customers the same, margins erode in ways that are hard to detect.
Pricing analysts often recommend starting with a simple question: What does it actually cost to serve this customer? That includes more than lumber and labor. It also includes:
delivery frequency
backhaul opportunities
pallet retrieval and sorting
payment terms
administrative overhead
A clear understanding of cost-to-serve
allows suppliers to price accounts more rationally and negotiate terms that reflect operational realities.
Discount Discipline Matters
Pricing pressure often appears through discounts rather than list prices. Sales teams naturally want to close deals. When pricing rules are unclear, discounts become the easiest tool to resolve customer objections.
The problem is that small concessions add up quickly. Revenue growth analytics advisor Armin Kakas noted in a recent LinkedIn article that B2B companies often lose more than six percent of revenue through hidden discounts, rebates, and concessions.
In pallet markets, those concessions often appear as:
absorbing freight
expedited deliveries
extended payment terms
price matching without verification
Many companies address this by creating clear discount guardrails. For example:
small discounts approved by sales
larger concessions reviewed by management
major price reductions tied to contract commitments or volume guarantees
These policies do not eliminate flexibility. They simply ensure that pricing decisions are visible and deliberate.
Pricing Should Reflect Value, Not Just Cost
Pallets can look like a commodity product, but the service around them rarely is. Some pallet suppliers provide consistent quality, reliable delivery, and efficient retrieval systems. Others compete primarily on price.
Companies that compete only on price eventually reach a ceiling on margins.
Marketing strategist company, Firebrand, recently described this risk as the “commodity trap,” where buyers choose suppliers purely on price because they see no meaningful difference between them.
Escaping that trap requires emphasizing the value behind the pallet. That value might include:
reliable pallet availability during tight supply periods
consistent pallet specifications that reduce product damage
delivery equipment type and schedule to suit customer requirements
Retrieval, recycling and repair programs that lower total pallet spend
multi-location supply coordination
Customers will still negotiate the price. But when the supplier solves operational problems, the conversation becomes broader than dollars per pallet.
Data Is Changing How Pricing Decisions Are Made
Another shift underway in the pallet industry is the growing role of data.
Historically, pallet procurement often relied on phone calls, emails, and long-standing relationships. Increasingly, companies are introducing digital purchasing platforms that bring more transparency to pricing.
This transparency cuts both ways. Buyers can compare prices across suppliers. But suppliers also gain better insight into demand patterns, order timing, and pricing trends.
Digital tools are also improving demand forecasting. By analyzing production schedules and historical order patterns, companies can anticipate pallet needs more accurately and avoid emergency purchases. Better forecasting reduces the pressure for last-minute pricing concessions.
Strategic Pricing Requires Strategic Conversations
Ultimately, pricing in the pallet industry still depends heavily on relationships. Customers want reliability. Suppliers want stable volume and predictable margins. The best pricing outcomes usually emerge from open conversations about supply chain realities. That might mean explaining how cost pressures affect pallet production. It might mean working with customers to forecast pallet needs more accurately.
Fastmarkets emphasized the importance of this collaboration in pallet procurement strategies, noting that strong supplier relationships and shared demand forecasting can help stabilize supply chains. When pallet suppliers and customers communicate early about demand changes, pricing conflicts become easier to manage.
The Companies That Win Will Treat Pricing as a Discipline
The pallet industry will likely continue operating in a volatile environment. Cost swings, logistics disruptions, and changing retail patterns are unlikely to disappear.
Companies that treat pricing as a once-a-year decision will struggle.
The companies that succeed will treat pricing as an ongoing discipline. They will:
• monitor market signals closely
• understand the true cost of serving each customer
• maintain discount discipline
• communicate value beyond the pallet itself
In a tight pallet market, pricing discipline helps pallet companies protect margins while continuing to meet the service expectations of large customers.