Solomon_6e_PPT_Student_11.ppt

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Transcript Solomon_6e_PPT_Student_11.ppt

Chapter 11

Price the Product

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Chapter Objectives

  

Explain the importance of pricing and understand how prices can take both monetary and nonmonetary forms Understanding the pricing objectives that marketers typically set when they plan pricing strategies Describe how marketers use costs, demands, and revenue to make pricing decisions

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

Chapter Objectives

    

Understand some of the environmental factors that affect pricing Understand key pricing strategies Explain pricing tactics for single and multiple products Understand the opportunities for Internet pricing strategies Describe the psychological, legal, and ethical aspects of pricing 11-3

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Real People, Real Choices:

Decision Time at Taco Bell

Which pricing option should Taco Bell implement?

– Option 1:

Price the entire menu at $1.29

– Option 2:

Use mixed price menu #4, and price items at $.99 and $1.29

– Option 3:

Use mixed price menu #1, and price menu items at $.99, $1.19, and $1.29

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“Yes, but what does it cost?”

Price: The assignment of value, or the amount the consumer must exchange to receive the offering

Includes money, goods, services, favors, votes, or anything else that has value to the other party

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Steps in Price Planning

Step 1: Develop Pricing Objectives

Pricing objectives take many forms:

Sales or market share objectives

Profit objectives

Competitive effect objectives

Customer satisfaction objectives

Image enhancement objectives

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Steps in Price Planning

Step 2: Estimate Demand

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Demand: Customers’ desire for a product

How much of a product are customers willing to buy as its price goes up or down?

Law of demand:

For most products, as price goes up, quantity demanded goes down

For prestige products, a price increase may actually result in an increase in quantity demanded

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Shifts in Demand

Typical demand curves assume that only price changes, but in reality, other factors can shift demand upward or downward

Changes in marketing strategy (improved product, new advertising)

Non-marketing activities (product recalls, development of new technologies, etc.)

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Estimating Demand

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 

Total demand:

Number of buyers * average amount of each buyer’s purchase

Firm’s demand:

Total demand * the firm’s estimated share of the market

Demand estimates should be adjusted if competition, the economy, or other factors change

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

Price Elasticity of Demand

Elasticity of demand: The percentage change in unit sales that results from a percentage change in price

When changes in price have large effects on the amount demanded, demand is elastic

When changes in price have little or no effect on the amount demanded, demand is inelastic

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Elastic vs. Inelastic Demand

Elastic Demand

Revenues decrease as price increases and vice versa

Non-necessities (pizza) generate elastic demand

Availability of close substitute products facilitates elastic demand

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Inelastic Demand

As price increases, revenues increase

The demand for necessities such as food and electricity is generally inelastic

Cross-elasticity of Demand

Changes in the prices of other products affect a product’s demand

If products are substitutes, an increase in the price of one will increase demand for the other (bananas vs. strawberries)

If one product is essential for use of second, an increase in the price of one decreases demand for another (Example: increasing price of gas lowers demand for tires)

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Steps in Price Planning

Step 3: Determine Costs

Variable costs: Costs of production that are tied to and vary depending on the number of units produced

Average variable costs may change as the number of products produced changes

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Steps in Price Planning

Step 3: Determine Costs

Fixed costs: Costs of production that don’t change with the number of units produced

Rent, cost of owning/maintaining factory, utilities, equipment, fixed salaries of a firm’s executives

Average fixed cost per unit will decrease as the number of units produced increases

Total costs: Total of fixed costs and variable costs for a set number of units produced 11-14

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Break-Even Analysis

Break-even analysis:

Determines the number of units a firm must produce/sell at a given price to cover costs

Break-even point:

– – –

Point at which total revenue and total cost are equal Break-even point (in units)

Contribution per unit

Break-even point (in dollars)

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Marginal Analysis

Analysis that uses cost and demand to find the price that will maximize profits

Marginal cost: Increase in total costs from producing one additional unit of a product

Marginal revenue: Increase in total income or revenue from selling one additional unit (decreases with each additional unit sold)

Profit is maximized where marginal cost is exactly equal to marginal revenue

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Steps in Price Planning Step 4: Evaluate the Pricing Environment

