2. 1. To indicate the importance and complexity of
price decisions for marketing managers.
2. To consider what is „price‟.
3. To identify factors internal to the firm that
influence price decisions.
4. To identify the factors external to the firm that
influence price decisions.
5. To know when to cut price, when to increase, and
when to sell below cost.
3. PRICE -It is the amount
of money charged for
“something”.
PRICING- It is the
twin brother of product
quality which when
combined make up of what
is called product value.
4.
5. It can be defines as
“reasoned choice” from a
set of alternative prices
that aim at profit
maximization within a
planning period in
response to a given
scenario.
6. Pricing has the dual marketing
function:
•Making products affordable to its
target market
•Reflecting the value of the
product
7. To make the price of a product
affordable and attractive to more
customers, firms offer installment
plans.
By direct sellers
By firms in franchising
By retailers
9. Product cost must be broken
down to fixed and variable
cost as most the companies sell
more than one item and fixed
cost must be allocated to
different products in a sensible
way. Most cost-based pricing
are used when there is
relatively little, if any, direct
competition or when buyers are
not price sensitive.
10. Under cost-based pricing strategy, there are two common types of
setting prices:
•Mark-up, where a standard percentage
based on cost is adopted.
•Target profit, where prices are set
towards attaining satisfactory rate of
return.
11. The company‟s objectives will have a big effect on
its pricing strategy. There is always a need to balance
between profit and the marketing shares objectives, and
regular dividends and growth revenue. For more market
shares a company would have to invest more marketing
money which may affect profit in the short run.
12. •Differential Pricing strategy- where
the same brand is sold at different prices
to different market segments.
•Competitive Pricing strategy- where
prices are set to exploit a firm‟s
competitive position.
•Product Line Pricing Strategy- where
related brands or products are sold at
prices that exploit mutual dependencies
or balance pricing over product line.
13. Some have high search cost
Some have low reservation price
All have special transaction
14. Objective of the Firm
Differential Competitive Product Line
Pricing Pricing Pricing
Some have
Random
high search Price Signaling Image Pricing
Discounting
cost
Some have low Penetration/
Periodic Price bundling/
reservation experience
discounting Premium
price curve
All have Second
Geographic Complementary
special marketing
Pricing Pricing
transaction Discounting
15. •Random Discounting
The marketer tries to
maximize the number of
customers informed of the
random discount at his
product‟s low price instead of
at a competitor‟s price.
17. •Periodic Discounting
The manner of discounting is
predictable over time and known to
consumers and the discount can be
used by all consumers. This periodic
discount enables the firm to cover his
total costs and still make a reasonable
profit.
18. •Price Signaling
Prices are set regardless of
high or basic product
quality. The high price
aims to influence
consumer‟s perception of
high quality.
19. •Consumers must be able to get information
about price more easily than information about
quality.
•Consumers must want the high quality
enough to risk buying the high priced product
even without a certainty of high quality.
•There must be a sufficiently large number of
informed consumers who can understand the
value quality and will pay a high price for that
high quality product.
21. •Experience Curve Pricing- concept
exploits a firm‟s production experience as
cost decrease due to cumulative volume.
•The use of experience curve pricing
starts by projecting the declining per unit
production cost (inflation adjusted) of a
product and then basing the pricing
strategy on a series of significant price
decreases that come with accumulated
production volume.
22. •Geographic or zone pricing
strategy- can be adopted
when there are adjacent
markets separated by
transport costs rather than
reservation or transaction
costs. Within each zone, it
would charge one price.
23. •Image Pricing
Image Pricing- makes us of
high price to signal high
quality and uses the profit it
makes from higher priced
versions to subsidize the
price of lower priced version.
24. •Price Bundling
-The basic idea of price bundling is
that the whole bundle is cheaper
than the buying the parts
separately.
-The basic requirement for price is
bundling is non- substitution
among products within the bundle
as a strategy to convince consumers
to buy all the products as a
package.
25. •Premium Pricing
The firm sets a high price
emphasizing on unique
product features.
•Complementary Pricing
3 related pricing strategies
comprise complementary pricing:
CAPTIVE, TWO-PART, and
LOSS LEADER PRICING.
