Pricing Strategy Flashcards
What is pricing strategy?
- involves making decisions on how best to price
- is a key factor in producing revenue for a firm
- prices are the easiest of all marketing mix variables to change
- Considered the only real means of differentiating in mature markets plagued by commoditization
- Is amongst the most complex decisions to be made in developing a marketing plan
What are the factors that determine pricing strategy?
- firm aims
- consumer expectations
- competitors actions
- other environment factors
What are some key issues in pricing strategy?
- Consumers expectations and perceptions(psychological effects)
- what makes consumers more sensitive to prices? - Pricing objectives
- The firms cost structure
- Competition and industry structure
- number and type of competitors and degree of regulation on prices - Stage of the product life cycle
- how does it affect pricing decisions? - Promotion and distribution
- Demographic factors: number of potential buyers, location, position, expected consumption rates and economic strength of potential buyers.
What are some examples of pricing objectives?
- Increase sales revenue or market share
- Volume-oriented
- Cash flow
- Maximize profit or margins
- Differentiate from matching competitors
- Keep the customer satisfied
- Enhance the image of your product
With respect to pricing, what do sellers tend to do?
- inflate prices because they want to receive as much as possible in an exchange
- must consider four key issues in pricing strategy:
1. Costs
2. Demand
3. Customer value
4. Competitors prices - have increased power of buyers when certain products are in short supply, in high demand or during good economic times
With respect to pricing, what do buyers tend to do/behave?
- often see prices as lower than marketing reality dictates
-must consider two key issues:
1. Perceived value
2. Price sensitivity - consider value as the ratio of benefits to cost
- have increased power over sellers when:
Economy is weak, product information is easy to obtain, when price comparison between products are easy to make
What are some assumptions about price cutting?
- increase sales, moves excess inventory, generate short term cash flow
- based in two pricing myths: when business is good, price cut captures market share,- when business is bad, price cut will simulate sales
- risky, due to each price cut has to achieve increase in sales volume to maintain gross margin
- often better of if can find ways to build value and then justify higher price
What are the pricing strategies in consumer markets?
- Base pricing strategies:
- market introduction pricing (skimming and penetration)
- prestige pricing
- value-based pricing
- competitive matching
- non-price strategies (emphasis other attributes)
2. Adjusting pricing: Meeting the buyers expectation by... - promotional discounting - reference pricing Psychological price strategies... - odd even pricing - price bundling
Distinguish between price skimming and penetration?
- Skimming:
- high marginal costs of production
- large lead time
- when price sensitivity is low in intro stage
- when product is radically new
- when ease of imitation is low
- when product has high quality image - Penetration
- when marginal costs of production are low
- when lead time is short
- when price sensitivity is high
- when product isnt very new
- ease of imitation is high
- when awareness and acceptance are low
- when trial is highly correlated with repeat purchases
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What situations decrease price sensitivity?
- lack of substitutes
- real or perceived necessities
- complementary products price go down
- products had highly differentiated from competition
- customers believe product to be worth the price
- customers are in certain situations associated Richard task with time pressure or purchase risk
What situations increase price sensitivity?
- when substitute products are highly available
- when the total expenditure is high
- when changes in price are noticeable to customers
- when price comparison is competing products is easy for customers
What is price discrimination?
- setting different prices to different customers for the same products
- movie tickets, transport, quantity discounts, promotion and coupons, international markets.
What are organizational markets?
- B2B or B2O
- businesses, government bodies, institutions, organizations
What are the characteristics of business markets?
- number of players: usually few sellers and buyers
- business transactions: less frequent, larger batches, complex negotiations and many interactions
- a lot of knowledge from representatives and actors
- buyers are heterogenous
- decisions go beyond physical properties combining quality, delivery, stability, service and trust and relationships.
What are some pricing strategies in business markets?
- Trade discounts: reduce price for certain intermediaries, based in function
- Discounts and allowances
- Geographic pricing: quotes based on transportation costs or distance
- Transfer pricing: pricing based on one unit in an organization selling products to another unit
- Barter and countertrade: making payments in goods, services rather than cash
- Price discrimination