1 / 16

GLOBAL PRICING ISSUES

Explore price definition, cost considerations, experience curves, financial issues, positioning strategies, gray trade impact, effects of the Euro, distribution challenges, retail formats, and legal constraints in international pricing and trade.

tdelarosa
Download Presentation

GLOBAL PRICING ISSUES

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. GLOBAL PRICING ISSUES • Price--definition • Applicability of price research outside U.S./Western Europe • Pricing issues in international trade • Pricing under “hard” currency scarcity

  2. Approaches to Pricing • Cost based • “Cost-plus” • Marginal cost for new market • Experience based costing • Prestige pricing • Market based pricing (demand) • Perceived customer value

  3. Reasons for Cost Declines With Volume • Experience curves • Economies of • Scale • Scope • Spreading R&D costs over more units • Lower costs of operating in other markets • Labor costs • Costs of other resources

  4. Experience Curves • Experience apart from economies of scale and volume buying power • 80% vs. 64% experience curves (actual numbers will vary depending on specifics) • Costs of initial units are very high and not very meaningful • With time, subsequent declines in cost take longer 80% 64%

  5. The Role of Cost PRODUCTION AND MARKETING COST VALUE > COST + PROFIT? CUSTOMER VALUE MARKET PRICES FOR SIMILAR VALUE LOWER COST THROUGH VOLUME VALUE > DIFFERENTIAL FROM LOWER COST ALTERNATIVE? INVESTMENT IN SPECIAL VALUE PRICE CONSIDERED PRICE OFFERING IF VIABLE

  6. Financial Issues • Currency of transaction • One side will face exchange rate risks • Costs of hedging and futures contracts • Currency convertibility and repatriability • Transfer prices between subsidiaries • Fairness of evaluation • Tax consequences  need for “arms length” transaction

  7. Price and Positioning • Strategies • Market brand • Value brand • Prestige brand • Impact of Product Life Cycle (PLC) • Cross-market spillover • Policies • Polycentric (price set for each set of markets) • Geocentric (global policy but individual mark-up decisions) • Ethnocentric (same price across countries)

  8. “Gray” Trade • “Gray” vs. “black” markets • Parallel importing • Re-importing (e.g., U.S. pharmaceuticals) • Legality • Diversion to higher cost markets (arbitrage) • “Consumer tourism”—forms • Limited quantities • Trip made for purchase of bringing back materials • “Nominal” travel to legitimize purchase • Manufacturer response

  9. Counter Trade • Barter • Compensation deals • Counter purchases • Product Buy-Back

  10. Effects of the Euro • Stable “exchange rates” • Easier comparability of prices across countries • May have served as sign of international competitive pressures • Changing prices to the Euro • Possible opportunity for price increase • Rounding issues • Highly visible and “institutionalized” prices • Concerns about competitor strategies

  11. Distribution • Transportation logistics • Role of channel members • customs • legal restrictions • Structure of channels • Legal issues • Infrastructure issues

  12. Retailers--Formats • Level of • service • assortment • Tradition of where merchandise is sold • Location and convenience • (Inter)national vs. local chains

  13. Global Retailing • Increasing presence of international retailers across countries • Outright entry • Acquisition of local chains continued under the original name and position • May be able to take advantage of cross-market • Bargaining power • Economies of scale • Balance with local sourcing

  14. Legal Constraints on Retailing • Restricted store hours • Regulation of assortment • Preferences for small retailers • Product uniformity • Price maintenance/ selective discounts

  15. Parallel Distribution • “Gray” market vs. counterfeiting • Gray markets--diversion from • authorized to unauthorized dealers within a country • lower cost areas (e.g., Mercedes Benz from Europe to U.S.) • temporary promotions in one region • highly taxed areas (usually through tourist purchases)

  16. Effects of Gray Trade • Brand equity • Relationships with established dealers • Legal liabilities • Complication of marketing strategies

More Related