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Price. Price is unique among the 4 Ps in that it directly affects the company's revenues and profits.Pricing is both a science and an art.Diligence and creativity are both necessary.Pricing seems to be the one ?P" that has been dramatically affected by the use of the Internet.. Characteristics of Industrial Prices I.
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1. Chapter 10 Pricing Industrial Products
And Services
2. Price Price is unique among the 4 Ps in that it directly affects the companys revenues and profits.
Pricing is both a science and an art.
Diligence and creativity are both necessary.
Pricing seems to be the one P that has been dramatically affected by the use of the Internet.
3. Characteristics of Industrial Prices I Includes more than list or quoted price
Delivery & Installation
Discounts (quantity, promotion, remit time)
Training costs
Trade-in allowance
Promotions: 2 for 1
Financing costs
4. Characteristics of Industrial Prices II Not an independent variable. Pricing interacts with:
product,
promotion, and
distribution strategies
Must consider complementary or substitute products when establishing price strategy
5. Characteristics of Industrial Prices III Prices can be changed by:
Changing price paid by buyer
Changing quantity/quality offered by seller
Changing premiums or discounts
Changing time and place of payment
Carry
Tax/Cash Flow implications
Changing time and place of transfer of ownership
Delivery
6. Characteristics of Industrial Prices IV Pricing often set through competitive bidding on a project-by-project basis
Dont know competitors prices
Negotiation may be used instead (some insist)
Emphasis on fairness
Need to justify price increases
Also justify higher prices
7. Characteristics of Industrial Prices V Affected by economic factors outside companys control:
Inflation
Long-Term contract (escalation clauses)
Interest Rates
Currency Exchange Rates
Affects cost of materials
Affects price of exports
8. Price = f(Value) Need to set an initial price that is neither too high (hurts sales) or too low (lost profit)
Value has two major dimensions:
Customers subjective estimate of products capacity to satisfy a set of goals
Objectively established by the competitive market. What the market will bear.
9. Economic Value to the Customer Purely economic sources of value
Need to compare life-cycle costs of your product and substitutes
If incremental value is high enough to justify a higher price, then there is EVC
Sometimes it takes a convincing sales effort to help customer see the value
10. Whats it worth to the customer? How much money can customers save by using our product?
Can the product help them increase sales or reach new customers?
Does the product provide a competitive advantage?
Does the product improve the safety of the products the customer sells? ( Value)
How much time can customer save by buying product vs. making themselves?
11. Strategic Pricing Programs:Objectives I ROI; Market Share
LT/ST Profit
Sales Growth
Stabilize Market
Convey Desired Image
Desensitize customers to price
Be Price Leader
Discourage entry & push out weak competitors
12. Strategic Pricing Programs:Objectives II Avoid Government interference (Anti-Trust/Regs)
Perceived Fairness
Customers, Distributors, Suppliers
Create interest & excitement
Sell other items in line
Discourage competitors from dropping price
Recover investment quickly
Generate sales volume
Encourage quick payment
13. Strategic Pricing Programs:Strategy Cost-Based
Fixed and Variable costs/Unit
Markup/ROI
Market-Based
Competitor Prices
Customer Demand
14. Market-Based Pricing Strategies Floor: just cover costs
Penetration: lower than market
Parity: match market
Premium: skimming
Price Leadership: everyone plays follow the leader
Stay Out/Keep Out
Bundle: Multiple products/services
Value-Based: Segment pricing
Cross-Benefit: Gotcha (Razors, Ink Jet)
15. Strategic Pricing Programs:Structure Basic: One price, no discounts, everyone pays the same
Lacks flexibility, limits sales
Low Cost ? competitive advantage in price
Price moves toward costs in PLC, until end
Creative Pricing: empty seats, box filler, late cancellations, season, demand, advance purchase, customer loyalty
16. Strategic Pricing Programs:Levels/Tactics Actual price charge w/discounts
Acceptable range that conveys value
Odd ($2,999) vs. Round ($3000)
Ensure adequate price gaps between items
Modify for costs, competitors, market ?s
Timing: not arbitrary, justify to customer
Sends signals to customers/competitors
Rebates, 2/1, trade-in, etc.
17. Pricing Program Strategy, structure, level, and tactics all work together. They must be coordinated.
Strategy may be long lived (several years).
May need to modify structure periodically.
Offer special price deals.
Levels and tactics need to be monitored closely and changed as needed.
Address competitor changes
In response to cost changes
As demand changes
18. Pricing Decisions: What Lies Beneath? Most companies use multiple pricing strategies.
If the firm sells complimentary or substitute products, they are more likely to use product line strategies (e.g., bundling).
Objectives
Costs
Demand
Competition
19. Objectives/Strategies Differentiation ? Higher Margins
Fewer competitors are substitutes
Increased brand loyalty
Moving to low price from premium-quality position can hurt sales, not help
Recoup development costs over longer period of time. Otherwise run risk of sales numbers that are too low to ever recoup costs.
