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This Session

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How does Priceline's business model addresses the fundamental problem of price discrimination: ... Priceline.com: 'We finally got a piece of the pie' Captain Kirk ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: This Session


1
Sessions 67
Uniform pricing (one price for all
consumers and we let them buy any quantity at
that price)
Last Session
Explicit Market Segmentation (Different
Prices for different customers)
This Session
Implicit Market Segmentation (Screening)
(Different Choices for different customers)
A Classic Pricing Dilemma You know composition
of market, but cannot identify valuation of
individual customers propose
different options for different consumers.
2
Understanding Cost (session 3)
Revenue Understanding Demand (session 2)
Profit Revenue Cost
Pricing
Monopoly Trade off b/w high P and low Q
(session 6)
Perfect Competition Supply and entry decisions
(session 4 5)
What if we can price discriminate? (i.e.,
different consumers pay different
prices) (session 9 10)
How pricing depends on demand through the
elasticities (session 7)
Strategic Competition Solving for the NE
price and quantity competition (session 12)
How timing matters Stackelberg (session 14)
Exotic topics Strategic Demand Network
externalities and Auctions. (session 15)
Tools Games Theory (session 11)
Externalities and Strategic interaction
Collusion (session 13)
3
Mid Term
The midterm is graded out of 49 which is the
number of potential answers. Midterm Average
44 Standard Deviation 2.8 No significant
difference between two sections Congratulations!
Very good show!! Keep in Mind Objectives of
midterm Correction at the end of your handout.
4
Today
  • Explicit market segmentation
  • Back to the Roxy Theater problem
  • Implicit market segmentation
  • Different choices for different consumers
  • Market power games
  • Midterm exam correction

5
Roxy Theater
  • Capacity constraint 95 seats
  • Current prices
  • General public 6.00
  • Students 4.80
  • Following the elimination of the university movie
    series , students demand is expected to increase
    drastically. The manager estimates that total
    demand will exceed capacity.
  • Should Roxy eliminate student discount
  • and charge the same price to all?

6
Roxy Theater
  • Capacity constraint K 95 seats
  • Demand General public Qg and Students Qs
  • Goal Maximize revenue under constraint of
    selling at capacity,.

P
Pu Revenue maximizing price under uniform
pricing that fill up capacity Pq price for
general public Ps price for student
Qs Qg K
Green Loss Red Gain Gain Loss
Qs Qg K
Pg
Pu
Ps
Revenue is maximized under Price discrimination
Qs
Qg
Qg
Qs
Q
7
Summary Roxy theater
  • Agree Es EGP (as in the past)
  • Recall MR P(1-1/E)
  • So if same price (say 6) MRS MRGP
  • Same price MRs ? MRGP ? profits are not
    maximized
  • To equate sell more to students less to general
    public till MRs MRGP
  • Cut prices to students from 6 Raise prices to
    General Public above 6
  • Lessons
  • Do not ignore other market segments
  • Price to maximize profits
  • Segmenting market and price discrimination can
    raise profits

8
Wrap Up session 8
  • Uniform pricing
  • The monopolist concedes some surplus to the
    consumer and some surplus is lost
  • No arbitrage and partial information about
    consumer valuations enable the monopolist to
    price discriminate and grab more surplus.
  • Perfect Price Discrimination
  • A benchmark of what you could do if you had
    perfect information and could offer each buyer
    a fixed quantity.
  • Imperfect/Explicit Market Segmentation
  • Charge different prices to different groups of
    customers if possible and if the groups have
    different elasticities of demand.
  • Charge inelastic market segment higher price.

9
Priceline.com We finally got a piece of the
pie Captain Kirk
Is this uniform pricing? Is this explicit market
segmentation?
  • How does Pricelines business model addresses the
    fundamental problem of price discrimination
  • Consumer identification
  • Ask consumers to identify themselves! Consumers
    reveal their own valuation through their bids.
  • Screening Mechanism
  • Make obtaining the discounted products such a
    pain in the in order to discourage
    high-valuation buyers from switching (this is
    necessary to convince sellers to use Pricelines
    site).

