Early in our work on pricing, we assumed that a strong strategy will automatically translate into better results. After all, we have the frameworks, the tiers, and the margin formulas in place. But what I have found, the hard way, is that pricing strategy on paper doesn’t guarantee results in the real world.
Execution is where the rubber meets the road—and what we need is not better pricing but better economic outcomes.
My wake-up call came when we analyzed a key segment of our accounts. This segment of customers—similar in size, purchasing behavior, and expected value—were supposed to follow a consistent pricing logic. We expected a tight cluster of prices, some variance for volume or loyalty, but largely predictable behavior.
What we saw instead was chaos:
In short, every gap in execution was costing us margin, confusing customers, and forcing our teams into firefighting mode to defend our pricing policies. The strategy wasn’t broken—our execution was.
We could have blamed sales for discounting, or finance for slow updates, or marketing for over-promising. But the truth was systemic:
The problem wasn’t individual behavior; it was a system that rewarded improvisation and punished consistency. And created a great deal of internal conflict.
I reframed the problem through what we call the Profit Streams framework. The idea is simple: Profit Streams are created when three very basic things align—customer segmentation, product portfolio pricing alignment, and disciplined execution.
Inconsistent execution breaks all three. If customers are mis-tiered, products mispriced, or sales improvising, there is no repeatable path to sustainable profitability. You can tweak price levels endlessly, but the leaking will persist until execution is fixed.
We approached the challenge systematically, separating responsibilities but collaborating on recommendations between Product and Pricing. This shared accountability, while acknowledging individual expertise, ensured each team could focus on its role in contributing to a Profit Stream.
Product:
Pricing:
This was not about adding more controls or stricter rules. It was about removing ambiguity and giving our teams the confidence to make good pricing decisions in the field.
The outcomes were immediate and measurable:
The pricing strategy didn’t change, but the economic outcomes did.
I realized that every company with pricing collaboration faces this challenge. Many assume discounts are purely a sales problem or margin erosion is inevitable. In reality, it’s about the hidden gaps—the misalignments that create noise in the data. Fix the gaps, and the margins follow.
This experience reshaped my approach to pricing. Now, every new product, customer tier, or promotion is evaluated not just for strategy, but for how it will execute in practice. I track alignment, consistency, and commitment as rigorously as price points or margin targets.
Profit Streams are not theory—they are visible, measurable, and repeatable. Execution is the bridge between strategy and sustainable results, and that bridge requires constant attention.
The takeaway is clear: If you want to create reliable Profit Streams, you have to see the gaps, fix the system, and empower teams to act with confidence.