26. •Complementary Pricing
CAPTIVE PRICING
•The firm tries to price their
product to low to attract
buyers and recover from the
bigger volume expected in the
accessories or consumables.
27. •Complementary Pricing
TWO- PART PRICING
• Two part pricing refers to
pricing commonly used by service-
based firms. There is a fixed fee
plus a variable fee to charge to
the customers.
28. •Complementary Pricing
LOSS LEADER PRICING
-Prices of well-known brands are
dropped to attract traffic to the
store. Several nationally branded
products would be advertised with
amazingly low prices.
29. Marketers may be tempted to price their
products low during the introductory
period, regardless of product quality and
choices of available distribution methods. The
temporary market shares gained however may
create a permanent price image for the brand
which may be difficult to change over time. A
market reality, is that whenever price
adjustments are needed, increasing prices is
much more difficult than lowering them.
30. Most common ways in setting prices under the market
demand-based pricing strategy:
•Perceived value, where marketers use the
perception of customers in establishing its
prices.
•Demand differential, where marketers choose
price level that would support their planned
sales volume and profit.
31. Diagnostic Perception Pricing
Products have different
features or attributes. These
attributes have different levels
of importance to the
customers.
32. Competition-based pricing strategy, there are two
common ways in setting prices:
•Going rate, where marketers begin and work
within the prevailing market price. Commodities
like gasoline have smaller prices except for self-
service stations, which charge little less.
•Sealed Bid, where the marketers price their
product or service depending on how competitors
are expected to price theirs. Mostly required by
government offices.
33. Different companies have different
objectives, different cost structures, and
different strengths. Marketers must
remember that the more unique their
products are, the more flexible they can
be in formulating pricing.
34. •F.O.B- Free on Board. This means that supplier
pays the freight up to a certain point, usually the
port of origin.
•C & F- Cost and Freight. Means that the
Philippine exporter is quoting a price inclusive of
freight from the Philippines up to Busan in South
Korea, the port of destination.
•C.I.F- Cost, Insurance, and Freight. Price has a
similar meaning with our C & F example except
that it includes the cargo insurance covering the
shipment from the port of origin to the port of
destination.
35. •Also called “Noticeable price
Difference”, this technique is used
most specially in supermarkets and
department stores to create an
impression of “good value”.
•The term Elasticity connects the relationship
between changes in price and quantity of sales.
•Price elasticity means that demand will change
if change in pricing occurs. Measurement allows
companies to evaluate how price changes will
affect total revenue.
36. •The objective is to know the fair range
of the upper and lower threshold limits of
pricing.
•Above the upper threshold limit,
consumer will feel the product is too
expensive.
•Below the lower threshold limit,
consumers will doubt the quality of the
product and may not buy it.
37. General guideline as to when to increase or decrease price:
•When to Increase Price
The firm will have to absorb the cost, and look for
ways to increase customer base, purchase volume, and
minimize wastage.
•When to Cut Price
In general, a price reduction is perceived as a sign that
something is wrong and needs correcting.
• When to Sell Below Cost
The bad news for all is when a firm not only has to
decrease price but also has to sell below cost.
38. When to Increase Price
Reasons for increasing Prices:
•Inflation-
•Foreign Exchange-
•Shortages
•Product repositioning
39. When to Cut Price
•Lower Cost
•Falling Market Shares
•Excess Capacity
•Excess Inventory
•Discourage Competition
40. When to Cut Price
•Socialized Pricing
•New Market Segment
•Availability of New Substitutes
•Subsequent Sales
•Competitive Trends
•Increase Competitive
Vulnerability
41. When to Sell Below Cost
•Perishable Goods
•Phase-out Products
•Damaged Products
42. In a free economy, marketers will having deal
with lower prices from competitors sooner and later.
There are price and non-price responses to price
attacks of the competition. Each of the alternatives
must be weight carefully considering the option that
will maximize its gain and preserve its longevity in
the marketplace.
44. This chapter is designed to give students a fundamental but
comprehensive insight into pricing. It sets out in a logical
order the key
factors that affect price and how it can be used strategically
and tactically. It starts, in the first section, by looking at a
number of key issues relating to price, what it means, and its
importance in terms of marketing and the other elements of
the marketing mix. It also sets the theme for the
chapter - that a systematic approach to pricing should
always be adopted.