CHAPTER 11 Pricing The Product - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

CHAPTER 11 Pricing The Product

Description:

Price is the value that customers give up or exchange to obtain a desired product ... Competitive effect objectives (e.g. Jet Blue and Delta) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:119
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 36
Provided by: tracy2
Category:
Tags: chapter | blue | jet | pricing | product

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CHAPTER 11 Pricing The Product


1
CHAPTER 11Pricing The Product
M A R K E T I N G
Real People, Real Choices Fourth Edition
2
Yes, But What Does It Cost?
  • Price is the value that customers give up or
    exchange to obtain a desired product
  • Payment may be in the form of money, goods,
    services, favors, votes, or anything else that
    has value to the other party

3
Opportunity Costs
  • The value of something that is given up to obtain
    something else also affects the price of a
    decision.
  • Example the cost of going to college is charged
    in tuition and fees but also includes the
    opportunity cost of what a student cannot earn by
    working instead.

4
Steps in Price Planning
  • Develop pricing objectives
  • Estimate demand
  • Determine costs
  • Evaluate the pricing environment
  • Choose a pricing strategy
  • Develop pricing tactics

5
Types of Pricing Objectives
  • Sales or market share objectives (e.g. long
    distance telephone services)
  • Profit objectives
  • Work back from a desired profit level
  • Competitive effect objectives (e.g. Jet Blue and
    Delta)
  • Customer satisfaction objectives (e.g. Saturn and
    firm pricing)
  • Image enhancement objectives prestige products
    like Rolex, Rolls Royce, etc.

6
Estimating Demand
  • Demand refers to customers desire for products
  • How much of a product do consumers want?
  • How will this change as the price goes up or down?

7
Demand Curves
  • Shows the quantity of a product that customers
    will buy in a market during a period of time at
    various prices if all other factors remain the
    same
  • Vertical axis represents the different prices a
    firm might charge
  • Horizontal axis shows the number of units
    demanded
  • Upward and downward shifts in demand curves

8
The Price Elasticity of Demand
  • How sensitive are customers to changes in the
    price of a product?
  • Price elasticity of demand is a measure of the
    sensitivity of customers to changes in price
  • Price elasticity of demand Percentage change in
    quantity demanded / Percentage change in price
  • Elastic / Inelastic demand / Unit Elasticity

9
Other types of demand elasticities
  • Income elasticity of demand
  • Percentage change in demand as a result of
    percentage change in incomes
  • Cross elasticity of demand
  • Percentage in demand for a product as a result of
    percentage change in price of a substitute (e.g.
    if price of Pepsi goes up the demand for Coke
    will increase) OR
  • Percentage in demand for a product as a result of
    percentage change in price of a complementary
    product (e.g. if price of gas goes up demand for
    tires may come down)

10
Estimating Demand
  • Identify demand for an entire product category in
    markets the company serves
  • Predict what the companys market share is likely
    to be
  • Marketing research to find out price elasticity
    of demand

11
Types of Costs_1
  • Variable costs per-unit costs of production
    that will fluctuate, depending on how many units
    or individual products a firm produces
  • Fixed costs do not vary with the number of
    units produced. Costs remain the same regardless
    of amount produced

12
Types of Costs_2
  • Average fixed cost is the fixed cost per unit
    produced (total fixed costs / number of units
    produced)
  • Total costs variable costs plus fixed costs

13
Break-Even Analysis
  • Technique used to examine the relationship
    between cost and price and to determine what
    sales volume must be reached at a given price at
    which company will completely cover its total
    costs
  • Sales Variable Costs Contribution
  • Losses lt BE point lt Profits
  • Angle of incidence, Margin of Safety
  • BE sales in units Total Fixed Costs /
    Contribution per unit

14
Evaluating the Pricing Environment
  • The Economy
  • Pricing in a Recession Consumers pull back on
    their spending
  • Pricing in inflation Consumers desensitized to
    rising prices
  • The Competition Perfect, Oligopoly, Monopolistic
    competition
  • Consumer Trends Affluent people hunt for bargains

15
Cost-Plus Pricing
  • Most common cost-based approach
  • Marketer figures all costs for the product and
    then adds desired profit per unit
  • Straight markup pricing is the most frequently
    used type of cost-plus pricing
  • price is calculated by adding a pre-determined
    percentage to the cost

16
Pricing Strategies Based on Cost
  • Advantages
  • Simple to calculate
  • Relatively risk free
  • Disadvantages
  • Fail to consider several factors
  • target market
  • demand
  • competition
  • product life cycle
  • products image
  • Difficult to accurately estimate costs

