Raising prices in the steel and building materials industry isn’t just a financial decision—it’s a strategic test. Every price increase risks pushback, lost volume, and relationship strain. But in a volatile market where input costs surge, freight fluctuates, and labor rates rise, price adjustments aren’t optional—they’re necessary.
So the question isn’t should you raise prices. It’s how you do it in a way that preserves trust, explains value, and keeps your best customers on board.
Timing Is Everything
In a volatile market, customers expect price changes—but that doesn’t mean they welcome them. Springing a surprise increase mid-contract or without proper notice can damage relationships.
Instead, be transparent early. Communicate intent before you send new quotes. If you’re tracking market trends and cost indices, your customers should already know an increase might be coming.
The best price increases aren’t surprises—they’re confirmations of what the customer has already seen coming.
Justify with Data, Not Emotion
When it’s time to communicate the change, don’t lead with “we have to.” Lead with facts. What’s driving the increase? Show the numbers:
Input cost movements (scrap, energy, alloys)
Transportation and fuel surcharges
Labor cost trends
Demand/supply imbalances in your region or category
Providing benchmarks—whether from CRU, Platts, or internal index models—helps customers understand that this isn’t arbitrary or opportunistic. It’s a response to real conditions.
Connect the Increase to Continued Value
Customers won’t push back as hard if they see that your value proposition hasn’t changed—or has improved. Reinforce what they’re getting, beyond just the tonnage:
On-time delivery rates
Quality assurance and defect rates
Inventory management or JIT support
Compliance and traceability services
Technical support or processing capabilities
Make the case that you’re not just increasing prices—you’re maintaining the service, speed, and support they’ve come to rely on. That reframes the conversation.
Tier the Change Strategically
Not every customer, contract, or product line should see the same price lift. Tier your increases based on:
Customer profitability
Contract length and renewal window
Strategic value of the account
Competitive dynamics
This isn’t about favoritism—it’s about intelligent margin management. And being flexible shows customers that you understand their business pressures, too.
Equip Sales to Have the Conversation
Your frontline team needs more than a price sheet. They need talking points. Data. Context. And a clear understanding of what’s negotiable—and what isn’t.
Run internal workshops before the rollout. Roleplay objections. Provide backup material. Help reps anticipate reactions like:
“We’re not seeing this increase from your competitor.”
“We didn’t budget for this.”
“Can you delay this until next quarter?”
Arm them with answers, but also empathy. The goal isn’t to bulldoze the customer—it’s to build mutual understanding.
Don’t Apologize for Running a Business
One of the biggest mistakes in delivering a price increase is acting guilty about it. You’re not raising prices to gouge—you’re adjusting to continue delivering quality, service, and stability.
If you communicate from a place of clarity and confidence, your customers will be more likely to respect the move—even if they don’t love it.
Make It Part of a Bigger Conversation
Use the price increase discussion as a chance to talk about the broader relationship:
What’s working well?
Where are the service gaps?
How can you add more value moving forward?
This transforms a transactional moment into a strategic dialogue. And it reminds the customer that you’re not just another supplier—you’re a partner looking to help them navigate the same market challenges.
Follow Through with Precision
Once the new pricing is agreed, make sure it sticks. Update ERP and quoting systems. Double-check that the new terms are reflected in invoices, contracts, and forecasting tools.
Misalignment here can undo all the goodwill you built in your pricing conversation. Consistency reinforces professionalism.
Final Thought: It’s Not About the Price—It’s About the Process
In steel, price is always important—but trust and clarity matter more. When you deliver a well-timed, well-supported, and well-communicated price increase, you strengthen the foundation of your customer relationships.
You’re not just defending your margin—you’re proving your value. And in a volatile market, that’s what earns you the right to keep doing business tomorrow.