Unit Iii: Pricing

Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 30

UNIT III

Pricing
What Is a Price?
Answer question “What is a price?” and discuss the
1 importance of pricing in today’s fast-changing
environment.

Major Pricing Strategies


Identify the three major pricing strategies and discuss
the importance of understanding customer-value
2
perceptions, company costs, and competitor strategies
when setting prices.
Other Internal and External Considerations
Affecting Price Decisions
3 Identify and define the other important external and
internal factors affecting a firm’s pricing decisions
What is a Price?
 In the narrowest sense, price is the amount of money
charged for a product or a service.
 More broadly, price is the sum of all the values that
customers give up to gain the benefits of having or
using a product or service.
 Price is the only element in the marketing mix that
produces revenue; all other elements represent costs.
Steps in Setting Price

Select the price objective

Determine demand

Estimate costs

Analyze competitor price mix

Select pricing method

Select final price


Step 1: Selecting the Pricing Objective
Survival
Maximum current profit
Maximum market share
Maximum market skimming
Product-quality leadership
Step 2: Determining Demand

Price Sensitivity

Estimating
Demand Curves

Price Elasticity
of Demand
Step 3: Estimating Costs

Types of Costs
Accumulated
Production
Activity-Based
Cost Accounting
Target Costing
Step 5: Selecting a Pricing Method
Step 6: Selecting the Final Price

Impact of other marketing activities


Company pricing policies
Gain-and-risk sharing pricing
Impact of price on other parties
Pricing Strategies

 The price the company charges will fall somewhere


between one that is too low to produce a profit and
one that is too high to produce any demand.
Customer Value-Based Pricing
 Customer value-based pricing uses buyers’ perceptions
of value as the key to pricing.
 The company first assesses customer needs and value
perceptions.
 It then sets its target price based on customer perceptions
of value.
 The targeted value and price drive decisions about what
costs can be incurred and the resulting product design.
Good-Value Pricing
 In response, many companies have changed their pricing
approaches to bring them in line with changing economic
conditions and consumer price perceptions.
 More and more, marketers have adopted good-value
pricing strategies ─ offering the right combination of
quality and good service at a fair price.
Value-Added Pricing

 Many companies adopt value-added pricing


strategies.
 Rather than cutting prices to match competitors,
they attach value-added features and services to
differentiate their offers and thus support their
higher prices.
Cost-Based Pricing

 Cost-Based pricing involves setting prices based


on the costs of producing, distributing, and
selling the product plus a fair rate of return for its
effort and risk.
 A company’s costs may be an important element
in its pricing strategy.
Types of Costs
The sum of the fixed and
variable costs for any
given level of production.
Costs that do not vary
with production or sales
level.

Fixed costs
Variable costs Total costs
(over-head)

Costs that vary directly with


the level of production.
Cost-Plus Pricing
 The simplest pricing method is cost-plus pricing (or
markup pricing) ─ adding a standard markup to the cost
of the product.Variable cost $10
Fixed costs $300,000
Expected unit sales 50,000
Then the manufacturer’s cost per toaster is given by the following:
fixed costs $300,000
unit cost = variable Cost + = $10+ = $16
unit sales 50,000
Now suppose the manufacturer wants to earn a 20 percent
Markup on sales. The manufacturer’s markup price is given by the
following:
unit cost $16
markup price = = =$20
(1−desired reture on sales) 1−0.2
Competition-Based Pricing

 Competition-based pricing involves setting


prices based on competitors’ strategies, costs,
prices, and market offerings.
 Consumers will base their judgments of a
product’s value on the prices that competitors
charge for similar products.
Other Internal and External
Considerations Affecting Price Decisions
 Internal factors affecting pricing include the
company’s overall marketing strategy, objectives,
and marketing mix, as well as other
organizational considerations.
 External factors include the nature of the market
and demand and other environmental factors.
Organizational Considerations
 Top management sets the pricing objectives and policies,
and it often approves the prices proposed by lower level
management or salespeople.
 In industries in which pricing is a key factor, companies
often have pricing departments to set the best prices or
help others set them.
 These departments report to the marketing department or
top management.
 Others who have an influence on pricing include sales
managers, production managers, finance managers, and
accountants.
Price-Adaptation Strategies

Geographical Pricing

Discounts/Allowances

Promotional Pricing

Differentiated Pricing
Price-Adaptation Strategies

Countertrade Discounts/ Allowances


Barter Cash discount
Compensation deal Quantity discount
Buyback arrangement Functional discount
Offset Seasonal discount
Allowance
The Market and Demand

 In this section, we take a deeper look at the price-


demand relationship and how it caries for
different types of markets.
 We then discuss methods for analyzing the price-
demand relationship.
Pricing in Different Types of Markets
Economists recognize four types of markets, each presenting a different
pricing challenge.

Four types of market

Pure
monopoly
Pure
competitio
n
Oligopolistic
competition Monopolistic
competition
Analyzing the Price-Demand Relationship
 Demand curve is a curve that shows the number
of units the market will buy in a given time
period, at different prices that might be charged.
Price Elasticity of Demand

 Price Elasticity is a measure of the sensitivity of


demand to changes in price.
 It is given by the following formula:
%change in quantity demanded
price elasticity of demand =
%change in price

• If demand is elastic rather than inelastic, sellers will


consider lowering their prices.
• A lower price will produce more total revenue.
• Marketers need to work harder than ever to differentiate
their offerings when a dozen competitors are selling
virtually the same product at a comparable or lower price.
The Economy
 Economic conditions can have a strong impact on the
firm’s pricing strategies.
 Economic factors such as a boom or recession, inflation,
and interest rates affect pricing decisions because they
affect consumer spending, consumer perceptions of the
product’s price and value, and the company’s costs of
producing and selling a product.
Other External Factors

 Resellers react to various prices


 Government
 Social Concerns
The End

You might also like