More Resources
Home > Entrepreneur Magazine > June 2005 > If It Ain't Broke . . .

If It Ain't Broke . . .

Don't even try to fix prices with competitors.
Article Tools
T   |   T
TEXT SIZE:
printPrint
E-MailE-Mail
My Bookmarks

Add to My Bookmarks
If It Ain't Broke . . .
Don't even try to fix prices with competitors.

Adds Article to your Entrepreneur Assist Bookmark page.

To price any item or service, you need some idea of what the competition is charging. Otherwise, your price might be so high that no one will buy, or so low you can't make a profit. Why not just sit down with your competitors and agree on the same nice, fat price?

Do that, and you run afoul of the Sherman Anti-trust Act, which has prohibited price fixing in the United States since 1890. Designed to encourage healthy competition, the law forbids companies from entering "contracts, combinations or conspiracies" in restraint of trade. If customers or competitors suspect price fixing, they can file a complaint with the FTC. Violating the Sherman Anti-trust Act is a felony, subject to fines of up to $10 million or jail terms of up to three years. And injured customers or competitors can sue for up to three times their actual damages.

It's OK to engage in parallel pricing by reading ads or checking out prices. That's why gas stations in any town usually all charge about the same price. But station owners have gotten in trouble for notifying each other when to raise prices.

Content Continues Below


Manufacturers may also insist that their dealers sell for a particular price--as long as it's a unilateral requirement and the manufacturer doesn't debate the policy with its dealers.

So don't even discuss prices with competitors, and don't cut any deals.


Jane Easter Bahls is a writer in Rock Island, Illinois, specializing in business and legal topics.



Today on Entrepreneur
Current Issue
Young Millionaires
From bootstrap to big time, our 2008 picks share their secrets to multimillion-dollar success.
Magazine Resources
sponsored by
Resource Centers
SecurityResource Center
Protecting your customers' information or preventing physical theft and keeping your company secure is a fundamental part of doing business

More Resources



Office Live Small Business
Get Online and Attract More Customers Now
Office Live Small Business Related Services

e-Business & Technology
Franchise News
Business Book Sampler
Starting a Business
Sales & Marketing
Growing a Business
E-mail*:
Zip Code*:
Subscribe to Entrepreneur Magazine