Reclaiming $1.7MM in Lost Price Realization for a Mid-Market Distributor

Overview: Price Realization Recovery

This case study shows how rigorous price realization analytics helped a mid-market distributor reclaim $1.7MM in lost price realization over twelve months — reversing a persistent year-over-year pricing headwind. Disciplined price-cost governance, a same-customer and same-SKU decomposition, and a refreshed discount waterfall all contributed to the price realization recovery. For mid-market commercial teams, the playbook shows that price realization is rarely a single-lever fix; it is a compounding capability built on monthly monitoring, category-level insight, and executive-visible pricing controls. See the full case study below, or read our related case study on Price-Cost Discipline at a Mid-Market Manufacturer.

Client Situation

A mid-market plumbing, electrical and HVAC distributor was experiencing a persistent, roughly $(140K) monthly year-over-year headwind from pricing — equivalent to a ($1.7MM) hit to the top line over a trailing 12-month period, or approximately 1.8% of sales.

On the surface, financial performance looked acceptable because favorable purchasing cost was masking the price erosion. In reality, internal cost productivity gains of roughly $1.6MM were being passed through to customers instead of falling to the bottom line — a classic symptom of legacy cost-plus pricing practices and a lack of price-cost governance.

Price realization recovery chart for a mid-market distributor

The leakage was concentrated in three categories: Electrical ($850K), Pipe & Fittings ($739K), and Water Heaters ($127K). Leadership suspected price discipline issues but lacked the granularity to pinpoint root causes or quantify recovery potential.

The Revify Approach

Diagnose — Price-Cost-Volume-Mix (PCVM) at Category and Customer Level

  • Decomposed 3.56M transactions across a 3.2-year window into Price, Cost, Volume and Mix drivers at monthly and TTM cadence.
  • Isolated categories where price increases were lagging cost increases and the internal cost savings were being ceded to customers.
  • Identified categories with accretive price (Toilets: +$41.1K price, +$3.2K cost) to surface internal best practices worth replicating cross-functionally.

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Stabilize — Discount Governance & External Benchmarks

  • Mapped every transaction to the responsible sales group to end the practice of unattributed discounts.
  • Exposed discount ‘anchoring’ — habitual clustering at 43% and 50% marks — indicating process-driven rather than market- or customer-driven pricing.
  • Established a framework for incorporating external benchmarks (Ferguson, Amazon, Trade Services) into list-price and discount decisions, beginning the migration away from cost-plus.

Scale — Back-End Rebate Architecture

  • Recommended re-routing purchasing cost savings through a back-end rebate structure, so cost productivity accrues to margin rather than leaking back to customers through front-end price concessions.

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Key Findings & Results

With clean data and a driver-based view in place, the client had, for the first time, a defensible quantification of price leakage and a prioritized roadmap to recover it. The largest and most urgent recovery targets were isolated to three categories totaling 1.8% of net sales in margin pressure — directly addressable with the governance controls deployed.

Beyond the quantified recovery, the engagement ended the ‘cost savings bleed’ that had been structurally eroding margin for multiple quarters, and gave leadership a repeatable monthly Price-Cost scorecard to manage the business going forward.

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IMPACT DIMENSIONQUANTIFIED BENEFIT
Identified price realization opportunity (TTM)$1.7MM
Monthly price headwind eliminated~$140K / month
Internal cost productivity now protected from pass-through~$1.6MM annualized
Categories prioritized for immediate actionElectrical, Pipe & Fittings, Water Heaters

Why This Matters

The client was unknowingly trading hard-won cost productivity for softer prices — a silent margin transfer from the income statement back to customers. Quantifying it changed the conversation from ‘are we disciplined?’ to ‘where, specifically, do we tighten?’

Conclusion

By replacing anecdote with driver-level evidence, the distributor moved from reactive, cost-plus pricing to disciplined price-cost management. The $1.7MM figure is not theoretical — it reflects value that was already being generated operationally and then given away commercially.

The same PCVM framework and discount-governance controls are now used monthly to prevent recurrence — turning a one-time recovery into an ongoing pricing capability.

Related Case Studies

Further reading

For broader industry perspective on revenue growth management and pricing analytics, see McKinsey’s Growth, Marketing & Sales insights.

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