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The economy

– –

Broad economic trends Recession

Consumers become more price sensitive

Inflation

Accustoms consumers to price increases Competition Consumer trends 11-17

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Steps in Price Planning

Step 5: Choose a Price Strategy

Pricing strategies based on cost

Simple to calculate and relatively risk free

The drawback of cost-based strategies is that they do not consider demand, competition, or the nature of the target market

Cost-plus pricing: Total all product costs and add markup

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Steps in Price Planning

Step 5: Choose a Price Strategy

Pricing strategies based on demand

Based on estimates of the quantity a firm can sell at different prices

Target costing: Identify quality and functionality customers need and price they’re willing to pay before designing product

Yield management pricing: Manages capacity by charging different prices to different customers

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Steps in Price Planning

Step 5: Choose a Price Strategy

Pricing strategies based on the competition

Pricing near, at, above, or below the competition

Price leadership strategy: Industry giant announces price, and competitors get in line or drop out

Typical in oligopolistic industries 11-20

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Steps in Price Planning

Step 5: Choose a Price Strategy

Pricing strategies based on customers’ needs

Value pricing or everyday low pricing (EDLP): Pricing strategy in which a firm sets prices that provide ultimate value to customers

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Steps in Price Planning

Step 5: Choose a Price Strategy

New-product pricing

Skimming price: A very high premium price is charged

Penetration pricing: A very low price to encourage more customers to purchase

Trial pricing: Low price for a limited period of time

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Steps in Price Planning

Step 6: Develop Pricing Tactics

Pricing for individual products

Two-part pricing

Payment pricing

Pricing for multiple products

Price bundling

Captive pricing

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Steps in Price Planning

Step 6: Develop Pricing Tactics

Distribution-based pricing

F.O.B. (free on board) origin pricing

F.O.B delivered pricing

Basing-point pricing

Uniform delivered pricing

Freight absorption pricing

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Steps in Price Planning

Step 6: Develop Pricing Tactics

11-25 Discounting for channel members

– –

List price (suggested retail price) Trade or functional discounts

Price given to channel members

– –

Quantity discounts Cash discounts

Encourages prompt payment

Seasonal discounts

Available only at certain times of the year

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

Pricing and Electronic Commerce

Dynamic pricing strategies are common in e-commerce:

Cost of changing prices on the Internet is practically zero

Firms can respond quickly and frequently to changes in costs, supply, and/or demand

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Pricing and Electronic Commerce

Online auctions (eBay.com)

E-commerce allows shoppers to purchase products through online bidding

11-27 Pricing advantages for online shoppers

– –

Consumers gain control Search engines and “shopbots” make customers more price-sensitive

– –

Consumers have more negotiating power Saves gas, time, and hassle associated with shopping at stores

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Pricing and Electronic Commerce

Freenomics: A business model that encourages giving products away for free because of the increase in profits that can be achieved by getting more people to participate in a market

Example: Comcast gave 9 million subscribers FREE digital video recorders but made money on installation and monthly DVR usage fees

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Psychological Issues in Setting Prices

Buyer’s pricing expectation

Internal reference price

Price/quality inferences

Psychological pricing strategies

Odd-even pricing

Price lining

Prestige pricing

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Legal and Ethical Considerations in Pricing

Deceptive pricing practices

Going-out-of-business sale

Bait-and-switch

Unfair sales acts

Loss-leader pricing

Unfair sales acts

Illegal business-to-business price discrimination 11-30

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Legal and Ethical Considerations in Pricing

Price fixing: Two or more companies conspire to keep prices at a certain level

– –

Horizontal price fixing Vertical price fixing

Predatory pricing: Firm sets a very low price for purpose of driving competitors out of business 11-31

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Real People, Real Choices:

Decision Made at Taco Bell

Danielle chose option 3

– Implementation:

Menu items were priced at $.99, $1.19 and $1.29. Consumers responded well to the Big Bell Value Menu

– Measuring success:

Sales lift (overall sales increase due to Big Bell Value Menu) was used. Other metrics include occasion-based analysis of purchase and performance relative to the break-even point

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Keeping It Real:

Fast-Forward to Next Class Decision Time at NAME

Meet Walter F. Judas, VP of Marketing Communications at Tourism Vancouver

Tourism Vancouver is a not-for-profit business association that promotes tourism

The decision to be made:

How to ensure that Tourism Vancouver continues to play a lead role in the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter games 11-33

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All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall