Pricing Policy Flashcards
1
Q
Definition of pricing policy
A
Monetary value of a product that a consumer is prepared to pay
2
Q
Importance of pricing policy
A
- has a decisive influence on your profits
- establishes your position in relation to your competitors
- establishes the target market
- regulates demand
3
Q
What objective may a manufacturer have when determining prices
A
- to increase market share
- to maintain market share
- to eliminate competition
- to maximise profits and increase profitability
4
Q
Factors influencing price
A
- form of market
- nature of demand
- availability of substitute goods
- fixed prices of products
- behaviour of consumer
- attitude of dealers
- production and distribution costs
5
Q
Form of market
A
Perfect competition: characterised by large number of buyers and sellers where price is determines by supply and demand
Monopolistic: one seller that dominates the market
Oligopoly: Few sellers, each insist on their own price
Monopoly: Only one seller who can insist on their price
6
Q
Pricing techniques: how a marketer determines prices of products
A
- cost based pricing: cost price of product is used as basis for determining selling price
- demand based pricing: the consumer’s willingness to pay a certain price
- competition based pricing: the markeer will look at the ruling market price (what competitors charge) as an indicator of the price
- combination pricing: combination of techniques
- price discrimination: different prices are charged to different consumers (example, cash vs credit)
7
Q
Pricing techniques for consumers
A
- Psychological pricing: odd-even pricing used by businesses to make it seem goods are cheaper
- Perceived value pricing: perceived value pricing is not based on the cost of the product, it is the value which the customer thinks they are deriving from a product or service
- Promotional pricing: used during sales
- Penetration pricing: where the price is initially set low to rapidly reach a wide fraction of the market
- Bait pricing: illegal practise. “Baiting” customers with unrealistically low prices to bring them into the store
- Loss leaders: goods/services offered at high discounts in order to attract new customers to the store