Communicating price increases – why attitude matters more than percentages
Guest article by sales expert Oliver Schumacher
Price increases are like thunderstorms: everyone knows they’re coming – but when the time comes, many salespeople flinch. The fear is great: “How will the customer react? Will they back out? Will they bring in the competition?”
As a speaker and sales trainer, I say: it’s not the price increase itself that’s dangerous – it’s the way it’s communicated.
When inner uncertainty radiates outward
I see it in countless training sessions: salespeople enter a price negotiation like a student entering a math exam – with their heads down, full of doubt, looking for excuses. And customers sense this immediately.
Those who do not stand behind their price adjustment radiate uncertainty – and open up a discount poker game with the customer that ends up being expensive.
Three principles for strong communication
On stage and in seminars, I like to get to the heart of the matter:
Attitude beats arguments – those who are proud of their performance sell more convincingly than those who only justify numbers.
Clarity creates trust – customers want to know: When does the new price take effect? Why is it justified?
Language determines emotions – “new prices” sounds like the future. “Price increase” sounds like loss.
Price increases as an impetus for greater strength
A price adjustment is not a request – it is a signal: We stand by our value. Those who communicate this consistently and confidently often even gain respect.
In my lectures, I provide inspiration on this topic, and in my training sessions, we practice it in a practical way:
- Announcing price increases in a way that comes across as professional.
- Confidently countering customer objections such as “too expensive.”
- Turning price discussions into opportunities – for example, for additional sales or new service packages.
Conclusion: More pride, fewer discounts.
Price increases are part of business. The decisive factor is not whether they happen, but how salespeople talk about them.
As a speaker, I inspire sales teams to no longer see price increases as a specter, but as an opportunity to strengthen their own attitude. And as a trainer, I prepare salespeople so that they don’t fear the next price adjustment – but use it as a stage to show: We are worth our money.
Book Oliver Schumacher as a trainer or speaker: 1 (704) 804 1054 or oliver.schumacher@premium-speakers.com
