- What is pricing power and why does it matter for PE portfolio companies?
- Pricing power is the ability to raise prices without losing customers or volume. It matters because price increases flow almost directly to profit — unlike volume growth, which carries incremental costs. For PE portfolio companies, pricing power is the fastest path to margin expansion. Aon demonstrated this by achieving 7% organic revenue growth (up from 4-5% historically) while expanding adjusted operating margin 80 basis points to 31.6%, reaching $13.4B in total revenue. Companies with strong pricing power typically share three characteristics: differentiated products, high switching costs, and embedded workflow integration. In PE contexts, pricing is often the first lever pulled post-acquisition because it can generate measurable EBITDA improvement within one to two quarters without requiring significant capital investment or organizational change.
- How do companies implement value-based pricing?
- Value-based pricing sets prices according to the economic value delivered to customers rather than cost-plus markups or competitor benchmarking. Implementation follows a structured process: first, quantify the measurable outcomes your product delivers (revenue gained, costs saved, risk reduced). Then segment customers by value received and willingness to pay. Robert Half International applied this approach by increasing bill rates 8-10% cumulatively, expanding temp staffing gross margin 260 basis points from 37.2% to 39.8%. The critical success factor is building a value quantification capability — tools and training that help sales teams articulate specific dollar impact to each customer segment. Common pitfalls include applying uniform price increases across segments (leaving money on the table with high-value customers while alienating price-sensitive ones) and failing to invest in the customer success infrastructure that supports premium pricing.
- What is product bundling and how does it increase revenue?
- Product bundling combines multiple products or services into a single offering at a price that exceeds individual product pricing while offering customers a discount versus purchasing separately. Bundling increases revenue through three mechanisms: higher average contract values, improved retention, and reduced competitive exposure. Securitas demonstrated this by growing technology solutions from less than 20% to 32% of sales, with bundled clients generating 40-60% higher contract values and retaining at 95%+ versus 85% for single-service clients. HubSpot grew revenue 329% to $2.2B as multi-hub adoption increased from approximately 30% to 44%. The key insight is that bundling works best when components are genuinely complementary — each product becomes more valuable because the customer also uses the others, creating switching costs that compound with each added product.
- How do contract structures affect pricing power?
- Contract structure is a critical but underutilized pricing lever. Key structural elements include contract length, pricing escalators, payment terms, and performance guarantees. ISS A/S embedded CPI-linked escalators into contracts and extended average contract length from 2.5 to 4.2 years, contributing 3-4 percentage points of organic growth. Teleperformance's shift to specialized multi-year contracts grew that segment 109% to EUR 1.36B with 90%+ renewal rates. Longer contracts with built-in escalators provide predictable revenue growth while reducing churn risk and competitive displacement. The trade-off is customer resistance to long commitments — companies must demonstrate sufficient value to justify lock-in. Veeva Systems maintained subscription retention above 119% and gross margins at 85-86% through contracts designed around deep workflow integration.
- What are the risks of aggressive pricing strategies?
- Aggressive pricing carries two primary risks: customer churn and competitive displacement. Cognizant's attempt to shift toward higher-value digital work saw revenue per employee actually decline from approximately $60K to $55K, with operating margins compressing from 18.1% to 15.3% — illustrating how pricing ambition without sufficient differentiation can backfire. A second risk is channel conflict: raising prices on one segment while maintaining discounts elsewhere creates arbitrage opportunities and erodes trust. Successful pricing strategies mitigate these risks by segmenting carefully, investing in value delivery before raising prices, and testing increases with smaller customer cohorts before broad rollout. The safest approach combines modest rate increases (3-5% annually) with structural improvements like bundling and contract optimization that increase price realization without visible sticker shock.