A simple business scenario:
- Seller A buys 1,000 units and resells them at RM1.00
(a 50% margin)
- Seller B buys 500 units and sells them at RM0.80 (a
30% margin).
Both offer the same product quality and service. However, within one week, A only manages to sell 100 units, while B sells all 500 units and continues receiving similar demand.
1. Lower Margin, Higher Volume Can Outperform Higher Margin, Lower Volume
- A sells at a higher profit per unit (RM0.50) but
only manages to sell 100 units.
- B sells at a lower profit per unit (RM0.30) and
manages to sell 500 units, fully clearing stock.
In absolute profit terms:
- A’s profit: 100 units × RM0.50 = RM50
- B’s profit: 500 units × RM0.30 = RM150
So, B earns 3 times more profit despite a lower margin.
Lesson 1 - A business strategy cannot rely solely on high margins. Competitive pricing + high turnover often leads to better total profit.
2. The Market Dictates the Price - Not the Seller
Both products are identical in quality and service. Yet customers prefer the cheaper option.
Lesson 2 : Customers will gravitate to the price that feels fair and offers value, especially when comparing identical products. Pricing must align with what the market is willing to pay.
3. Accessibility and Affordability Expand Your Customer Base
A higher price reduces your reachable market. B’s lower price makes it accessible to more buyers, which increases volume.
Lesson 3 : Sometimes, the best approach is to reduce your margin but widen
your reach.
4. Cash Flow Matters
- B sells all 500 units, turning stock into cash
quickly.
- A sells slowly, locking capital in inventory.
Lesson 4 : High turnover improves cash flow, reduces risk of dead stock, and allows faster reinvestment.
5. Customer Behavior: Perception of Fairness and Trust
Even if quality and service are the same, customers may perceive A’s pricing as too high, creating resistance.
Lesson 5 : Customers are more likely to trust a price that aligns with their perception of value.
6. Long-Term Advantage - Repeat Customers
If B continues providing good value, customers remember the “fair price” and come back.
A risks losing customers permanently if perceived as overpriced.
7. Strategy Must Match Market Conditions
- A is using a premium pricing strategy in a market
that behaves like a value-driven market.
- B is aligning with what the market wants.
Lesson 6 : Choose a strategy that fits the market, not the seller’s personal preference.
In short : A’s mistake is prioritizing profit margin instead of total profit and turnover. B wins because of competitive pricing, faster cash flow, and better alignment with customer expectations.
- become more price-sensitive
- compare options more carefully
- cut back on non-essentials
- prefer lower-priced alternatives even if quality is the same
- customers feel less “pain of paying”
- they can buy more or more frequently
- they perceive B as understanding and trustworthy
- customers conserve money
- they can buy other necessities
- they feel more in control of their spending
- Seller A uses a premium-pricing mindset in a value-driven market.
- Seller B uses a market-aligned strategy, showing awareness of inflation, declining disposable income, cost-of-living pressures and competitive landscape
- remained affordable
- did not take advantage of the situation
- provided consistent value
- B understands the economic downturn
- B empathizes with customers’ reduced purchasing power
- B adapts pricing to match real-world conditions
- One person alone can only sell so much,
- By hiring help, he increases capacity, reach, and speed.
- Total profit: RM150
- Worker cost (example: if 7 days × RM0.10): RM0.70
- Net profit: RM149.30
- Saving costs does not equal making profit.
- Doing everything alone slows the business.
- Opportunity cost becomes huge.
- leverage
- business scaling
- cash flow management
- customer behaviour
- market environment
- productivity
- long-term business mindset
- saving costs
- doing it alone
- short-term thinking
- limited growth
The scenario of Seller A and Seller B decisively illustrates that a successful business strategy cannot rely solely on high margins. Seller Bs victory, earning triple the profit (RM150 vs. RM50) despite a lower margin, highlights the power of competitive pricing, high turnover, and strategic alignment with customer expectations.
By recognizing reduced purchasing power in the market and prioritizing cash flow and accessibility , Seller B not only maximized absolute profit but also cultivated customer trust and loyalty by offering perceived fairness and value. Furthermore, Bs willingness to leverage a worker for a small cost demonstrates an understanding of scalability and long-term systems thinking over As focus on cost-saving and self-dependence.
Ultimately, success comes from choosing a strategy that fits the market, not the sellers personal preference.