20. Costs Establishes the minimum price
Set price based on target margin or return
Can price below cost to:
Keep employees and facilities working during downturn
Support other products in the line
Low bid to establish relationship. Make $ in long term, or on extras
Experience or reputation
New skills
21. Standard Cost Approach Target Return Pricing
Need accurate sales forecast: standard volume
Variable costs and fixed costs/unit: standard costs
P = DVC + FC/Q + rK/Q
P: Price DVC: Direct Variable Cost/Unit
FC: Fixed Cost r: Rate of Return
K: Capital Used Q: Standard Volume (units)
22. Standard Cost Approach Can include interest rates on debt, tax rates (perhaps different countries for mfr and sales), or inflation factors.
Dont raise prices to counter weak sales; Dont drop prices too quickly either
Need reliable standard volume estimate
Initial low price may increase volume, which in turn lowers per unit fixed costs
23. Contribution Analysis Trade off between price and units sold
Total Revenue Total Variable Cost = Variable Contribution Margin
Fixed Costs Contribution/Unit = Break Even Sales Volume (minimum sales)
Estimate change in volume for changes in price and compare to break even (Maximum sales/profit
24. Demand Sets the upper limit of price
Need to understand customers reasons for buying product; how they use it
Hard Benefits
Physical Attributes: hp, productivity, durability, error rate, performance tolerances
Soft Benefits
Warranty, service, other augmented product
Balance benefits to customer against the costs (price +)
25. Costs Price + (delivery, modifications, financing, maintenance, operation, less salvage)
CT machine $500K-$1MM to purchase
Also costs ~ $100K/year to operate and maintain
Cost to prepare facilities to house
Risk (defect, poor performance) ? Cost
What trade offs are the customers willing to accept?
Slower delivery; Low service priority
Higher, chunkier inventory
Larger purchase commitment
26. Elasticity of Demand Sensitivity of customers quantity demand to changes in price
Usually demand has a negative slope (higher price ? lower demand)
Issue is how steep
Sometimes must hit a threshold level before there is a change in elasticity ? Substitutes become more palatable as prices rise
29. Elasticity % ? Quantity % ? Price
If > 1, elastic
If < 1, inelastic
30. Determinants of Elasticity Available substitutes
Necessity of product
Relative size of purchase $$$
Differentiation of product/Standardization
Customer switching costs
Ease/Difficulty of comparison (Complexity)
Third-Party Payer (Pass-Through)
Price/Quality Association
Time (Payment due, need for product)
31. Industrial Products Tend to have inelastic demand
Especially if technically sophisticated, customized, or crucial to operations
Routine purchases more elastic
Situational elasticity: customer and market circumstances
Incumbents push uniqueness
Challengers push substitutability
Elasticity can vary across segments
32. Cross Elasticity Compliments
Lumber and nails, drill presses and bits
Negative cross elasticity
Substitutes
Shipping by train vs. truck, Company B vs. A
Positive cross elasticity
33. Competition Need to monitor continuously
Anticipate changes
Relatively easy because there are relatively few suppliers and few customers
Tends to be oligopolistic
Structure: concentrated
Price Leader
Sets the tone for pricing
Usually the organization with the best cost structure (competitive advantage)
34. Four Strategic Pricing Options Pressure Pricing
Opportunistic Pricing
Gold-Standard Pricing
Negotiated Pricing
35. Pressure Pricing Market leader maintains fairly stable price level
Price not dictated by demand fluctuations
Price increases controlled
Controls market entry
36. Opportunistic Pricing Follow the swings of the market
Raise prices as high as elasticity will allow
Raise prices as high as customer goodwill or loyalty will allow
Lower prices as demand drops
37. Gold-Standard Pricing
38. Gold-Standard Pricing Short run policy
Quote all customers the same price
Ignore specific circumstances
39. Negotiated Pricing Tailor pricing to each customer (or segment) based on
Elasticity
Competitive Alternatives
Type of Customers
40. PLC Pricing I Critical at Introductory Stage
Sets the tone for future pricing decisions
Penetration pricing (low)
Higher sales, lower margins
Can leave too much on the table
Parity pricing (match)
Premium/Skimming pricing (high)
Can get highest margins
Risk competitive entry
Always easier to lower prices than to raise
Dont try to recoup R&D costs too quickly
41. PLC Pricing II Growth: New competition
More specialized need segments develop
Product extensions developed
Scale economies and experience curve start to come into play
Price ranges narrow; convergence on market price
Downward pressure on pricing
42. PLC Pricing III Maturity: Market more saturated
Competition aggressive and entrenched
Product may be cash generator (Cash Cow)
Focus is on repeat sales/internal cost efficiency
Competition more heavily priced based; but stop short of price war
Maximize short-term direct product contribution to profit
43. PLC Pricing IV Decline
May raise price to capitalize on remaining, inelastic demand, or
Leave prices stable, cut expenditures, let product die, or
Cut price, toward break-even, use as loss leader to sell complimentary products
44. Competitive Bidding I Most common with
public projects
governmental agencies
custom, technically complex products
long manufacturing cycles
Usually the low bidder
Not always in private sector
Consider bidder qualifications (See AGC form)
45. Competitive Bidding II Invitation to Bid: RFP published
Newspaper
Private Publications: Dodge Reports
Usually very precise plans and specifications that become part of the purchase contract
May have to provide a performance bond to ensure that the product/service will be completed. Bid bonds less common.
