Chapter 14 Pricing Strategies and Tactics

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
pricing concepts for establishing value
Advertisements

Chapter 13 Pricing concepts
Pricing.
1 Pricing Concepts & Setting the Right Price. 2 The Importance of Price to Marketing Managers Revenue Profit The price charged to customers multiplied.
Chapter Eleven Pricing Strategies.
Chapter 17 Dr. Pointer’s Notes
Chapter 10 Pricing Strategies
Section 26.2 Setting Prices
Pricing Strategies Chapter Definitions Market-Skimming Pricing Setting a high price for a new product to skim maximum revenues layer by layer.
LECTURE-17 Pricing Strategies.
Setting the Right Price
Foundations of Chapter M A R K E T I N G Copyright © 2003 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. Managing the Pricing Function 14.
Pricing: Understanding and Capturing Customer Value
Objective 5.02 The Price Strategy.
Pricing: Understanding and Capturing Customer Value
Chapter 30 – Pricing Strategies
Marketing Management Dawn Iacobucci
Chapter foundations of Chapter M A R K E T I N G Managing the Pricing Function 14.
Principles of Marketing
Principles of Marketing
PowerPoint Slides to accompany Rix Marketing: A Practical Approach 7e
Chapter Eleven Pricing Strategies Copyright ©2014 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
Pricing Chapter 12 PowerPoint slides Express version Instructor name
MR2100 (c) Paul Tilley Pricing: Building a Price Foundation Chapter 13 Marketing 2 MR2100.
For use only with Perreault and McCarthy texts. © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 Irwin/McGraw-Hill Chapter 17: Pricing Objectives and Policies.
Chapter Objectives Pricing Strategies CHAPTER Compare the alternative pricing strategies and explain when each strategy is most appropriate.
The Marketing Mix Price
Copyright © 2001 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited Lecture 4 Pricing policies of pharmaceutical companies.
Copyright © 2004 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 14 Managing the Pricing Function.
Chapter 26 Pricing Strategies.
Copyright © 2006 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 19 Pricing Strategies.
Pricing Strategies After deciding whether to use a cost-oriented, demand-oriented, or a competition-oriented policy, your company will develop a pricing.
Copyright 2000 Prentice Hall13-1 Chapter 13 Pricing Methods.
Chapter 17/18 Pricing / Pricing Strategies Describe typical company pricing objectives Discuss Market Share vs. Sales Review Break-Even Analysis Skimming.
Pricing Strategies Chapter 26.1
Marketing: Real People, Real Decisions Pricing Methods Chapter 13 Lecture Slides Solomon, Stuart, Carson, & Smith Your name here Course title/number Date.
12-1 Copyright  2007 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Marketing: Creating and Delivering Value 5e, by Quester, McGuiggan, Perreault McCarthy By.
Chapter 17 Pricing Objectives and Policies. Pricing Strategy Determines 1] How flexible prices will be 2] At what level prices will be set over the Product.
Chapter 9: Pricing Objectives and Policies
Chapter 17 Pricing Objectives and Policies. Pricing Strategy Determines 1] How flexible prices will be 2] At what level prices will be set over the Product.
Price Strategy & Management
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Marketing 4/e by Quester, McGuiggan, Perreault and McCarthy 12–1 Part 3: The marketing mix Chapter.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada 11-1 Psychological Pricing Appeals to tendencies in consumer behaviour.  Prestige Pricing  Odd-Even Pricing.
Marketing & Sales – 3rd Hour
© 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Chapter 15 Price and Value Chapter 15 Price and Value Principles of Marketing 1201.
Copyright © 2006 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved. Part 7: Pricing Decisions 18.Price Concepts and Approaches.
PRICING DECISIONS “There are two fools in every market. One charges a very high price and another charges a very low price”
MGT301 Principles of Marketing
Chapter 11 Pricing Strategies
Managing the Pricing Function
Third Edition Roger A. Kerin Lau Geok Theng Steven W. Hartley
Chapter 10 Pricing Strategies
Chapter 19 Pricing Strategies.
Marketing’s Role in the Global Economy
Pricing Strategies.
Lecture on Pricing Strategies
Pricing Products: Pricing Considerations and Strategies
Pricing Chapters
Chapter 11 Pricing Strategies.
Chapter 10 &11 Pricing Strategies.
Pricing Concepts.
Chapter 10: Adjustments to the list of quoted prices
Chapter 10 Pricing Strategies.
How much will I charge for MILK?
How much will I charge for MILK?
Chapter Eleven Pricing Strategies.
Pricing Products: Pricing Considerations and Strategies
Pricing Strategies CHAPTER 10.
Chapter Eleven Pricing Strategies.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 14 Pricing Strategies and Tactics Sommers  Barnes Ninth Canadian Edition Presentation by Karen A. Blotnicky Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, NS Copyright © 2001 by McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited

