
Tesla, Elon Musk’s EV carmaker, published its Q3 results earlier today (Australia time). Profits plunged 44 per cent. But, from my perspective this was the interesting part: “after it cuts prices to boost sales“.
Let’s unpack that for a second: Tesla “slashed prices by around 25 per cent in the United States during the last year” – “putting the priority on sales rather than profit“.
As it happens, this is also a common trait of professional services firms: prioritizing getting the deal done over making an actual profit – including agreeing to heavy “volume discounts”.
As the Tesla results show though, any price discount you give comes directly from profit – not sales revenue.
So the price discount you offer your clients is essentially compounded on your bottom line – 10% is not 10%, it’s more like 30%.
Or in the case of Tesla: a 25% price discount has resulted in a 44% plunge in profit.
Something to think about when you are next thinking about what pricing options you have available to you.
And please, don’t follow this advice:
“I view it as a way to defend market share at the expense of margin” .
Kevin Roberts, director of industry insights and analytics at CarGurus, an online auto sales site
In professional services firms, market share should never Trump (pun intended) profit.
As usual, if you need any help with any of this, feel free to reach out.