Competition Flashcards
Why do firms compete?
- to increase their customer base
- to increase sales
- to expand market share
- to achieve product superiority
- to enhance image
- to maximise profits
What are the two types of competition?
- price competition (using pricing strategies)
- non-price competition (e.g. new product development, advertisements, prize competitions)
What are the two main types of advertising?
- informative advertising
- persuasive advertising
Why do firms advertise?
- to create consumer wants
- to create powerful brand images and customer loyalties
- to reduce competition
What are the benefits of brand loyalty for a business?
- it leads to repeat purchases
- it protects sales and market share
- customers are willing to pay more for the brand
- customers continue to buy the brand even if the producer increases its price or the prices of rival products fall
What factors influence the price of a product?
- the level and strength of consumer demand
- the amount of competition from rival firms
- the cost of production
- business objectives (maximise profits, increase market share, maximise sales)
What different pricing strategies are there that firms may adopt?
Demand-based:
- price skimming
- penetration pricing
Competitive:
- destruction/predatory pricing
- price leadership
Cost-based:
- cost-plus pricing
What is price skimming?
This is a pricing strategy used when there is little or no competition in a market for a new or improved product. It involves charging a high price to recover development costs and to yield a high initial profit.
What is penetration pricing?
This pricing strategy involves setting a low price for a new product to boost its sales and increase market share in a competitive market.
However, if sales do not increase rapidly, the firm may not be able to survive, or a price war could start with rival firms.
What is destruction pricing? (also known as predatory pricing)
This pricing strategy involves deep price cuts (often below costs) in order to ‘destroy’ the sales of a competitor. If the firm is successful in removing the competition, it can then raise prices again and recover its losses.
This strategy is mostly used by established and dominant firms to deter new competitors who cannot afford such deep price cuts. However, this may result in a price war.
What is price leadership?
This pricing strategy involves firms raising and lowering prices at the same time to avoid a price war. The firm with the largest market share will usually be the price leader.
What is cost-plus pricing?
This pricing strategy involves calculating the average cost per unit and adding a mark-up for profit.
Price = (total cost/total output) + mark-up for profit
However, this takes no account of what consumers may be willing to pay or how much competition there is to supply the market
What is a price war?
Price wars involve deep price cuts bewteen a small group of large competing firms continually trying to undercut each other to attract customers from their rivals.
Define
Market structure
The characteristics of a market, usually on the supply side, including how many firms compete for the market, the degree of competition or collusion between them, the extent of their product differentiation, and the ease with which new firms can enter the market to compete with them.
What is perfect competition?
A theoretical market structure in which there are many firms supplying identical products to an equally large number of consumers such that no individual firm has any influence over market price. All producers and consumers exchange at the equilibrium market price.
All firms in a perfectly competitive market are price takers as they have no power to influence the market price.
Few examples of perfect competition actually exist; this is a concept used by economists as a comparator for all other market structures.