--- id: ins_simon-premium-price-champion operator: Hermann Simon operator_role: Founder Simon-Kucher & Partners; pricing pioneer; author Confessions of the Pricing Man, Hidden Champions source_url: https://www.simon-kucher.com/ source_type: book source_title: "Confessions of the Pricing Man — Premium Price Champions" source_date: 2015-10-23 captured_date: 2026-05-05 domain: [strategy, product, pmm] lifecycle: [pricing-packaging, brand-strategy, productisation] maturity: applied artifact_class: framework score: { originality: 3, specificity: 4, evidence: 4, transferability: 4, source: 5 } tier: B related: [ins_simon-single-price-always-suboptimal, ins_premium-pricing-virtuous-cycle, ins_neumeier-onlyness-test] raw_ref: raw/expert-content/experts/hermann-simon.md --- # Premium pricing is sustained by continuous innovation, brand investment, and discipline, not by raising the price ## Claim A premium price is only sustainable when customers perceive a superior price-to-value ratio (not the lowest price, but the best value). Sustaining that perception requires continuous innovation to maintain the value gap, brand-building to signal quality, heavy communication investment (customers cannot pay for value they do not perceive), and discipline to resist the temptation of discounts and special offers that erode price integrity. ## Mechanism Premium pricing depends on a value-perception gap that must be defended over time. Three forces work continuously to close the gap: (a) competitors copy and approach feature parity; (b) buyers normalise the premium experience and stop perceiving it as differentiated; (c) the seller's own communication ages and stops landing. Each of these requires a counter-investment, innovation to widen the gap, brand to signal continued superiority, communication to keep the value visible. Without this triple investment, the premium erodes; the seller then resorts to discounting, which (per the discounting card) accelerates the erosion permanently. ## Conditions Holds when: - The category has high enough margins that the innovation + brand + communication investment is sustainable. - The buyer can perceive value differences (most considered-purchase B2C, most B2B with complex evaluation). - The seller has organisational discipline to resist short-term discount pressure during quarterly stress. Fails when: - Commodity categories where buyer cannot perceive premium value (some utilities, some infrastructure). - Companies that cannot fund continuous innovation due to capital constraints. - Categories in disruption where the entire premium-positioning landscape is collapsing (e.g., legacy taxi vs. ride-share economics). ## Evidence > "Premium price champions maintain a superior price-to-value ratio (not the lowest price, but the best value), sustain that superiority through continuous innovation, build strong brands that serve as quality signals, invest heavily in communication (customers cannot pay for value they do not perceive), and resist the temptation of discounts and special offers that erode price integrity." · see `raw/expert-content/experts/hermann-simon.md` line 17. ## Signals - Innovation cadence is continuous, not one-and-done, premium tier features ship at least quarterly. - Brand and communication budgets are protected during downturns (a counter-cyclical signal of premium-pricing discipline). - Discount-on-premium-tier rates near zero; sales reps cannot discount premium without executive sign-off. ## Counter-evidence Premium pricing is not always the right strategy. Network-effect categories (consumer marketplaces, social platforms) often win with low or zero pricing precisely because user count is the value. Hormozi's "starving crowd" framework starts from market choice, not price tier, premium positioning makes sense in some markets and not others. ## Cross-references - `ins_simon-single-price-always-suboptimal`, premium pricing is the high tier in a differentiated structure. - `ins_premium-pricing-virtuous-cycle`, Hormozi's adjacent claim about the compounding mechanism. - `ins_neumeier-onlyness-test`, Onlyness is what makes the value gap defensible against feature-parity competitors.