1 / 24

MM:Chapter 16

MM:Chapter 16. Designing Pricing Strategies and Programs. Setting the Price. 5.Selecting a pricing method. 4.Analyzing competitors ’ costs, prices and offers. 3. Estimating costs. 6. Selecting the final price. 2. Determining demand. 1. Selecting the pricing objective.

alyn
Download Presentation

MM:Chapter 16

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MM:Chapter 16 Designing Pricing Strategies and Programs

  2. Setting the Price 5.Selecting a pricing method 4.Analyzing competitors’ costs, prices and offers 3. Estimating costs 6. Selecting the final price 2. Determining demand 1. Selecting the pricing objective

  3. 1. Selecting the pricing objective • The firm must determine position of its market • offer. • There are 5 main objectives of pricing: • Survival: covering all FC and VC • Maximum current profit: taking dd & cost into acct • Maximum market share: mkt penetration pricing • Maximum market skimming: skimming pricing • Product-quality leadership: high price, high-quality • Partial cost recovery: for nonprofit org

  4. 2. Determining demand • Demand varies across the level of price. • The lower the price, the more the units • products can be sold. • Degree of price sensitivity depends on • several factors.

  5. Factors affecting degree of price sensitivity Unique-value effect Substitute- awareness effect Difficult- comparison effect Total income- expenditure effect Total cost- expenditure effect Share-cost effect Sunk- investment effect Price-quality effect Inventory effect

  6. 2.1 Estimating demand curve • Analyzing past data • Longitudinal (overtime e.g., BKK in last 10 yrs) • Cross-sectional(diff locations at the same time e.g., BKK, Phuket, Chiengmai, etc. in the yr 2002) • Using price experiment(e.g., several prices in a store) • Interviewing customers(e.g., how many units custs would buy at diff proposed prices)

  7. 2.2 Elasticity of demand • Demand is likely to be more inelastic when : • There are no or few substitutes. • Buyers do not notice higher price. • Buyers are slow to change habit. • Price increase is justified.

  8. 3. Estimating costs 3 main types of costs are: 1) Fixed costs, 2) Variable costs, 3) Average costs: cost per unit at that level of production Accumulated Production: Learning curve will aid price reduction. Differentiated Marketing Offers: ABC accting identifying real costs associated with serving each cust Target costing: 1) Determine price, 2) Determine desired profit margin; then we have the target cost that must be achieved.

  9. 4. Analyzing competitors’ costs, prices and offers

  10. 5. Selecting the pricing method • Pricing can be based on: • Customers' demand schedule • Cost function • Competitors' prices

  11. 7 Different Pricing Methods 1. Markup pricing 2. Target-return pricing 3. Perceived-value pricing 4. Value pricing 5. Going-rate pricing 6. Auction-Type pricing 7. Group pricing

  12. 1. Mark-up Pricing Unit Cost = VC + __FC__ Unit Sales MU Price = Unit Cost________ ( 1 – desired return on sales)

  13. 2. Target-Return Pricing • Target-return price = unit cost + desired return * invested capital unit sales • Break-even volume= __fixed cost__ (Price – VC)

  14. 3. Perceived-value Pricing • Under perceived-value pricing, a company use ads and sales force to communicate and enhance perceived value in buyers’ minds.

  15. 4. Value Pricing • Charging relatively low price for a high-quality product/service e.g., Lotus supercenter. • Everyday low pricing (EDLP) VS High-Low pricing

  16. 5. Going-Rate pricing • Basing price mainly on competitors’ prices rather basing on the dd and cost of the company • Mainly used in oligopolistic industries that sell commodity, and where costs are difficult to measure

  17. The last two Pricing methods 6. Auction-Type Pricing 7. Group or Pool Pricing • Consumers and business buyers can join groups to buy at lower price

  18. 6. Selecting the final price Apart from those calculations, a firm must consider these 5 factors: 1. Psychological pricing 2. Gain-and-risk-Sharing Pricing 3. Influence of other mkting mix 4. Corporate pricing policies 5. Impact of price on other parties

  19. Adapting the price • Geographical pricing • Price discount and allowance • Promotional pricing • Discriminatory pricing • Product-mix pricing

  20. GeographicalPricing • Barter: direct exchange of goods • Compensation deal: some in cash, the rest in pdts • Buyback arrangement: some in cash, the rest in pdts made by the supplied equipment • Offset: all in cash but the large amount of the money will be invested in the buyer’s country

  21. Price Discount and Allowance • Cash discount • Quantity discount • (cumulative, non-cumulative) • Functional discount (trade discount) • Seasonal discount • Allowance: trade-in , and promotional • allowances

  22. Promotional pricing • Loss-leader pricing: cutting price on well-known brands • Special-event pricing: e.g., Central’s summer sale • Cash rebates • Low-interest financing: e.g., water heaters at o% • Longer payment terms • Warranties and service contracts • Psychological discounting: e.g., Was Bt 999, now Bt 499

  23. Discriminatory pricing • Customer-segment pricing: e.g., BTS • Product-form pricing: e.g., Text with hard cover and paperback • Image pricing • Channel pricing: e.g., Coke in a pub, a restaurant • Location pricing • Time pricing

  24. Product-mix pricing • Product-line pricing: e.g., Microsoft’s operating systems • Optional-feature pricing: e.g., small talks, GPRS • Captive-product pricing: e.g., razors and razor blades • Two-part pricing: fixed fee plus a variable usage fee • By-product pricing: pricing pdt on its value • Product-bundling pricing

More Related