10
A Requisite for Screening
  • Options cannot differ only by price you need
    another dimension or
  • product characteristic about which customers have
    different preferences.
  • Called Screening Mechanism
  • Must be correlated with willingness to pay
  • We discuss several examples of implicit market
    segmentation
  • We consider in more details two screening
    mechanisms
  • Product differentiation
  • Bundling

Road map for session 9
11
Basic Terms and Concepts
The composition of the market is known, but you
can not identify who is who. Menu The set of
options you offer your customers. Objective
Customize trades in the menu such that consumers
reveal to you who they are via their choices
(i.e., high valuation consumers freely choose the
more expensive option on the menu.) Make sure
menu satisfies two constraints Participation
constraint Customer prefers the deal over not
trading at all. Self-selection constraint
Customer prefers the deal you have designed for
him/her over other deals in menu.
12
Limitations of our analysis
  • Our goal is NOT to ask which menu design is the
    best. This is a hard and possibly intractable
    problem.
  • We present some examples of menu designs used in
    practice and we try to see the logic behind them.

13
A Simple Example Coupons
  • Focus on coupons and rebates that require an
    effort on the part of the consumer to redeem
    (usually, must be mailed in for refund)
  • Coupons and rebates appear to be a rather
    expensive way to cut prices
  • Coupons must be printed and circulated
  • Redeeming them is expensive applications must
    be processed, checks cut and mailed
  • So why issue coupons? Wouldnt it be easier to
    just cut prices?

14
Coupons (cont.)
  • Consumers are not equally likely to redeem
    coupons
  • Correlation between a consumers willingness to
    pay
  • and the likelihood that he/she redeems
  • What is the likely direction of this
    correlation?
  • Rebates discriminate among consumers according
    to the value they
  • attach to their time
  • ...and for this to work it is essential that
    redemption is made to be a
  • time-consuming hassle

15
Coupons As a Screening Device
With rebates and no coupons, MR C A B. This
may not be optimal because the firm gives up AB
to sell additional output. With coupons, only
some consumer redeem, so MR C A, and a price
cut is more attractive. Note that here there are
effectively two prices in the market.

Demand
Old price P0
B
A
New price P1
C
dont redeem
redeem
Q
Q0
Q01
16
Price Elasticity of Demand for Users Vs.
Nonusers of Coupons
  • Cat food 0.49 1.13
  • Frozen entrée 0.60 0.95
  • Gelatin 0.97 1.25
  • Spaghetti sauce 1.65 1.81
  • Shampoo/conditioner 0.82 1.12
  • Soup 1.05 1.22
  • Hot dogs 0.59 0.77
  • Cooking oil 1.21 1.32

17
Other Examples of Implicit Price Discrimination
  • Hardcover vs. Softcover Books
  • Versioning
  • Super Thursday Regular Thursday sales in
    supermarkets
  • Bulk Discounts nonlinear pricing
  • Damaged Goods
  • Mathematica student versions degrade math
    coprocessor in order
  • to slow down calculations
  • Federal Express offers both morning and
    afternoon delivery. FedEx does
  • not deliver afternoon packages in the morning,
    even if they arrive in time
  • for morning delivery. Instead they will make
    two trips to the same location.

18
The Mother of All Discriminatory Pricing Airline
Pricing
  • Airlines like to segment the market based on
    valuations, but valuations are not observed
  • On the other hand, valuations are correlated
    with time sensitivity.
  • In general consumers with higher valuation are
    less likely to accept
  • Saturday night stay
  • A 14-day advance ticketing ,..etc.
  • Solution Create a product line based on
    artificial restrictions.
  • These annoy customers, and have little or no
    bearing on their cost of operation

19
Screening with Differentiated Products
Scenario Airline has B business customers and L
leisure customers.
Cost per ticket 300 (Same for restricted and
unrestricted tickets)
20
Screening with Differentiated Products Exercise
10.2 10.5
  • 0. Explicit market segmentation
  • Sell unrestricted to both (for a low price)
  • Sell unrestricted to business travelers only (for
    a high price)
  • Sell unrestricted to business and restricted to
    leisure travelers

21
Screening with Differentiated Products Exercise
10.2 10.5 (cont.)
22
Comparison of 3 Options
(A) sell only unrestricted tickets at a price of
___________ to business travelers
only Profit (B) sell only unrestricted
tickets at a price of ____________ to all
travelers Profit (C) sell unrestricted
tickets to business travelers for ____________
and restricted tickets to leisure travelers for
__________. Profit
23
(No Transcript)
24
Bundling
  • Selling several goods in one bundle
  • Hardware and software
  • Software suites
  • Sports/Concert tickets
  • Auto accessories