Chapter Goals To gain an understanding of: Price competition and value pricing Pricing strategies for market entry: skimming and penetration pricing Price discounts and allowances Geographic pricing strategies Special strategies including one-price, flexible-price, price lining, resale price maintenance, leader pricing, everyday low price, odd pricing Legal issues associated with pricing

Pricing Strategy how does a company decide what price to charge for its products and services? what is “the price” anyway? doesn’t price vary across situations and over time? some firms have to decide what to charge different customers and in different situations they must decide whether discounts are to be offered, to whom, when, and for what reason

Price vs. Nonprice Competition In price competition, a seller regularly offers products priced as low as possible and accompanied by a minimum of services. In nonprice competition, a seller has stable prices and stresses other aspects of marketing. With value pricing, firms strive for more benefits at lower costs to consumer. With relationship pricing, customers have incentives to be loyal-- get price incentive if you do more business with one firm.

Nonprice Competition some firms feel price is the main competitive tool, that customers always want low prices other firms are looking for ways to add value, thereby being able to avoid low prices sometimes prices have to be changed in response to competitive actions many firms would prefer to engage in nonprice competition by building brand equity and relationships with customers

Relationship Pricing Uses price as a method to build long-term relationships with the best customers Focuses on giving better deals to better customers Goal is to price relative to the value of the customer to the firm, while building loyalty and stimulating repeat buying

The Price Determination Process In pricing, an organization first must decide on its pricing goal. The next step is to set the base price for a product. The final step involves designing pricing strategies that are compatible with the rest of the marketing mix. Many strategic questions must be answered: Will our company compete on the basis of price or other factors? What kind of discount schedule (if any) should be adopted?

SELECT PRICING OBJECTIVE The Process: An Illustration SELECT PRICING OBJECTIVE SELECT METHOD OF DETERMINING THE BASE PRICE: Cost-plus pricing Price based on both demand and costs Price set in relation to market alone DESIGN APPROPRIATE STRATEGIES: Price vs. nonprice competition Skimming vs. penetration Discounts and allowances Freight payments One price vs. flexible price Psychological pricing Leader pricing Everyday low vs. high-low pricing Resale price maintenance

Market Entry Pricing Strategies Market-Skimming Pricing: Setting a high initial price for a new product. Works if product is new, distinctive and desired Early in Product Life Cycle, when demand inelastic Protected by entry barriers, e.g. patents Market-Penetration Pricing: Setting a low initial price for a new product. Works if large market, elastic demand Economies of scale are possible Fierce competition

Discounts and Allowances Quantity discount: The more you buy, the cheaper it becomes-- cumulative and non-cumulative. Trade discounts: Reductions from list for functions performed-- storage, promotion. Cash discount: A deduction granted to buyers for paying their bills within a specified period of time, (after first deducting trade and quantity discounts from the base price)

Calculating a Cash Discount 3/10, NET 30 Percentage to be deducted if bill is paid within specified time Number of days from date of invoice in which bill must be paid to receive cash discount Number of days from date of invoice after which bill is overdue 1/7, NET 30

Other Discounts and Allowances Seasonal Discounts Forward Dating Promotional Allowances

The Competition Act Predatory pricing: Selling at unreasonably low prices to lessen competition. Price discrimination: The use of different prices for different customers. It is illegal if a price advantage is granted to one, but not another, where both compete and the articles are similar. Granting promotional allowances must be done on a proportionate basis to all customers.

Geographic Pricing Strategies F.O.B. Point-of-Production pricing: Price quoted at factory-- buyer pays transportation. Uniform delivered pricing: Same delivered price quoted to all; works if transportation costs small. Zone-delivered pricing: Set same price within several zones, e.g. Maritimes, Quebec. Freight-absorption pricing: Seller absorbs transport cost to penetrate market.

Special Pricing Strategies firms may adopt a one-price strategy or charge different prices to different customers flexible pricing strategies: shoppers may pay different prices if they buy the same quantity

Psychology of Pricing the psychology of pricing suggests that price will convey a message about the product or service being sold leader pricing bait pricing prestige pricing price lining involves setting prices at a small number of fixed levels within a retail store odd pricing is often used to suggest a bargain, while even pricing is used more in prestige, fashion stores

Questionable Pricing Practices resale price maintenance involves a supplier requiring that intermediaries sell a product at a certain price: illegal in Canada, firms are allowed to specify a “suggested” retail price some firms reduce prices, possibly even below cost, to attract customers; this form of “loss-leader” pricing is not illegal unless it persists for a long time with the goal of eliminating competition (predatory pricing)

Everyday Low Price (EDLP) vs. High/Low Pricing In EDLP pricing, a retailer charges a constant, low price with no temporary discounts. For example: Wal-Mart, Price Club, and Saturn. In high-low pricing, a retailer charges higher prices but then runs frequent promotions in which prices are temporarily lowered.