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This Christmas, clever retailers will price like airlines

In 1998, Alan Hess published a very humorous take on what would happen if airlines sold paint. This Christmas, retailers of all products (not just paint) may want to seriously ask themselves if they should be running their business like an airline. Dun & Bradstreet’s National Business Expectation Survey just revealed that expectations for inventory […]
Jon Manning
This Christmas, clever retailers will price like airlines

In 1998, Alan Hess published a very humorous take on what would happen if airlines sold paint. This Christmas, retailers of all products (not just paint) may want to seriously ask themselves if they should be running their business like an airline.

Dun & Bradstreet’s National Business Expectation Survey just revealed that expectations for inventory levels have risen to their highest point since 2000. For retailers, this Christmas is going to be just as much about inventory management as it is about pricing management, which is something airlines have mastered since American Airlines first introduced the practice of revenue management 40 years ago.

Most airline passengers have now been conditioned that if they want the cheapest airfare, they have to book early. As the day of departure approaches, airfares tend to increase in price, as the airlines manage their inventory ensuring they have sufficient seats remaining for the price-insensitive, time-sensitive business traveller.

For retailers, Christmas day is the day of departure. And as that day approaches, shoppers who haven’t completed their Christmas shopping become increasingly price-insensitive and time-sensitive. Like an airline, retailers’ prices can likewise reflect this pattern of demand: the best prices are available during November, but as Christmas approaches, prices are slowly increased.

This strategy also allows you to be price-competitive when it counts, with all those overseas online retailers who have been eating into your margins all year. And as Christmas approaches, their window of opportunity to deliver before Christmas gets more and more tenuous.

Bundling can also play a useful role in the lead-up to Christmas. Put some complimentary products together into a bundle or package, offering them at a discount on the sum of the price, but make sure the products are available individually to make the bundle attractive.

Finally, focus on the in-store experience. While you’re competitive on price, and you’ve got customers in your store (and not online), give customers an in-store experience they will want to come back to. Scott Kilmartin, who runs a shop call Haul in North Fitzroy in Melbourne, has just given his store a new look ahead of Christmas. In fact, why not give them an offer that brings them back to the store in during the back-end of January or early February (which is probably going to be a very tough period for retailers)?

As we all know, buying paint from a hardware store goes something like this: 

Customer: Hi, how much is your interior flat latex paint in Bone White?

Store assistant: We have a medium quality, which is $16 a gallon, and premium, which is $22 a gallon. How many gallons would you like?

Customer: I’ll take five gallons of the medium quality, please.

Store assistant: That will be $80 plus GST.

But if we were buying paint from an airline, it might sound something like this, as Alan H. Hess reported about 15 years ago:

Customer: Hi, how much is your paint?

Store assistant: Well, sir, that all depends.

Customer: Depends on what?

Store assistant: Actually, a lot of things.