25
Exercise 10.6 Screening via Bundling
Pricing of a two-concert mini season (Wagner and
Harbison) at a theater. Highly segmented, with
only three types of customers
A customer may go to one or both of the concerts.
26
Benchmark Explicit Market Segmentation
No Bundling
27
Pure Bundling
Mixed Bundling
28
Bottom Line
  • Even if you cannot explicitly segment the market
    dont lose heart. You can still price
    discriminate if you know the composition of the
    market
  • Construct menus of deals which make costumers
    reveal to you their type via their choice of
    deals
  • Find products and design mechanisms where you
    can effectively prevent high-end consumers from
    buying the low-end product
  • Try product differentiation, versioning,
    inter-temporal pricing, damaging, bundling, that
    achieves price discrimination

Do not ignore the composition of your market!
29
  • If a 5 increase in income leads to a 12
    increase in the quantity demanded of mobile
    phones, ceteris paribus, the value of the income
    elasticity of demand for mobile phones is
  • a. 2.4 and mobile phones are a normal good.
    b. 0.42 and mobile phones are a normal
    good.c. 2.4 and mobile phones are an inferior
    good.d. 0.42 and mobile phones are an inferior
    good.
  • The existence of profit in a perfectly
    competitive industry means that
  • a. new producers will seek to enter the
    industry.b. the current price exceeds marginal
    cost.c. consumers will switch to substitute
    goods.d. each producer is charging a different
    price.e. the current price exceeds average
    cost.

30
  • What is meant by the "deadweight loss" caused by
    a tax?a. The surplus that results.b. The
    inefficiency that results from the loss of
    potentially
  • beneficial transactions.
  • c. The transfer of wealth from taxpayers to the
    government in
  • the form of tax revenue.
  • d. The shortage that results.
  • One difference between monopoly and perfect
    competition is that a. a perfect competitor
    seeks to maximize profit a monopolist does not.
  • b. the marginal revenue curve for a monopolist
    is downward-sloping,
  • and for a perfect competitor it is
    horizontal.c. a monopolist seeks to maximize
    profit a perfect competitor does not.
  • d. the marginal revenue curve for a perfect
    competitor is downward-
  • sloping, and for a monopolist it is horizontal.

31
5. The profit-maximizing rule for a monopoly firm
is to produce at the output rate where
a. price is maximum b. MR MC/1 (1/Ed)
c. P exceeds ATC by the greatest amount
d. all of these e. none of these 6. A firm
producing in the short run uses two inputs,
capital and labor. The quantity of capital is
fixed and generates a monthly cost of 6,000. The
quantity of labor can be varied, and the
wage rate per hour of labor is 20. If 400
hours of labor are hired for the month, and 140
units of output are produced, what is the
firms average total cost for the month?
a. 100.00 b. 2.80 c. 123.00
d. 43.00
32
  • The monopolist's marginal revenue curve is
    downward-sloping because a. his total revenue
    declines as he sells more.b. he operates in the
    range where ATC is downward-sloping.c. he
    operates in the range where MC is
    downward-sloping.d. the monopolist must lower
    his price in order to sell more.
  • Suppose a seller is considering entering a new
    market. Demand for the
  • product is given by Q80-p. Marginal cost is
    equal to 10 and the seller also
  • has a fixed entry cost equal to 600. A
    price set at the level of 30 is
  • a. above the profit maximizing price for the
    seller.
  • b. equal to the profit maximizing price for the
    seller but, as the seller does
  • not cover his fixed cost, he should
    not enter.
  • c. below the profit maximizing price but allows
    the seller to make profit.
  • d. maximizing the sellers revenue.
  • e. below the profit maximizing profit and does
    not allow the seller to
  • make profit.

33
9. If a firm experiences economies of scale as
it expands production, a. then its
marginal cost curve is not upward-sloping in that
range. b. then it is not subject to
diminishing returns. c. then its average
total cost curve is downward-sloping in that
range. 10. Suppose an industry
initially had been perfectly competitive and
then became a monopoly. Which of the
following would occur? a. The deadweight
loss would be eliminated. b. Producer
surplus would decrease c. Consumer surplus
would increase. d. Consumer surplus would
decrease.
34
  • A perfectly competitive firm is currently
    selling its product at the market
  • price of 6. Its average fixed cost is
    0.75 and its average total cost is
  • 5.50. How much would the market price
    have to decline in order for the
  • firm to choose to shut down in the short
    run? a. The price would have to fall below
    4.75. b. The price would have to fall below
    0.75 c. The firm should shut down now, at the
    price of 6.00 d. The price would have to fall
    below 5.50.
  • 12. For a firm with market power the more
    inelastic the demand for a firm's
  • product, the
  • a. smaller the markup of price over cost
  • c. larger the price
  • d. more likely it is that the firm must price
    as if it were in a perfectly
  • competitive market
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