Ch13 - Pricing, Promoting and Distributing products Flashcards
market share
company’s percentage of the total industry sales for a specific product type
-> at the beginning, companies may initially set low prices for new products to establish market share
cost-oriented pricing
considers a firm’s desire to make a profit and its need to cover production costs
price = seller cost + profit
(covers variable costs but not fixed costs)
markup def
the amount added to an item’s purchase cost to sell it at a profit
breakeven analysis
assesses costs versus revenues for various sales volumes and shows, at any selling price, the amount of loss or profit for each possible volume of sales (covers variable + fixed costs)
pricing strategies for existing products
1 - pricing above prevailing market price for similar products (takes advantage of assumption that higher price = better quality)
2 - pricing below market prices
3 - pricing at or near market prices
strategies for pricing new products
1 - price skimming : set initial high price to cover dev and production costs and generate a large profit on ea. item sold -> only works if you can convince the customers
2 - penetration pricing - set initial low price to attract customers (best when it has a lot of competitors)
price lining
offering all items in certain categories at a limited number of prices (having similar products at different price points)
psychological pricing
1000$ vs 999.95$ (trick customers)
promotion def
techniques for communicating information about products and is part of the communication mix—the total message any company sends to customers about its product = must communicate the uses, features, and benefits of products, and marketers use an array of tools for this purpose
promotional strategies
push strategy : “push” its product to wholesalers and retailers, who then persuade customers to buy it
pull strategy : appeals directly to customers, who demand the product from retailers, who in turn demand the product from wholesalers, who in turn demand the product from the manufacturer
advertising def
paid, nonpersonal communication by which an identified sponsor informs an audience about a product
distribution mix
the combination of distribution channels by which a firm gets products to end users
Intermediaries and wholesalers def
int : help to distribute goods, either by moving them or by providing information that stimulates their movement from sellers to customers
whol : intermediaries that sell products to other businesses for resale to final consumers (retailers sell directly to customers)
distribution channel (and 4 types)
path a product follows from producer to end user
1 - direct distribution (producer -> customer)
2 - retail distribution : producer -> retailer -> customer)
3 - wholesale distribution : producer -> wholesaler -> retailer -> customer)
4 - distribution by agents or brokers : producer -> agent -> customer (they receive commissions on the goods they sell)
distribution strategies
Intensive distribution : product is distributed through as many channels and channel members as possible (usually low-cost customer goods)
Exclusive distribution : manufacturer grants the exclusive right to distribute or sell a product to one wholesaler or retailer in each geographic area (luxury products)
Selective distribution : between intensive and exclusive, selects only wholesalers and retailers that will give special attention to the product in terms of sales efforts, display position, and so on