Companies in retail and e-commerce face the challenge of making their pricing more professional when margins stagnate, resources become scarce, or manual pricing processes are inefficient. Professional pricing software offers strategic added value here: It automates administrative tasks, enables data-based pricing decisions and maximizes sales and profit through intelligent algorithms. While rule-based pricing (level 1) creates transparency and trust, demand-based price optimization (level 2) uses machine learning to forecast optimal price points.
However, the correct selection of a pricing solution requires a systematic approach: Studies show that 60% of companies regret software purchases, often with significant financial consequences. A comprehensive, objective and efficient evaluation of various software solutions – ideally with external expertise – is therefore crucial for the long-term success and ROI of the investment.
Three reasons often initiate the introduction of professional pricing software in retail, wholesale and e-commerce:
In this situation, it makes sense to consider technical support that enables better pricing decisions with less manual effort.
Important: The persons acting retain financial responsibility and substantive understanding of pricing. No one leaves the proverbial “driver’s seat.”
In retail and e-commerce, dynamic pricing is often equated with frequent price changes. In our understanding, this is not a mandatory feature. We understand dynamic pricing to be adaptive pricing. Over time, it is regularly (“dynamically”) checked whether the factors and market conditions that determine pricing have changed compared to the last pricing. These factors include, for example:
You can perform this regular review of how the market and other factors have changed manually. Likewise, you and your pricing managers can manually check whether you need to manually optimize the current price for each of your products.
Pricing software…
The first level includes decision rules that are applied in rule-based pricing (also “rule-based pricing”). An internal pricing manager determines the strategic orientation of pricing and defines corresponding decision trees, which are scaled by a pricing system. These rules begin with a definition of the scope, e.g. range sections and article roles (e.g. all corner articles/KVIs in the category XYZ).
The second level builds on the user-defined decision rules and considers them as framework conditions. These framework conditions define a possible price range. Within this price range, an optimal price is set in accordance with the specified pricing strategy, which maximally achieves the target value of a so-called target function. This process and the underlying technology are understood as price optimization.
In the retail industry and in e-commerce, at least six data sources are connected to pricing software:
The evaluation of different providers of pricing software is ideally carried out (a) comprehensively, (b) objectively and (c) efficiently.
A comprehensive evaluation refers both to (a) a longlist of relevant providers that is as complete as possible and to (b) including all relevant evaluation dimensions and criteria as completely as possible. These evaluation criteria include
An objective evaluation means that the (a) manner, (b) the evaluation instruments and (c) the evaluation compression into a recommendation are determined in advance (“ex-ante”) and applied equally to all software options – i.e. unbiased (without “bias”).
An efficient evaluation ensures that internal resources are used as productively as possible when evaluating pricing tool options. Efficiency in the evaluation is ensured (a) by a step-by-step prioritization in the evaluation process and (b) by the introduction of the relevant project assets by an experienced expert.
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