Chapter 8
Chapter 8
Principles of Marketing
CHAPTER 8
PRICE DECISIONS
Learning Objectives
2
Topic Outline
What Is a Price?
Major Pricing Strategies
Other Internal and External
Considerations Affecting Price
Decisions
Price strategies
What Is a Price?
Good-value pricing
offers the right combination of quality
and good service at a fair price
Major Pricing Strategies
Con
Major Pricing Strategies
Cost-Based Pricing
Cost-based pricing setting prices based on the costs for producing,
distributing, and selling the product plus a fair rate of return for
effort and risk
Major Pricing Strategies
Cost-Based Pricing
Cost-based pricing adds a standard markup to the cost of the
product
Major Pricing Strategies
Cost-Based Pricing
Types of costs
Fixed Variabl Total
costs e costs costs
Major Pricing Strategies
Cost-Based Pricing
Executive salaries
Major Pricing Strategies
Cost-Based Pricing
Variable costs are the costs that vary with the level of production
Packaging
Raw materials
Major Pricing Strategies
Cost-Based Pricing
Total costs are the sum of the fixed and variable costs for any given
level of production
Major Pricing Strategies
is minimized
Buyers feel it is fair
Disadvantages
Ignores demand and competitor prices
Major Pricing Strategies
Break-Even Analysis and Target Profit Pricing
Pure competition
Monopolistic
competition
Oligopolistic
competition
Pure monopoly
Other Internal and External Considerations Affecting Price Decisions
Economic conditions
Reseller’s response
to price
Government
Social concerns
New-Product Pricing Strategies
Pricing Strategies
Market-skimming
pricing
Market- penetration
pricing
New-Product Pricing Strategies
Market-skimming pricing is a strategy with high
initial prices to “skim” revenue layers from the
market
Product quality and image must support the price
Buyers must want the product at the price
Costs of producing the product in small volume should
not cancel the advantage of higher prices
Competitors should not be able to enter the market
easily
New-Product Pricing Strategies
Market-penetration pricing sets a low initial
price in order to penetrate the market quickly
and deeply to attract a large number of buyers
quickly to gain market share
Price sensitive market
Inverse relationship of production and
distribution cost to sales growth
Low prices must keep competition out of the
market
Product Mix Pricing Strategies
By- Product
product bundle
pricing pricing
Product Mix Pricing Strategies
Captive-product pricing
involves products that
must be used along
with the main product
Price Mix Pricing Strategies
Internationa
l pricing
Discount and allowance pricing
Most companies adjust their basic price to reward customers
for certain responses, such as early payment of bills, volume
purchases, and off-season buying.
The many forms of discounts include:
A cash discount
A quantity discount
A functional discount
A seasonal discount
Promotional allowances
Segmented pricing
In segmented pricing, the company sells a product or
service at two or more prices, even though the difference
in prices is not based on differences in costs.
Customer-segment pricing
Location pricing
Time pricing
Price-Adjustment Strategies
Segmented Pricing
To be effective:
Market must be segmentable
Segments must show different degrees of demand
Watching the market cannot exceed the extra
revenue obtained from the price difference
Must be legal
Price-Adjustment Strategies
Psychological pricing occurs when sellers consider the
psychology of prices and not simply the economics
Reference prices are prices that buyers carry in their minds
and refer to when looking at a given product
Noting current prices
Remembering past prices
Assessing the buying situations
Price-Adjustment Strategies
Promotional pricing is when prices are
temporarily priced below list price or cost to
increase demand
Special event pricing
Loss leaders
Cash rebates
Low-interest financing
Longer warrantees
Free maintenance
Price-Adjustment Strategies
Risks of promotional pricing
Used too frequently, and copies by competitors can
create “deal-prone” customers who will wait for
promotions and avoid buying at regular price
Creates price wars
Price-Adjustment Strategies
Geographical pricing is used for customers in
different parts of the country or the world
FOB-origin pricing
Uniformed-delivered pricing
Zone pricing
Basing-point pricing
Freight-absorption pricing
Price-Adjustment Strategies
Freight-absorption pricing means the seller absorbs all or part of the actual
freight charge as an incentive to attract business in competitive markets
Price-Adjustment Strategies
Price
Price cuts
increases
• Product is • New models
“hot” will be
• Company available
greed • Models are
not selling
well
• Quality issues
Price Changes
Responding to Price Changes
Questions
Why did the competitor change the price?
Is the price cut permanent or temporary?
What is the effect on market share and profits?
Will competitors respond?
Price Changes
Responding to Price Changes
Solutions
Reduce price to match competition
Maintain price but raise the perceived value through
communications
Improve quality and increase price
Launch a lower-price “fighting” brand
Price Changes