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Agenda:. Key drivers in setting pricesInternal factorsCompany objectivesCostsPositioningExternal factorsCompetitionChannelsCustomersOther environmental elementsGeneral pricing approaches. What is Price? Many Names. RentFeeRateCommissionTuitionFareTollPremiumBribeInterest. What i
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1. Pricing Policy Marketing Management
2. Agenda:
Key drivers in setting prices
Internal factors
Company objectives
Costs
Positioning
External factors
Competition
Channels
Customers
Other environmental elements
General pricing approaches
3. What is Price? Many Names Rent
Fee
Rate
Commission
Tuition
Fare
Toll
Premium
Bribe
Interest
4. What is Price? Only marketing mix element to produce revenues
Most flexible element
6. Pricing Factors Internal
Company goals
Target profit/ROI
Product positioning
Costs
External
Channel
Competition
Customer value (perceived)
8. Internal factors: Costs Floor
Unit cost as a function of cumulative output
11. Internal factors Product positioning
Top-end – luxury/prestige signal
Middle-of-the-road
Bottom-end – “value-for-money”
12. External Factors: Distribution Channels Margins affect end-price
Dell versus Apple
Margins influence amount of push:
Contribution = (RP-WP) x volume
Margin-game: RP – WP (niche players)
Turnover-game: volume (mass marketers)
13. External Factors: Competition Reference point
Competitive response – factors:
Price cut or increase
Comparability of competitive offers
Number of competitors & market shares
Who initiates price cut (price leader versus fringe player)
Profitability
Emotions
14. External Factors: Customer Value Perceived value is derived from:
Economic benefits (performance, productivity)
Functional benefits (features)
Emotional benefits (comfort, power, etc.)
Value is unique to individual customer
15. General Pricing Approaches Markup pricing
Target return (profit) pricing
Going rate pricing
Value pricing
16. Cost-based Pricing – Markup pricing Adding a standard markup to cost
18. Cost-Based Pricing Example
Variable costs: $10 Fixed costs: $ 300,000
Expected sales: 50,000 units Desired Sales Markup: 20%
Variable Cost + Fixed Costs/Unit Sales = Unit Cost
$10 + $300,000/50,000 = $16 per unit
Unit Cost/(1 – Desired Return on Sales) = Markup Price
$16 / (1 - .20) = $20
Profit = $4 per unit (20% of $20) Markup Pricing
19. Advantages of Cost-Plus Pricing Legally acceptable
Price always above cost
If costs known, pricing task becomes quite simple
20. Break-even charts show total cost and total revenues at different levels of unit volume.
The intersection of the total revenue and total cost curves is the break-even point.
Companies wishing to make a profit must exceed the break-even unit volume. Cost-Based Pricing: Target Profit Pricing
22. Competition-Based Pricing: Going-Rate Pricing Price based on competitors’ prices
Charge same, more or less
24. Value Pricing Base price on perceived value
Perceived value made up of several elements
Use other marketing mix elements to communicate and enhance perceived value
25. Emerson Electric “You developed a product, looked at the costs, and said, ‘I need to make X,’ and you marked it up accordingly – and people would buy it.”
26. Emerson Electric Now the company decides prices by figuring out how much customers are willing to pay, rather than what the products cost – and the differences can be huge.
27. Example: Pricing a new compact sensor for measuring flow of fluids Planned cost-based price: US$ 2,650
Final customer-survey-based price: US$ 3,150 (+20%)
29. Assessing Perceived Value :Survey-Based Methods Direct price response surveys (willingness-to-pay?)
Purchase intention
33. Factors affecting price sensitivity: Perceptions & preferences
How well differentiated?
Price-quality
Substitutes
Awareness of substitutes
Comparability
Sunk cost (or switching cost)
34. Factors affecting price sensitivity Ability to pay
Proportion of total budget
Shared cost (3rd party?)
35. Price Sensitivity Heuristics: Customers are more price sensitive when:
awareness of substitutes is high
total expenditure is high (budget constraint)
opportunity costs of time are low
36. New Product Pricing--Skimming: High S/T profits
Reap profits pre-entry
Quick recovery R&D
Profits before obsolescence (patent expiration)
Room for future price cuts
Prestige & quality signaling
Avoids cut-throat competition
Lower volume --> less demanding on resources
37. New Product Pricing -- Penetration: High profit through fast sales growth
Quick trial
Reduction of S/T costs (experience curve)
Better utilization of high fixed capacity
Deters entrants
39. Product Line Pricing Setting price points between product line items
Set price to maximize profits for entire product line
Captive product pricing – pricing products that must be used with core product (Printers; razors; powered toothbrushes)
40. Product line pricing Loss-leaders
Items priced at minimal margins or even losses
Goal?
41. Psychological Price Points Artificial price points may serve as thresholds
“Odd” pricing (e.g., $999)
Processing of price information
Signaling “good” deal
43. Bundling Offer products as a package (set menu) and price bundle lower than sum of parts
Example: value meals
44. Example: Pricing Encyclopedia Buyer A’s WTP:
Book: $9,000
CD: $1,000
Total: $10,000
A la carte price?
Bundle price? Buyer B’s WTP:
Book: $5,000
CD: $5,000
Total: $10,000
45. Pricing -- Take-Aways: Your price should be driven by all four C’s:
1) Company (Cost/Goals)
2) Channel
3) Competition (Reference)
4) Customer (Perceived Value)
Pricing is not a stand-alone decision but integral part of marketing mix
Pricing is part art, part science
46. Pricing -- Take-Aways: Price and value are two different concepts. Your customers may look for the “best” value. However, “best” value does not mean the lowest price.