It's no secret that good pricing
practices are good for business. They increase customer satisfaction, increase profits,
and go a long way toward assuring compliance with the law. While satisfied customers
generally mean repeat business, price errors that stem from haphazard or inefficient
pricing practices can cost stores money. For one thing, the dollar amount of undercharges
often exceeds the dollar amount of the overcharges. For another, it is against the law to
charge more than the advertised shelf price. Stores that do may be subject to civil and
criminal fines.
The Federal Trade Commission and the National
Conference on Weights and Measures say it can be relatively easy to improve pricing
practices-and in the process, boost customer satisfaction, your bottom line, and
compliance with the law. Here are their step-by-step suggestions.
- Contact trade associations like the Food Marketing
Institute or National Retail Federation for how-to manuals on pricing accuracy.
- Contact your local weights and measures officials for
information about inspection procedures and pricing laws. For a copy of the price
verification procedure adopted in 1995 contact: National Conference on Weights and
Measures, PO Box 4025, Gaithersburg, MD 20885, (301) 975-4004.
- Develop written procedures for all forms of pricing
activity in your store. Include ways to ensure that the price in the store's computer
matches the posted or advertised price. Remember that your customer expects to receive the
lowest price posted or advertised.
- Develop training programs for store employees that
stress your commitment to accurate pricing.
- Designate a pricing coordinator for your store.
- Give one employee responsibility for the accuracy of
prices of all Direct Sale Delivery items. Make sure DSD vendors check with the pricing
coordinator before they do any pricing.
- Check prices of a random sample of items-50 or
so-every day to ensure that the price in the store's computer matches the posted or
advertised price. Use the NCWM price verification procedure.
- Do a full store audit several times a year, checking
prices in one aisle, section or area each week. This is the only way you will find all of
the undercharges.
- Have the inventory audit team conduct a pricing audit
while they're doing an inventory audit.
- Use hand-held scanners to speed price audits. Your
wholesaler may be able to provide them.
- Use a portable lable printer during price audits to
immediately replace incorrect or missing shelf labels.
- Offer your customers a reward if they are overcharged.
Giving one item free (up to a maximum dollar value) to any customer who correctly reports
an overcharge builds customer loyalty and support.
- Encourage your trade association or wholesaler to set
up an industry monitoring program. Contact the Pennsylvania Food Merchants Association, PO
Box 870, Camp Hill, PA 17001-0870, (717) 731-0600, for information about its scanning
certification program.
Source: Facts for business-Good Pricing
Practices? Scan Do, Federal Trade Commission (202) 326-3650.
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