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Retail Travel Services (TM 334) Lecture 4 OPERATIONS. 1- Retail Pricing. Retail pricing: The pricing technique used by most retailers is cost-plus pricing . This involves adding a mark-up amount (or percentage) to the retailer's cost.
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Retail Travel Services (TM 334) Lecture 4 OPERATIONS
Retail pricing: • The pricing technique used by most retailers is cost-plus pricing. This involves adding a mark-up amount (or percentage) to the retailer's cost. • Another common technique is suggested retail pricing • This simply involves charging the amount suggested by the manufacturer and usually printed on the product by the manufacturer.
Pricing StrategiesEDLP vs HIGH/LOW • Everyday Low Pricing (EDLP) • Prices are set between regular non-sale price and deep discount sale prices • May consider it as “Everyday Stable Prices” • High/Low Pricing • Prices are higher than EDLP competitors, but promote frequent sales featuring lower prices • Makes the consumer’s purchase decision time-dependent Adapted from Levy/Weitz
Pricing StrategiesEDLP vs HIGH/LOW EDLP Strategy 4 Advantages Reduced Price Wars Reduced Advertising Improved In-Stock Levels Reduced Stockouts & Improved Inventory Management High/Low Strategy 4 Advantages Same Merchandise Appeals to Multiple Markets Creates Excitement Moves Merchandise Emphasis on Quality or Service OR Source: Adapted from Levy and Weitz
Pricing INTERNAL FACTORS Product Characteristics Variable Cost Per Unit • Demand Patterns • Perishable • Seasonal? • Easily obsolete? • Product Line • Manufacturer’s price per unit • Allocated: • Transportation • Labor • “Shrinkage” Category/Item Role/Strategy Item Price • Does the item draw shoppers to the store? • Does the item offer one-stop-shopping convenience?
How Does Item Pricing Affect Sales of a Brand or Product Line? • The relative price of each item within a brand affects total brand sales • Price per unit varies based on: • Different sizes • Different quality levels or features Consumers are pretty effective at identifying and selecting the “best buys”
PricingPRODUCT • Product Line Pricing refers to pricing items within the product line, or brand, so that as the price per unit decreases as quantity increases • Is important because the consumer is confused if the price per unit does not decline as the quantity increases – “irrational” pricing • Failure to price rationally is likely to result in low sales volumes for larger sizes, making them less profitable based on ABC
PricingPRODUCT • There are two major causes of product line pricing problems: • The manufacturer does not price so that cost per unit drops with increased features or quantity • Pricing base models, or popular sizes, aggressively (at low margins) requires other items within the brand to be priced at higher margin Items with more (features) are priced too high
PricingPRODUCT • To avoid product line pricing problems: • Buyers/category managers (or pricing specialists) should be careful when making price changes • A “price simulator,” or some other tool, can be developed by which relative prices for items within a brand are determined automatically • Items that are not properly priced by vendors, i.e., items that have higher unit costs as quality/quantity increases, should be dropped from the product line • It can irritate and upset customers, reducing satisfaction and loyalty
PricingCOMPETITION • The most common form of competitive pricing is price matching • Must be able to monitor competitors’ prices • Easy to implement • Applied more often to frequently purchased items • In packaged goods, may also maintain a percentage spread relative to other formats on key SKUs • e.g., spread between national brands and private labels • Price matching guarantee The effect of competition is muted by exclusive products or when comparison is difficult
PricingCOMPETITION • However, if competitors price a category at too low a gross margin, it does not mean that their prices should be matched • Category pricing should take into account the following, along with competitor prices: • Consumer price sensitivity • Importance of the category to the chain’s price image • Strategic importance of the category (i.e., is it a “Destination” category?)
PricingCONSUMER PRICE SENSITIVITY • Product categories are not uniformly responsive to prices – some are more sensitive to price levels than others • Consumers also may respond differently than one another to price levels Price sensitivity (price elasticity) reflects how purchase behavior changes with changes in price
Consumer Price SensitivityRETAILER CONSEQUENCES • Price sensitivity can have different consequences for the retailer: • Price image - How do item prices and category price levels affect how consumers feel about the prices in the store • Product substitutability - How willing are consumers to substitute one product for another in the category
Consumer Price SensitivityPRICE IMAGE • Specific types of categories have a greater impact on price image than others: • Frequently purchased categories • Categories in which consumers spend a lot of money • Categories which are important to price image can be identified by analyzing categories’ frequency of purchase and actual expenditure • Products within a category also have different effects on price image: • Leading, high-share brands have a major impact on price image • Aggressive pricing of private label does not as pronounced an impact on price image
Consumer Price SensitivityPRICE IMAGE • The best evidence available indicates that consumers use different mechanisms to determine the price image of a retailer Source: Center for Retail Management, Northwestern University
Consumer Price SensitivityPRODUCT SUBSTITUTABILITY • Product substitutability can be measured by: • Price elasticities - the effect of price changes of an item on sales of that particular item. • Cross-price elasticities - the effect of price changes of one item on other items in the category. • If a brand has high brand equity, it has low cross-price elasticities • If a brand has little brand equity, it has high cross-price elasticities Suppliers may be able to measure price elasticities, but can seldom produce cross-price elasticities