In this episode of Pricing Heroes, we sit down with Dr. Stephan Liozu, Founder of Value Innoruption Advisors, a boutique consultancy specializing in industrial, digital, and value-based pricing. Stephan is the author of more than a dozen books on pricing, including The Pricing Journey, and has published extensively in the Journal of Professional Pricing. He also serves on the advisory boards of the Professional Pricing Society and LeveragePoint Innovation.
Stephan’s career path is anything but conventional. Having started in general management before becoming a CEO in the building materials industry, he later transitioned into pricing through a PhD focused on value-based pricing. Since then, he has become a leading voice on pricing transformation, change management, and leadership.
Our conversation explores how professionals can build rewarding careers in pricing, the importance of change leadership, how retailers can navigate inflation and supply chain shocks, and what lessons can be drawn from SaaS and service models to create stronger customer value.
Stephan describes himself as someone who didn’t “grow up” in pricing. His early career focused on business leadership, culminating in a CEO role. But along the way, pricing and value became central themes in his work, especially in industries with distributors and differentiated products.
In 2009, he pursued a doctorate in value-based pricing, researching the shift from cost-plus to customer-centric approaches. That academic work became his second book, The Pricing Journey, and launched his career in pricing advisory.
“I wasn’t born a pricing expert,” he reflects. “I came into pricing with business experience. That gave me a different perspective on how pricing drives the entire enterprise.”
Asked what advice he would give to aspiring pricers, Stephan is clear: pricing is one of the best places for ambitious professionals to gain experience. “Pricing touches everything—sales, supply chain, marketing. Spending time in pricing makes you better at all of them.”
But he cautions that pricing leadership requires more than analytics. The best VPs of pricing combine technical expertise with soft skills like emotional intelligence, change management, and leadership.
“To become a VP, you have to be a leader,” he emphasizes. “It’s not just about running Excel models. You need to speak the language of top management, sales, and marketing. Business acumen and influence are as critical as technical depth.”
In today’s volatile environment, Stephan argues, pricing professionals must also be change agents. The last five years have been “chaotic,” and leaders who cannot manage or drive change will fall behind.
He offers three key recommendations:
“You need to be an engine of change,” he explains. “Know the technical side, yes, but also be a charismatic leader who brings people along.”
Looking back at 2022, Stephan points to three defining challenges:
He highlights the importance of anticipating mega-trends, whether it’s flu season, construction cycles, or inflation. “Retailers should already be working on 2024 and 2025,” he says. “If you don’t anticipate, you’re caught with empty shelves and lost sales.”
Stephan warns that the coming year will be unusual: some categories will face ongoing inflation (food, energy), while others will deflate (commodities like wood and steel). Retailers must adapt pricing in real time.
Consumers, he notes, are more vocal than ever. “They read that prices are going down, but don’t see it in stores. That creates frustration and political scrutiny.”
Retailers must:
“If your suppliers drop prices by 10%, maybe you pass 8% on to customers and retain 2%,” Stephan advises. “It’s about intelligence and fairness. Push prices too far, and customers change behavior.”
While SaaS companies often struggle with pricing maturity, Stephan believes retailers can learn from their agility. SaaS firms pivot quickly, experiment, and adapt value propositions—traits retailers should adopt.
Retailers can also innovate with bundles, services, and warranties. Stephan cites Best Buy as a standout: price-match guarantees, supplier “stores within a store,” and Geek Squad services that turn an $84 product into a $300 sale with installation and warranties.
“Don’t just sell products,” he urges. “Sell systems, services, and experiences. That’s where the pricing power is.”
Ultimately, Stephan argues, pricing is only as strong as the value proposition it supports. “Pricing won’t save you if traffic goes down,” he cautions. “Innovation, differentiation, and a great value prop—combined with pricing technology—are what make retailers successful.”
He points to examples from industrial distribution and consumer retail where companies like Grainger, Fastenal, and Best Buy have stayed relevant by pairing strong pricing with broader innovation strategies.
For professionals eager to expand their knowledge, Stephan shares his go-to resources:
Above all, he emphasizes curiosity: “Every day, I read, search, and download papers. There’s so much free information out there. You have to stay curious and build your own skills.”
Olena: Hello and welcome to Pricing Heroes Podcast by Competera. It is a series of interviews with the best-in-class retail pricing experts driving their company’s bottom-line metrics for the retail industry.
Our guest today is Stephan Liozu. Stephan is the Founder of Value Innoruption Advisors, a consulting boutique specializing in industrial, digital, and value-based pricing.
He’s an author of 12 books on pricing and has written many articles on strategic pricing issues for the Journal of Professional Pricing. Stephan also sits on the advisory board of the Professional Pricing Society and LeveragePoint Innovation.
