he explained it to me as follows … Who on the law of averages will be the next one to pass on? … Yeah the grand parents … and when they need a good photo for the memorial cards guess where they come … in fact guess who supplies them the memorial cards? Right the photographer who took the quality shots of the grandparents at the wedding and he sells lots of them… now that photographer really understands LTV. I suggested to him that they may in fact like to have a memorial book on the life of their dearly loved one and he could offer them the additional service of producing this for them from old photographs etc. I believe he has plans for this in 2010.             

There are hundreds of other things you could do and the best person to come up with these is you. You know your customers best … you know your culture … your market … your countries customs way better than me. So take some time to think about the concept of LTV for you and come up with ways to maximise the LTV opportunity of all your customers.

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Go for it … and in so doing create a bigger pay packet with more money for yourself rather than the poor guy in the cartoon above.  

For those of you who are attending SWPP 2010 in London next week, come along and see the wide range of photographic slip in folders and strut mounts, traditional I Nobili wedding albums, modern digital I Nobili albums and our range of memories photo book albums including the Rubens & Da Vinci. I may not be there in person myself … us superhero’s can never plan anything as you never know when someone needs to be rescued but my colleagues Hannah Radhi & Ronan Ryle will look after you well.  

 

 Happy Snapping everyone

 PV Photoman

How do you sell your wedding albums packages and how do you up-sell your bride in a recession?

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

From my experience dealing with Photographers there seems to be just two main ways a Photographer sells his wedding packages. The first is via a range of wedding packages starting at a particular price point with three or four price points. From my experience all photographers might charge these at different rates but I have seen packages start at £800 going up to £5000.

£5000 I hear your say… I couldn’t sell that. Think about it … If you offer it do you actually need to sell any … you will still sell more because it will up-sell your Bride. How will it do this? I will answer this with a few questions which I will answer myself:

Who makes the decision to order a particular album? Answer: The Bride heavily influenced by the women in her relationship.

Who has no say or very little? Answer: The Groom … however he is generally there to make his new wife to feel that he is really interested or if he was really honest to make sure she does not spend too much.

I am sure you will agree with me that watching this buying process can be really fun. Watching the reactions of both of them, keen not to annoy each other, this early in their life together. So what generally happens… You tell me … you see this interaction more than I do … but this is what I have seen and think this is probably typical. Let’s say for simplicity sake you have three packages … One the entry level at £1000, a middle package £1700 and your premium deluxe package at say even £2500 (if £5000 makes you uncomfortable). So tell me which one sells most? Don’t tell me… let me guess the £1700 middle package. Did you ever ask yourself why the middle package sells most? Here is the reason… The Groom would be happy with the £1000 package … The Bride would love the £2500 package … So where do they compromise … you are right the middle one .. so they spend £1700. All the talk about having a budget etc is total baloney … This is just used as a negotiation tactic between them and you and each other.

 So what happens if you stop at the middle package and never offer a Deluxe Premium Package? You are right you will sell less of what should be your £1700 middle packages.

So what do you do? I would suggest you always have on display you’re Premium De- Luxe package with the expectation you will sell few of these but that it will sell more of your next package down. This is what I call strategic positioning of your offering to up sell your customer. In a recession this is even more important as the Bride is much more likely to feel the pressure to compromise more and not go for the De-Luxe album option.

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So if you agree with me what should you do? Contact Hannah or Ronan at www.photovalue.com and order an I Nobili Magnum Modern album. I guarantee this album will help you increase your sales next year and if it doesn’t I’ll eat my hat.  

 

 

By the way a final tip… always show the Bride the most expensive package first. This way you set in her mind the need that she really likes … and if she gets her way she may even just place that order for one.

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Hopefully the negotiation dynamic your bride and grooms work through are far more subtle than the two on the left. 

Season’s Greetings to you all and I wish you all a Healthy & Prosperous 2010.   

Happy Snapping

PV Photoman