Chapter 12: Pricing Decisions and Cost Management Flashcards

1
Q

What is the main consideration when setting prices for products or services?

A

Supply and Demand

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2
Q

What are the 3 influences on supply and demand?

A
  1. Customers - depend on product features
  2. Competitors - depend on pricing, product features and production volume
  3. Costs - depend on production volume
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3
Q

What are the 2 key factors affecting short-run pricing?

A
  1. Many costs are irrelevant
  2. Takes advantage of changes in demand
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4
Q

What are differences between short-run and long-run pricing?

A
  • Irrelevant costs are relevant in the long run, not in the short run
  • Profit margins are set to earn a desired rate of return in the long run, margins change in the short run to keep up with demand
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5
Q

In competitive markets, what approach do managers use to price products or services?

Describe that approach.

A

Market-based approach

Managers look at customer demands and competitors prices, then control costs to earn target rate of return.

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6
Q

In less competitive markets, what approach(es) do managers use to price products or services?

Describe that approach.

A

Market-based or Cost-Based approaches.

Managers determine costs to produce and then assess the price to charge to recoup costs and achieve a target rate of return.

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7
Q

In noncompetitive markets, what approach do managers use to price products or services?

Describe that approach.

A

Cost-based approach.

In this type of environment companies don’t have to respond to competitor’s prices, only to the demand customers have for the product.

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8
Q

What are the 5 steps to developing target prices and costs?

A
  1. Develop a product people want
  2. Choose a target price
  3. Derive a target cost per unit
  4. Perform cost analysis
  5. Perform value engineering to achieve target cost
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9
Q

Calculate the target cost per unit.

A

Target price per unit

-

Target operating income per unit

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10
Q

What is value engineering?

A

Systematically evaluate value chain in order to lower costs, improve quality and satisfaction.

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11
Q

What are value-added cost?

A

A cost, if eliminated, reduces perceived value or usefulness.

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12
Q

What are non-value-added costs?

A

A cost that, if eliminated, would not reduce value or usefulness or a cost the customer is not willing to pay for.

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13
Q

How are prices developed using the cost-based approach?

What are some considerations to this point?

A

Cost base + Markup

It is a starting poing in price-setting and the markup is flexible based on the market.

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14
Q

Why do most firms choose to use the full cost for cost-based pricing?

A
  • Allows for full recovery of all costs
  • Allows for price stability because price is harder to manipulate
  • It’s simple, there is no need to categorize costs
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15
Q

What is product life cycle?

Why is it significant?

A

Time from initial R&D to customer service after product is no longer offered.

Managers sometimes have to consider pricing over multiple years.

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16
Q

What is life-cycle budgeting?

A

Estimating revenues and individual costs of each product from R&D onward.

17
Q

What are some important considerations for life-cycle budgeting?

A
  • Non-production costs are large
  • Development period for R&D is long and costly
  • Many costs are locked in at the R&D stages
18
Q

What are some issues managers must consider outside of cost when making pricing decisions?

A
  • Price discrimination
  • Peak-loading pricing
  • International issues
  • Antitrust laws
19
Q

What is price discrimination?

What is one of its features?

A

Charging different customers different prices for the same product or service.

It is illegal if the intent is to prevent competition for customers.

20
Q

What is peak-load pricing?

A

Charging higher price for same product or service when demand approaches capacity limit.

21
Q

What is predatory pricing?

A

Deliberately lower price below cost to drive competitors out of the market, restrict supply, and eventually raise prices.

22
Q

What is dumping?

A

Foreign firm sell products in the U.S below the market value in thier home country.

23
Q

What is collusive pricing?

A

Companies in same industry conspire to set prices and production decisions.