17
Steps in Cost-Plus Pricing
  • Estimate unit cost
  • Calculate markup
  • Markup on cost
  • Markup on selling price

18
Pricing Strategies Based on Demand_1
  • Demand-based pricing means that the selling price
    is based on an estimate of volume or quantity
    that a firm can sell in different markets at
    different prices
  • Target costing find out what customers will be
    willing to pay and work backwards to design a
    product within that cost
  • Yield management pricing services use this
    method to fill capacity

19
Pricing strategies
  • Price leadership the biggest firm in the
    industry announces a new price and all other
    firms fall in line - oligopoly
  • ELDP Every Day Low Pricing prices based on
    customer perceptions of value. No further
    discounts given e.g. Walmart, PG, etc.

20
New Product Pricing
  • Skimming price firm charges a high, premium
    price for its new product with the intention of
    reducing it in future response to market
    pressures
  • Penetration pricing new product is introduced
    at a very low price
  • Trial pricing product carries a low price for a
    limited time period

21
Pricing Tactics
  • Pricing for Individual Products
  • two-part pricing (e.g., country clubs, cell phone
    services)
  • payment pricing (e.g., easy payments for new
    cars)
  • Pricing for Multiple Products
  • Price bundling (e.g., monitor, keyboard, CPU in a
    computer package)
  • Captive pricing (e.g., razors and razor blades)

22
More Pricing Tactics
  • Distribution-based pricing
  • FOB pricing
  • CIF pricing
  • Basing-point pricing
  • Uniform delivered pricing
  • Freight absorption pricing

23
Discounting for Channel Members
  • Trade or functional discounts
  • Quantity discounts
  • Cash discounts
  • Seasonal discounts

24
Trade Discounts
  • Pricing structure built around list price
  • List price, also called suggested retail price,
    is the price that the manufacturer sets as the
    appropriate price for the end consumer
  • Manufacturers offer discounts because channel
    members perform selling, credit, storage, and
    transportation services

25
Pricing with Electronic Commerce
  • Dynamic pricing strategies
  • price can be adjusted to meet changes in the
    marketplace
  • online price changes can occur quickly, easily,
    and at virtually no cost
  • Auctions
  • sites offer chance to bid on items
  • sites offer reverse-price auctions

26
Price Discrimination
  • Means that marketers classify customers based on
    some characteristic that indicates what they are
    willing or able to pay
  • Acceptable when price differences are in response
    to
  • changes in cost of product
  • changes in competitive activity
  • changes in marketplace

27
Psychological Issues in Pricing
  • Internal Reference Prices consumers have a set
    price or price range in mind
  • If the actual price is higher, consumers will
    feel the product is overpriced
  • If it is too low below the internal reference
    price, consumers may assume its quality is
    inferior
  • Competition as Reference Price If the price is
    close, the assimilation effect will encourage the
    customer to think the products are similar enough
    and choose the lower-priced product

28
Price-Quality Inferences
  • If consumers are unable to judge the quality of a
    product through examination or prior experience,
    they usually will assume that the higher-priced
    product is the higher-quality product

29
Psychological Pricing Strategies
  • Odd-even pricing
  • Price lining

30
Legal and Ethical Considerations
  • Deceptive pricing practices
  • Unfair sales act
  • Price discrimination

31
Deceptive Pricing Practices
  • Retailers must not claim prices are lower than
    competitors unless it is true
  • A going out-of-business sale should be the last
    sale before going out of business
  • Bait-and-switch consumers are lured into store
    for a very low price, but then the item is not
    available. A more expensive product is offered
    instead
  • Trading up is acceptable

32
Unfair Sales Acts
  • Laws or regulations prohibiting selling products
    below cost
  • loss leader pricing
  • many regulations even set a percentage markup
    below which the distributor may not sell the
    products

33
Price Discrimination
  • Means selling the same product to different
    wholesalers and retailers at different prices if
    practices lessen competition
  • Regulated by Robinson-Patman Act
  • only applies to resellers
  • discounts are legal if based on established
    policy and offered to any customer who chooses to
    buy under those conditions

34
Price Fixing
  • Occurs when two or more companies conspire to
    keep prices at a certain level
  • Horizontal price fixing occurs when competitors
    making the same product jointly determine what
    price they each will charge
  • Vertical price fixing occurs when manufacturers
    attempt to force the retailer to charge the
    suggested retail price

35
Predatory Pricing
  • Means that a company sets a very low price for
    the purpose of driving competitors out of business
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com