Why Price-Off is the Most Expensive Promotion You’ll Ever Run

Price-off is the default promotional mechanic in Singapore FMCG. Walk through any supermarket: FairPrice, Cold Storage, Giant, Sheng Siong… and the evidence is everywhere. Red stickers. Slashed prices. Multi-buy deals. Twenty percent off this week, back to full price next week, twenty percent off again the week after.

It’s familiar. It’s easy to approve. And for most brands running it repeatedly, it’s quietly doing serious damage.

The Problem With Price-Off Isn’t the Discount. It’s the Habit.

The problem is what happens when it becomes the answer to every brief.

When a brand runs price-off frequently enough, consumers stop buying at full price altogether. They learn the rhythm. They stock up on promotion and wait it out when the price returns to normal. The brand hasn’t recruited new buyers or built loyalty, it has simply trained its existing customers to buy cheaper.

What Price-Off Actually Costs

Every time a brand reduces its price, it sends a signal to the consumer about what the product is actually worth. Do it often enough and that signal becomes permanent. The brand that was worth $8.90 is now, in the consumer’s mind, a $6.90 product that occasionally gets greedy and charges more.

The Brief Behind the Brief

The stated objective is usually one of three things; drive trial, increase volume, or defend against a competitor. Price-off addresses all three on the surface. But each of those objectives has a more effective mechanic available that doesn’t require giving margin away.

Trial is better driven by a Money Back Guarantee or a Try Me Free mechanic. The brand takes the risk, the consumer takes no financial leap, and the full shelf price is maintained throughout.

Volume is better driven by an Extra Size Pack or a Collector mechanic — the consumer gets more value without the brand conditioning them to expect a lower price.

Competitive defence is better handled by a Gift with Purchase (GWP) or Partner Offer that adds value to the brand’s proposition rather than reducing it to a price battle.

When Price-Off Is the Right Answer

There are situations where price-off is genuinely the right mechanic. Clearing short-dated stock. Responding to a direct competitive price attack where matching is unavoidable. Launching a new SKU into a category where trial barriers are purely financial.

In those situations, use it. Structure it carefully, set a clear end date, and treat it as a tactical intervention rather than a promotional strategy.

The question to ask before every brief is simple: is price-off the most effective mechanic for this objective, or is it just the most familiar one?

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