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089 Pricing

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PRICING PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
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Page 1: 089 Pricing

PRICINGPRODUCTS AND SERVICES

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NATURE AND IMPORTANCE OF PRICE

What Is Price?

To the seller...To the seller...Price is revenuePrice is revenueand profit sourceand profit source

To the consumer...To the consumer...Price is what you give Price is what you give

up to get what you wantup to get what you want

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THE PRICING EQUATION FOR CONSUMERS

PRICE = LIST PRICE - INCENTIVES & ALLOWANCES + EXTRA FEES

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THE PROFIT EQUATION FOR SELLERS

Profit = Total revenue - Total cost or

Profit = (Unit price × Quantity sold) −Total cost

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WAYS TO SELECT BASE PRICE LEVELS

Demand oriented – focus on consumer preference

Cost oriented – focus on business’s expenses

Profit oriented – focus on profitCompetition oriented – focus on the marketplace players

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DEMAND ORIENTED APPROACHES

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DEMAND ORIENTED APPROACHES

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PROFIT ORIENTED APPROACHES

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PRICING

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COST ORIENTED APPROACHES

• Cost-Oriented Approaches

Standard Markup Pricing add the standard industry fixed % to my costs. Easy to implement.

Cost-Plus Pricing add a standard £ amount to my costs- like £500.00 for shipping and handling

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COMPETITION ORIENTED APPROACHES

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COMPETITION ORIENTED APPROACHES

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Profit-Oriented Pricing Objectives-Profit-Oriented Pricing Objectives-Sales revenue Sales revenue

Sales-Oriented Pricing Objectives-Sales-Oriented Pricing Objectives-

Status Quo Pricing Objectives-Status Quo Pricing Objectives-Survival, social responsibilitySurvival, social responsibility

Market share, unit volume

PRICING OBJECTIVES

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PRICING CONSTRAINTS

Demand for the Product Class, Product, & Brand

Newness of the Product: Stage in the Product Life Cycle

Cost of Producing and Marketing the Product

Competitors’ Prices

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ESTIMATING DEMANDAND REVENUE

• Consumer Tastes• Price and Availability of Similar Products

• Consumer Income levels

• Changes in external environment

Always use price first, but must adjust for:

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demand curve for Newsweek (initial conditions)

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demand curve for Newsweek (shift in demand)

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HOW MUCH MORE WILL THEY BUY WHEN I LOWER PRICE?

Price Elasticity of Demand

InelasticInelasticDemandDemand

An increase or decrease in price will not significantly

affect demand

Elastic Elastic Demand Demand

Consumers buy more or lessof a product when the price changes

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Price set depends on costs How to value them?

Total revenue is the total money received from the sale of a product

Total Revenue = Price X Quantity

FUNDAMENTAL REVENUE CONCEPT

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Deviate with changes in level of output

Total CostsTotal Costs

VariableVariableCostsCosts Fixed CostsFixed Costs

Do not deviate as level of output changes

FUNDAMENTAL COST CONCEPT

How do you know when you’re making money?

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CALCULATING A BREAK EVEN POINT

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Issues Issues That That LimitLimitPricing Pricing DecisionsDecisions

Deceptive pricing- can’t bait and switch

Price Fixing-Manufacturer can’t agree with competitors or resellers to

set price

Price Discrimination-can’t set a different price for the same item for two

different customers

Predatory Pricing-can’t sell an item at a loss to bankrupt

the competition

LEGAL AND ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS

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SETTING A FINAL PRICE• Step 1: Set an Approximate Price Level pick a starting range using demand and

break even analysis

One-Price Policy – Dollar Store or no haggling

• Step 2: Set the Specific List or Quoted Price

Flexible-Price Policy- different prices for different buyers and buying situations

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SETTING A FINAL PRICE

• Step 3: Make Special Adjustments to the List or Quoted Price

Discounts• Quantity Discounts

• Seasonal Discounts

• Trade Discounts to resellers

• Cash Discounts

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SETTING A FINAL PRICE

Promotional Allowances – if you sell 12, 13th is free

Trade-In Allowances - like for cars

Allowances

• Everyday Low Pricing-reduce promotional allowances but also reduce price of item so reseller sells more

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Uniform Delivered Pricing – seller pays shipping and charges it to all buyers equally, but holds title during transit

FOB Origin Pricing – buyer pays shipping owns goods in transit

Geographical Adjustments

SETTING A FINAL PRICE

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Price (P)

Price (P) is the money or other considerations (including other goods and services) exchanged for the ownership or use of a good or service.

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Demand Curve

A demand curve is a graph relating the quantity sold and price, which shows the maximum number of units that will be sold at a given price.

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Total Cost (TC)

Total cost (TC) is the total expense incurred by a firm in producing and marketing a product. Total cost (TC) equals the sum of fixed cost (FC) and variable cost (VC) or TC = FC + VC.

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Fixed Cost (FC)

Fixed cost (FC) is the sum of the expenses of the firm that are stable and do not change with the quantity of a product that is produced and sold.

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Variable Cost (VC)

Variable cost (VC) is the sum of the expenses of the firm that vary directly with the quantity of a product that is produced and sold.

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Break-Even Analysis

Break-even analysis is a technique that analyzes the relationship between total revenue and total cost to determine profitability at various levels of output.

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Pricing Objectives

Pricing objectives involve specifying the role of price in an organization’s marketing and strategic plans.

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Pricing Constraints

Pricing constraints involve factors that limit the range of prices a firm may set.


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