Hi Stephan, thank you for joining me today.
Stephan: Thanks for having me. Yeah, that’s quite a long bio.
Olena: Very impressive. So first things first, could you please tell our listeners more about yourself, your background, and your path?
Stephan: Interestingly enough, I didn’t start my career in pricing. I was more of a business person and worked my way up to become CEO of a building materials company.
Along the way, I really paid attention to pricing and value in my roles, because I was always working for very differentiated companies. We had to do pricing, and with a lot of distributors we needed to help them with pricing as well.
So in 2008, I decided I needed to pursue a doctorate degree. I started in 2009 and did my dissertation on value-based pricing—on how to move from cost-plus to value in strategy, pricing, and marketing. I later published that as my second book, The Pricing Journey.
Since then, I left the corporate world in 2012 and I’ve been helping lots of companies get better at pricing. So I’m not per se a pricing expert—I wasn’t “born” in pricing—but I entered the field with a lot of business experience.
Olena: I see. That’s actually something I wanted to ask you at the end, but since we’re speaking about your background and not being born in pricing—what advice would you give people who are thinking about moving deeper into pricing or deciding on their careers right now? What made you realize this was the path you wanted to take?
Stephan: First of all, pricing is part of marketing. If you go back to the four Ps, pricing touches everything: supply chain, sales, product management.
So I always recommend that young and ambitious professionals spend some time in pricing. Become a value manager, pricing manager—whatever the role is—for a period of time, because it will make you better at sales, marketing, supply chain, and so on.
After that, you might fall in love with the topic of value and pricing. It’s a vast domain. You could do a stint in retail, or move into manufacturing—there are many sectors.
The key is to focus both on technical skills in pricing and on soft skills. The best VPs of pricing I’ve seen are strong in emotional intelligence, change management, and leadership, while also having a solid technical foundation.
If you want a career in pricing, you need to develop business acumen and know how to speak to sales, marketing, and top management. It’s not just about optimization or doing advanced analytics in Excel—though that is required. To become a VP, you must be a leader. That’s my advice.
Olena: Definitely. I’ve been hearing this a lot—not just about hard skills like data science, but also about soft skills. You mentioned change management. I know you’re a big expert in that. So what are your top tips for a killer change management strategy?
Stephan: First of all, if you are in pricing today—whatever the sector, and especially in retail—you have to be a change agent. No doubt.
The last five years have been crazy. I’ve been in business for over 30 years, but the last three to five years have been chaotic. If you can’t manage change or lead change in organizations, you’ll be at a disadvantage.
My first recommendation is to get certified in change management. Go to organizations like the ROI Institute, Prosci, or LaMarsh Global—these are well-known—and get a certification. You’ll be using change management over the next 10 years as things continue to evolve.
Second, understand the difference between project management and change management. They’re two different things, with different skills and capabilities. Even if you’re a certified project manager (PMP), that’s not the same as being good at change management.
Third, read a lot about change management. There are millions of resources online. There’s no reason you can’t start learning today. I’ve published papers on change management in pricing and even developed a certification called Change Agent in Pricing. It’s vital in today’s environment.
Finally, pricing professionals need to understand the difference between change leadership and change management. Change management is about process—roadmapping, stakeholder mapping, “what’s in it for me” analysis, etc. Change leadership is about being a charismatic leader, convincing without authority, and bringing people on board. Both are essential.
Olena: We should definitely add a link to your certification—it’s hard to know what’s worth it among all the material out there. Speaking of recent years, 2020 was crazy and 2022 wasn’t much easier. How would you describe 2022 for retail? What were the main challenges, and how can retailers tackle them?
Stephan: I’d highlight a few key areas.
Number one: dynamic pricing. Most retailers had to become very agile, reacting quickly to market shifts and competition. Faster access to competitive data is crucial—you can’t price yourself out of the market, or price too low and leave money on the table.
Number two: supply chain resilience. Even now, shelves in some sectors like healthcare are empty. Last year, thousands of products couldn’t be supplied, and that directly impacts retailers’ bottom lines and assortment strategies. Securing supply chains in 2023 and beyond is critical.
And overall, agility is everything. Retail organizations need faster, more collaborative teams. Strategy and tactics must be developed and executed quickly. That’s the only way to stay competitive in this new environment.
Olena: Yes, I’ve seen those empty shelves in drugstores here in Berlin. If you’re sick, you might need a doctor’s prescription—because over-the-counter cold medicines are gone.
Stephan: Exactly. That’s a perfect example. Two years ago, when people were staying home, the flu almost disappeared. Now with people socializing again, flu and colds are back, and immunity levels are lower. That was predictable.
