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As a business consultant, this may not be an easy subject to address. The primary role of a consultant is to help clients achieve profitability in their chosen ventures.

However, there exists a thin and often blurry line between legitimate profitability and profiteering. Though similar in origin, they are conceptually different:

  • Profitability reflects the achievement of a business’s primary goalβ€”to make sustainable profit by delivering value.
  • Profiteering, on the other hand, involves exploiting people or situations unfairly, such as creating artificial scarcity to inflate prices.

To simplify this discussion, let’s use smartness to describe ethical business practices, and greed to describe exploitative onesβ€”without being overly judgmental.

Defining Smartness vs. Greed

  • Smartness involves leveraging the 4Psβ€”Place, Product, Pricing, and Promotionβ€”to position a business advantageously and ethically.
  • Greed is when a business disregards these principles and manipulates customer vulnerability for excessive gain.
  • For example, selling an inferior product at a higher price than its superior alternative purely due to demand is greed.

A Case in Scarcity

  • Basic economics teaches that lower supply leads to higher pricesβ€”if all things remain equal.
  • However, exploiting scarcity to sell substandard goods at a premium is not smartness; it’s criminal and unethical.
  • A common example: Passing off imitations as original products during a shortage, forcing customers to pay more for less value.

Value Exchange: The Ethical Baseline

  • Every buyer-seller transaction is a value exchange. There must be a reasonable correlation between what’s offered and what’s paid.
  • Taking advantage of a customer’s ignorance or desperation to charge excessively crosses into greed.

When Scarcity is Genuine

  • During genuine shortages, a reasonable markup may be justified:
    • For instance, if the normal profit margin is 20%, adding 10–15% more may be seen as smart adaptation.
    • However, 25% or more may be interpreted as greed.
  • Yet, these are rules of thumb, not scientific standards. So:
    • What do we make of a 16%–24% markup?
    • Are these grey areas, or borderline greed?

The Ethical Challenge

  • Even during scarcity, smart pricing should not inflict undue harm on buyers.
  • Sellers should aim for profitability that is fair and ethical, not exploitative.

Festive Pricing and Market Psychology

  • Excess demand during festive periods often leads to price spikes, despite reduced disposable incomes.
  • While this is often blamed on imperfect markets, it’s also a result of psychological market behaviorβ€”sellers understand buyer urgency and capitalize on it.

Final Thought: Walking the Line

  • Economics does not always answer to morality.
  • When tempted to exploit buyer helplessness, ask: β€œAm I being smart or greedy?”
  • The seller’s market may create room for profitβ€”but it’s how you use that opportunity that defines smartness or greed.

What Are Your Thoughts?

Please feel free to share your perspective on where you believe the line should be drawn between smart business and unethical greed.