The term MSRP appears everywhere in international decks. In France, the topic is usually framed differently on the ground. Teams mostly talk about recommended retail prices, compliance with recommended prices and the risk of drifting into imposed resale prices. The nuance is not cosmetic. It changes the way the topic needs to be managed. A brand selling through indirect distribution can recommend a resale price to independent distributors, but it cannot impose it. That is the red line.
The point that matters
Not monitoring the prices displayed by your resellers means letting three things slip at the same time: your positioning, your perceived margin and the consistency of your network. On the other hand, trying to enforce a price as a firm order, with pressure or retaliation, exposes you to a real competition risk. In France, recommended prices are allowed. Imposed prices are not.
On the ground, the problem is rarely theoretical. It takes a very simple form. One distributor cuts the price to gain volume. Another refuses to follow. A third aligns late. After a few weeks, your reading of the market becomes unclear. Your campaigns send traffic, but price perception varies from one retailer to another. Your marketing team thinks it is pushing a premium product. The consumer sees a discounted product at one reseller and an overpriced one at another. The brand promise starts to crack.
Why the topic is coming up everywhere
Recommended price monitoring is moving back to the center because price gaps have become much more visible. Before, teams had to check store by store. Today, e-commerce price monitoring makes differences visible almost in real time. And when a brand works through indirect distribution, this transparency changes everything. Consumers compare quickly. Retailers monitor each other. Sales teams receive constant field feedback. The issue is no longer whether a gap exists. The issue is whether it is isolated, recurring or structural.
This is where price compliance stops being a purely legal topic. It becomes a business topic. For a CMO, an inconsistent price can weaken a campaign. For a Brand Manager, it can blur positioning. For a Retail Manager, it can create tension across distributors. And for everyone, it can make performance much harder to read.
The most common problem is having marketing data on one side and a weak price reading on the other. Teams see traffic. They see clicks. Sometimes they see intent. But they do not see clearly enough what happens at each retailer. That is exactly why the topic must be connected to distributor data. This point is central when marketing teams need usable signals.
What gets stuck in practice
First trap: believing that a recommended price is enough to create consistency. It does not work that way. A recommended price that is not followed remains a weak signal. You need to look at gaps, their frequency, the retailers involved, competitive pressure and the moment when these gaps appear.
Second trap: trying to hold the network with methods that are too aggressive. At that point, you leave management and enter a risk zone. The French Competition Authority reminds companies that a supplier can recommend a price, but cannot impose it on independent distributors. It also sanctioned several companies in 2024 for directly or indirectly fixing resale prices with distributors, for a total of 611 million euros.
Third trap: treating the topic only as a commercial war. In reality, monitoring the recommended price also helps understand performance. A retailer that drops too far may convert better in the short term, but it can also weaken the overall perception of the product. Conversely, a reseller that remains too high without justification can slow retailer exits despite strong exposure.
- Identify gaps that last, not only one-off anomalies
- Compare prices by retailer, by product and by campaign period
- Always connect displayed price to availability and conversion
- Document gaps before starting a commercial discussion
- Never confuse price monitoring with price imposition
What we recommend in practice
In practice, a strong MSRP compliance approach in France relies on three blocks. First, clean monitoring of retailer prices. Second, a business reading of the gaps. Third, the ability to act without leaving the legal framework.
Monitoring needs to be continuous. Not monthly. Not artisanal. Not based on three screenshots. You need to see displayed prices, variations, the most stable distributors, those that break the market and those that drift when a campaign starts. Once this reading exists, trade-offs become much stronger. You no longer debate based on intuition. This setup is useful when distributor price tracking needs to become operational.
| Observed situation | What it really means | Useful action |
|---|---|---|
| A retailer sells clearly below the recommended price | It may be trying to capture demand or clear stock quickly | Check recurrence, promotional context and impact on the network |
| Several resellers align very quickly | The market becomes more homogeneous, but the reason needs to be understood | Monitor margin, competitiveness and brand perception |
| A high price persists despite an active campaign | Conversion may drop even with strong traffic | Cross-check price, outgoing clicks and availability |
| A price gap keeps returning on the same products | The issue is structural, not accidental | Prepare a documented and factual network discussion |
In this logic, Click2Buy mainly makes the topic usable. Not to police the network. The platform helps connect sent traffic, visible distributors, availability, price levels and performance signals. That is much more useful than an isolated price reading, because you also see what these gaps produce on purchase intent and exits toward retail partners.
The right position for a brand
The right position is neither weak nor brutal. Not monitoring anything means accepting the situation. Trying to lock everything down is not sustainable and can become expensive. The right line is distribution network control based on data, a precise reading of price gaps and clean commercial discussions.
You also need to accept that price alone does not explain everything. A retailer can display a good price and still lose because the product page is weak or because online product availability is poor. That is why price reading must always be cross-checked with commercial execution. This is where retailer data quality makes the difference.
In the end, MSRP compliance in France is not a jargon topic. It is a consistency topic. Consistency of positioning. Consistency of business reading. Consistency of the relationship with distributors. Brands that seriously monitor reseller prices are not trying to control everything. They are trying to see clearly, react quickly and prevent repeated price gaps from becoming a margin, perception and performance problem.
Why is MSRP compliance important for a brand in France?
Because it helps maintain consistent price positioning across distributors.
How can MSRP compliance be monitored simply?
By regularly checking displayed prices to quickly identify recurring gaps.
How much can a price gap hurt a brand?
Quite quickly, because a few visible gaps can damage margin and brand perception.
18 reviews
Maxence Antao, Communications Officer at Click2Buy
Our role at Click2Buy is to guide our clients throughout the buying journey and optimize their marketing ROI using real-time retailer stock data.