So why do we see empty shelves? Retailers and pharma companies should have anticipated the trend. CVS and Walgreens in the U.S., for example, are probably losing millions because of these shortages. Retailers need to be nimble and forecast mega-trends like this better—working today on what will happen in 2024 and 2025.
Olena: Definitely. What mega-trends do you see now for the retail industry as a whole?
Stephan: Right now, we’re seeing an economic slowdown. Building materials, for example, are already slowing, and construction cycles are highly predictable: first commercial, then residential, then industrial. Inflation is still here, and retailers should have seen this coming.
The key is adapting business models quickly. If new construction slows, pivot to renovation products immediately. You can’t wait six months—the shift is happening now.
It’s the same story everywhere: anticipate what’s coming, secure supply chains, change assortments, and adjust pricing strategies quickly. That’s core to retail survival.
Olena: And speaking of pricing specifically—what should retailers focus on next year?
Stephan: In the next 12 months, we’ll have both inflation and deflation happening at the same time. Food and energy prices are still going up, but commodities like wood, steel, and transport costs are going down.
Retailers must track this in real time. Consumers are also frustrated: they hear prices are falling but don’t see it in stores. That leads to perceptions of unfair pricing and government scrutiny.
So retailers need real-time pricing strategies that reflect supply chain changes, competitive data, and consumer expectations. Invest in competitive pricing software, price optimization solutions, and assortment tools. Now is the time—profits over the last two years were strong, so reinvest in pricing capabilities.
Also, work with suppliers. Some suppliers raised prices too aggressively. Retailers should push back, negotiate smarter, and capture margin improvements when costs fall instead of passing everything through to consumers. Value-based pricing applies here as well—bundles, promotions, and smart segmentation can help.
Olena: That’s very true. I’ve seen Christmas decorations heavily discounted now after being overpriced earlier—retailers seem to be losing margin.
Stephan: Exactly. Push prices too high, and consumers change behavior. They reuse last year’s decorations instead of buying new. With energy prices high in Europe, consumers are especially cautious.
Retailers must continuously measure willingness to pay and adjust. Too many simply “rode the wave” of inflation without doing enough research. Trends are moving faster now—think in terms of three to six months, not three years.
Olena: We’ve been talking about retail, but what about SaaS companies? Do you see crossover in pricing lessons between SaaS and retail?
Stephan: Yes, but it’s mixed. SaaS companies are nimble, quick to pivot, and organized for scaling once they find product-market fit. Retailers can learn from that agility.
But honestly, retailers are more advanced in pricing. SaaS companies are still learning. In retail, you don’t survive without strong pricing.
What retailers should emulate is SaaS-style iteration—rapid experiments, new concepts, tiger teams, agile methods. For example, Walgreens opening doctor’s offices inside stores is an innovation that needed agility. Retailers must do more of that.
Olena: I love the Best Buy example you mentioned earlier—bundling phones with accessories, warranties, even installation services. That’s a powerful upselling strategy.
Stephan: Exactly. Best Buy survived the online disruption by innovating. They offered price-match guarantees, trained salespeople on value-based selling, and let suppliers like Apple and Samsung build “stores within a store.”
Then they acquired Geek Squad, offering installation and maintenance. So a customer goes in for an $84 device and leaves with a $300 bundle of products, services, and warranties. That’s value creation.
Other retailers should think the same way: don’t just sell products, but services, experiences, and solutions. PetSmart added grooming and pet-sitting. Staples offers digital printing and design. It’s all about expanding the value proposition.
Olena: That’s fantastic advice. Before we wrap up, what resources would you recommend to pricing professionals? Books, podcasts, or media?
Stephan: First, follow software vendors and consultants—they host great webinars with thought leaders. Connect with experts on LinkedIn. Join groups like PPS (Professional Pricing Society) and EPP (European Pricing Platform).
Second, don’t just read about pricing. Read about change management, innovation, and data monetization. Retailers have tons of data—learn how to monetize it.
And finally, adopt a mindset of curiosity. Every day I read, download papers, and follow experts. There’s so much free information out there. Build your own skills, stay curious, and learn continuously.
Olena: Can you name a few experts you follow on LinkedIn?
Stephan: Sure. Tim Smith, Mark Stiving, myself of course, and consultants from firms like BCG, McKinsey, SKP. They publish great material. Join the PPS and EPP LinkedIn groups to see who’s active and follow them.
Olena: Great, thank you so much Stephan. This was an insightful conversation and a pleasure to have you on the show.
Stephan: Thank you, I appreciate the opportunity.
Olena: I hope you enjoyed our interview. Follow our guest on LinkedIn for more information about AI and deep learning–enhanced pricing solutions. Visit Competera.ai, and don’t forget to subscribe to Pricing Heroes on your favorite podcast app. Please rate us five stars so more people can discover the show. All links are in the episode description. Until next time!