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Customer’s Reference Price Perceived Value Ted Mitchell.

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1 Customer’s Reference Price Perceived Value Ted Mitchell

2 Various prices on a can of Coke that we see in different situations (in a grocery store, in a vending machine in Disneyland etc) and retrieve from our memory to assess whether Coke price is acceptable or not are called: – Referent prices – Reference prices – Retrieved prices – Rented prices – Reversed prices In most cases consumers cannot process accurately pricing information because they have: – unlimited resources – limited information – biases – limited cognitive resources – limited mathematical skills

3 Various prices on a can of Coke that we see in different situations (in a grocery store, in a vending machine in Disneyland etc) and retrieve from our memory to assess whether Coke price is acceptable or not are called: – Referent prices – Reference prices – Retrieved prices – Rented prices – Reversed prices In most cases consumers cannot process accurately pricing information because they have: – unlimited resources – limited information – biases – limited cognitive resources – limited mathematical skills

4 Consumers perceive discounts: – In Relative terms – In Absolute terms – In Terms of overall expenditures on all discounted and non- discounted items – Only while Shopping in Stores – with skepticism Partitioned pricing strategy - when product price is presented separately from a surcharge (e.g. shipping and handling surcharge in online purchase) is based on the fact that consumers anchor on product price and: – ignore a surcharge – overreact on a surcharge – insufficiently adjust for a surcharge – overestimate total price – underestimate total price

5 Consumers perceive discounts: – In Relative terms – In Absolute terms – In Terms of overall expenditures on all discounted and non- discounted items – Only while Shopping in Stores – with skepticism Partitioned pricing strategy - when product price is presented separately from a surcharge (e.g. shipping and handling surcharge in online purchase) is based on the fact that consumers anchor on product price and: – ignore a surcharge – overreact on a surcharge – insufficiently adjust for a surcharge – overestimate total price – underestimate total price

6 Expected Price or Reference price

7 Modify Demand Function Classic Demand Q = a-bP Modified for Customer’s Reference Price, P e Q = a – bP + c(P e -P) Q = a - bP + bP e If the customer has a high reference price (I.e., P e >P), then the customer expects to pay more and is delighted to pay your relatively low price

8 Pricing to the Customer’s Perceived Value Ted Mitchell

9 Perceived Value Pricing Is A Form of Demand Based Pricing Great Value! Pack

10 Perceived Value Pricing Customers respond to value To a customer Value = All Benefits to Customer Minus All Costs to Customer

11 Axiom of Value Pricing Is If you give your customer 50% more value than your competitor then you should be able to charge a 50% higher price before they switch.

12 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D STYLE WEIGHT ? ? ??? POWER WEIGHT ? ???? SPEED WEIGHT ? ???? COMFORT WEIGHT ? ???? Measuring Perceived Quality of the Product

13 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D STYLE 30% ? ??? POWER 20% ???? SPEED 15% ???? COMFORT 35% ???? Importance of Product Attributes to Customer

14 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D STYLE 30% 1 256 POWER 20% 6345 SPEED 15% 3425 COMFORT 35% 5642 OVERALL SCORE ???? Customers Perceive Different Levels in Different Brands

15 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D STYLE 30% 1 256 POWER 20% 6345 SPEED 15% 3425 COMFORT 35% 5642 OVERALL SCORE ???? Compensatory Model Looks For

16 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D STYLE 30%.3 (1) =.3.3(2) = 0.6.3(5) = 1.5.3(6) = 1.8 POWER 20%.2(6) =1.2.2(3) = 0.6.2(4) = 0.8.2(5) = 1.0 SPEED 15%.15(3) =.45.15(4) = 0.6.15(2) = 0.3.15(5) =0.75 COMFORT 35%.35(5) = 1.75.35(6) = 2..1.35(4) = 1.4.35(2) = 0.7 OVERALL SCORE ???? Weigh Each Level of Attribute by the Importance of the Attribute

17 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D STYLE 30% 0.30.61.51.8 POWER 20% 1.20.60.81.0 SPEED 15%.450.60.30.75 COMFORT 35% 1.752.11.40.7 OVERALL SCORE ???? Sum the partial worth scores for the total perceived quality

18 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D STYLE 30% 0.30.61.51.8 POWER 20% 1.20.60.81.0 SPEED 15%.450.60.30.75 COMFORT 35% 1.752..11.40.7 OVERALL SCORE 0.3 + 1.2 +.45 + 1.75 = 3.75 ???

19 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D STYLE 30% 0.30.61.51.8 POWER 20% 1.20.60.81.0 SPEED 15%.450.60.30.75 COMFORT 35% 1.752..11.40.7 OVERALL SCORE 3.753.94.04.25 Which one does the Customer Prefer?