46. Competitive Bidding III Sealed/Closed Bids
Due at same time
Open all at once
One time pricing
Open/Negotiated Bids
Iterative process
Combines bidding and negotiating
Web bidding has facilitated this process
47. Competitive Bidding IV Questions to consider:
Is project large enough to bid?
Are the specs precise enough to do an accurate bid?
How will successful bid affect our other jobs, products, and customers?
Who else may bid? How hungry are they?
Do we have time to put together quality bid?
(Courtesy Bid)
48. Competitive Bidding V Bidding Strategy
Probabilistic Bidding (Value????)
Assumes profit maximization is goal
Assumes lowest bid selected
Focus on size of bid, expected profit if win, and probability that bid will win
E(X) = P(X)Z(X)
X = Bid Price Z(X) = Actual profit if successful
P(X) = Probability of bid acceptance
E(X) = Expected profit at this bid
49. Competitive Bidding VI Bidding models are only tools
Managerial judgment is critical
Set price to achieve a good win
Bids are not always fixed
Might have an escalation clause
Might have a pass-through clause (cost+)
Post-Bid negotiation (by customer) common
Extras (not addressed by bid) PROFITABLE
50. Negotiation
51. Price Negotiation I Need good interpersonal skills, persuasion skills, judgment, conflict resolution skills
Negotiation is the result of two sides coming together to decide how much gain each will have by working together
If not win-win, wont happen
Each side has minimums that it wants to win and needs to win
If < need ? No deal
If << want ? No repeat deal
52. Price Negotiation II Need to understand risks and rewards for both sides of negotiation
Estimate settlement ranges for self and other party
Bargaining zone: Sellers minimum price to Buyers maximum price
54. Negotiation Styles Avoidant: Relatively rare
Avoid confrontation. Out for self.
Collaborative: Good long-term strategy
Win-Win. Try to satisfy self and other party.
Competitive: Short-sighted
Win-Lose. Get all you can from other party.
Sharing: Common
Both parties partially satisfied.
Accommodative: Rare
Satisfy other party, at own expense.
55. Other Issues on Negotiation One time deal, or repeated negotiation?
Repeat ? more cooperation
Have longer term view
What else besides price is important?
Guarantees
Return Policies
Volume
Quality
Financing
Service
Time constraints?
56. Discounts and Incentives Common point of negotiation
Can use to attract new customers, or keep existing ones
Can offer on select products, and to select customers
Prepaid freight, drop-shipping, financing, post-dating, returns, rebate
Discounts:
Cash
Quantity
Trade
57. Cash Discounts Incentive to pay quickly
Helps cash flow
2/10, n30: 2% off if paid w/in 10 days, otherwise, full amount due in 30 days
Might offer discount for prepaying, prior to delivery, or even prior to production
Many companies need cash, and will discount for up-front $ (+ no risk)
Prepaid expenses can provide payer tax benefits in addition to discounts offered
58. Quantity Discounts Cheaper by the dozen theory
Seller gets guaranteed sales
Can plan production better
Smoothes out production, inventory, delivery
Helps with financing, & getting other business
Can offer discounts on $ or unit level
Might spread out large purchases over a period of time, but commit up front
59. Trade Discounts Also called functional discounts
Usually given to distributors for performing certain functions for the manufacturer
Storage, warehousing
Sales
Transportation
Promotion
Common with automobile dealers
60. Leasing I Contract to use an asset that is owned by someone else (renting) for a period of time
Avoid cash payment up front
Sometimes avoid maintenance and ops costs
Can expense for taxes (not amortize)
Does not reduce debt capacity
Hedge against technology obsolescence
61. Leasing II Financial Lease
Longer term
S lease pmts > Purchase price of asset
Lessee (buyer) responsible for maintenance & operating expenses
Can apply some of lease pmt to purchase @ end
Operating Lease
Shorter, cancelable
Not amortized
Lessor (seller) responsible for ownership expenses
No purchase option
Lease price > financial lease price
62. Transfer Pricing Internal sales price from one division to another within the same company
Need to cover costs
Need to be cheaper than market
Exact price subject to negotiation
Both sides usually profit centers
May need to be determined by higher-up
Set formula (cost + 2/3 of margin to market)
63. WWW & Pricing Facilitates information search by customers
Auctions: buyers set prices, not sellers
Buyers control transaction, on-line bidding
Can get spot pricing on everything and can take competitive bids on lots of purchases
Forces even strong brands to be treated like commodities
64. What to do about WWW Use differential pricing
Optimize pricing by using customer data: increases customer switching costs
De-Menu pricing; can adjust pricing almost instantly as needed; remove lumpiness
Push differentiation even more: can use web to provide pleasing aesthetics, entertainment, education, or escapism
Dont assume customers will not pay more
Establish electronic exchanges, barter excess supplies
Maximize revenue, not price: Yield Management