20 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D STYLE 30% 1 256 POWER 20% 6345 SPEED 15% 3425 COMFORT 35% 5642 OVERALL SCORE 3.753.94.04.25 Highest Preference Score Wins

21 Why Is this Basic Model so popular? Forces us to be explicit on advertising/product decisions It allows us to think about probabilities of purchase and using them as a measure of intention to purchase Helps in Pricing and Forecasting Market Share

22 Implications for Changing Strategy Modify the product (real positioning) Alter beliefs about amount of attributes in our brand Alter beliefs about amount in competitor’s brand Alter beliefs about the importance of an attribute Call attention to neglected attributes

23 Implications for Changing Strategy – Modify the product (real positioning) – alter beliefs about amount of attributes – alter beliefs about competitor’s amount – alter importance weights – call attention to neglected attributes What degree of shift in beliefs about power is necessary to give us a 1% increase in market share? What will it cost to gain this increase in beliefs? Will the increase in Market share pay for the effort?

24 Style Comfort Brand A Brand B Brand C Brand D

25 Individual Customer may have an ideal product Style Comfort Ideal A B C D

26 The Concept of An Ideal Brand is at the basis of many product positioning ideas. Style Comfort Ideal A B C D

27 . : :. :... Style Comfort A B C D. : :. :..... : :. :.... : :. :..... : :. :... Small Dots are the ideals of individual customers. : :. :...

28 Style Comfort A B C D. : :. :..... : :. :.... : :. :..... : :. :... You are the manager of Brand A Where do you want to position your product?

29 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D STYLE 30% 1 256 POWER 20% 6345 SPEED 15% 3425 COMFORT 35% 5642 OVERALL SCORE 3.753.94.04.25 Reposition Brand A

30 What is the Probability of Purchase?

31 Probabilities of Purchase Highest value takes all the market? A value reflects a high probability of Purchase is more realistic A probability of purchase on an individual basis implies a market share percentage over the total market

32 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D OVERALL SCORE 3.753.94.04.25 RESULTS FROM RESPONDENT 2135

33 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D OVERALL SCORE 3.753.94.04.25 RESULTS FROM RESPONDENT 2135 Probability of A

34 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D OVERALL SCORE 3.753.94.04.25 Repeat for each brand Probability of Purchase 23.6%24.5%25.2%26.7% Probability of Purchase implies Market Share

35 Setting Price to the Perceived Quality of the Offering

36 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D STYLE 30% 0.30.61.51.8 POWER 20% 1.20.60.81.0 SPEED 15%.450.60.30.75 COMFORT 35% 1.752.11.40.7 OVERALL SCORE 3.94.04.25 Target Market Averages On Value 3.75

37 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D OVERALL SCORE 3.753.94.04.25 Target Market Averages On Value Overall Score is a measure of perceived value.

38 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D OVERALL SCORE 3.753.94.04.25 Target Market Averages On Perceived Value Average Perceived Value is

39 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D OVERALL SCORE 3.753.94.04.25 Setting Price for Brand D Average Perceived Value is 3.975 Brand D is 0.275 higher than Average

40 BRAND ABRAND BBRAND CBRAND D OVERALL SCORE 3.753.94.04.25 Target Market Averages On Value Average Perceived Value is 3.975 Brand D is higher than average.

41 Implication If Brand D is 6.9% higher than average then you should be able to charge up to a 6.9% higher price. If the average price is $200 then the maximum price for Brand D should be Max price for D = 200 + 200(6.9%) Max price for D = 200 + 13.83 = $213.83

42 Problem with Perceived value Pricing As A Form of Demand Based Pricing is To Measure Perceived Price or Cost to Purchase

43 Other Demand Based Pricing

44 Value Added Pricing (Industrial) Consider the value of the benefits to the customer Price the product relative to what the product does for the customer

45 Psychological Pricing 1.This is a closing out sale... This is a once in a life time sale. Limit of 4 per customer! 2.Loss-leader Pricing 3.Bait & Switch Pricing 4.Nature of Numbers (rounded or sharp)

46 Nature of Odd-Even Pricing 9.909.009.99

47 Cash Rebate Coupons 2%10 net 30 Low or no finance charges % off list (functional discount) volume discount Cumulative

48 Discrimination Pricing Customer Based (young, old) Product/Image Based Geographical or Location Based Seasonal

49 If you cut your price Customers may not buy more because of Anticipate More Price Cuts Believe your Products are being made cheaper Your competitor reacts

50 Difficulties With Demand Based Pricing “Unfair to gouge people when they need something.” “Price should not be the way goods and services are allocated in society.” “Too hard to calculate.” “Too hard to explain.” “Causes too many fluctuations and makes the industry unstable.”

51 Any Questions?


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