Se ha denunciado esta presentación.
Se está descargando tu SlideShare. ×

Price Strategies.pptx

Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Próximo SlideShare
price.pptx
price.pptx
Cargando en…3
×

Eche un vistazo a continuación

1 de 36 Anuncio

Más Contenido Relacionado

Más de Siegel High School (20)

Anuncio

Más reciente (20)

Price Strategies.pptx

  1. 1. Price
  2. 2.  Increase profits  Attract new customers  Maintain current customers  Increase profit per customer  Introduce new product  Generate cash  Improve Return On Investment
  3. 3. Synonyms for Price  Rent  Tuition  Fee  Fare  Rate  Toll  Premium  Honorarium  Special assessment  Bribe  Dues  Salary  Commission  Wage  Tax
  4. 4. The Components of Total Cost Used in Determining Pricing Total Costs Sum of the Fixed and Variable Costs for a Given Level of Production Fixed Costs (Overhead) Costs that don’t vary with sales or production levels. Rent on the Arena Transportation Salaries Variable Costs Costs that do vary directly with the level of production. Raw materials Packaging Materials
  5. 5. The Three C’s Model for Price Setting Costs Competitors’ prices and prices of substitutes Customers’ assessment of unique product features Low Price No possible profit at this price High Price No possible demand at this price
  6. 6. Identify the popularity of the product Compare Competition Target Budget Conscious Customers
  7. 7. Attract New Customers  Introductory coupons / discounts  provide incentive  maintain reference price  Trial offers  increase familiarity  reduce risk  Problem  perceived as unfair
  8. 8. Pricing Common Mistakes  Number one problem facing marketing executives  Too cost oriented  Not revised enough to reflect changes in market  Do not take entire marketing mix into account  Not varied enough for different products, different market segments, different purchase occasions
  9. 9. Price Cues  “Left to right” pricing ($299 vs. $300)  Odd number discount perceptions  Even number value perceptions  Ending prices with 0 or 5  “Sale” written next to price
  10. 10. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall When to Use Price Cues  Customers purchase item infrequently  Customers are new  Product designs vary over time  Prices vary seasonally  Quality or sizes vary across stores
  11. 11. Pricing strategies change as the product passes through its life cycle •PREMIUM STRATEGY • Producing a high-quality product and charging the highest price •ECONOMY STRATEGY •Producing a lower quality product but charging a low price Rolex vs Timex watches
  12. 12. •GOOD VALUE STRATEGY •“We have high quality, but at a lower price” •OVERCHARGING STRATEGY •Company overprices its product in relation to its quality •GM uses combination of strategies, offering various automobiles Hummer – Cadillac - Pontiac Marriott – Courtyard Marriott – Residence Inn
  13. 13. Pricing Strategies for New Products
  14. 14. “Penetration” is a market share maximization strategy Penetration Pricing •Setting a low initial price •Attract large number of buyers •Win large market share •Low price serves as barrier to entry for competitors
  15. 15. “Skimming” is a profit maximization strategy Market Skimming – •Setting initial high prices for a short time before lowering prices to more competitive levels •Ex: iPhone, new albums, movies •As sales slow or competitors introduce similar products, price is lowered
  16. 16. •Follow-the-leader pricing strategy •uses a particular competition as a model •Variable pricing strategy •offer price concessions to certain customer •Flexible pricing strategy •take into consideration special market conditions •What the traffic will bear •only used when there is little or no competition Tactics For Fine-Tuning
  17. 17. Pricing Strategies  Differential Pricing Strategies  Discriminatory pricing • Selling same product/service to different buyers at different price • Movies tickets sold to children/over 65 for discount • Priceline.com  Second-market discounting • Students get in free at Vanderbilt football games • Golf courses weekend versus weekday pricing When you name your price, the seller has already told Priceline what minimum price he is willing to accept. The difference from traditional retailing is that you, the buyer, don't know what that price is. That's a breakthrough, all right. For sellers. Priceline offers them a clever way to charge different prices to different customers, based on their willingness to pay.
  18. 18. Psychological Pricing  Price is based on consumer’s emotion and image rather than economy  Prestige Pricing  Setting an artificially high price to provide a distinct image  Reference Pricing  Lesser know brands featured next to name brands to reflect value $999.99 VS
  19. 19. Product Line Pricing  Setting price steps between items in the same product line  Each product offers more features  John Deere tractors 1200.00 – 5000.00  Armani Sports Coats 250 – 500 – 850  Prices should consider  Differences between products, customer evaluations of features, and benefits & competitors prices
  20. 20. Psychological Pricing  Odd-Even Pricing  $9.95 vs $10.00  Traditional Pricing  Keep prices close to historical costs
  21. 21. Optional Product Pricing  Pricing optional or accessory products sold with the main product  Which products to include in base price, and which to offer as options Car – power windows, cruise control, radio with CD player, DVD player
  22. 22. By-product Pricing  Pricing low-value by-products to get rid them, or to reduce the price of the main product  Chicken processors sell feathers to mattress and pillow makers  Lumber mills sell bark and sawdust as decorative mulch for home and commercial landscaping  Allows producer to reduce main product price and become more competitive
  23. 23. Captive Product Pricing  Pricing products that must be used with main product  Razor blades used with special handle  Camera film that is camera specific  Computer software  Main products are priced low  Set high markup on captive product
  24. 24. Two-part Pricing  The price of the service is broken into a fixed fee and a variable usage fee  Telephone charges monthly rate – fixed fee  Charges for calls beyond certain amount of minutes – variable usage fee  Fixed amount must be low enough to induce usage of service  Profit is made on variable fees
  25. 25. Product Bundle Pricing  Combining several products and offering the combination at a price below that of buying the products individually  Theatres & sports teams selling season tickets  Hotel packages that include room, meals, and entertainment  Restaurants offer complete meals rather than individual items from a la carte menu  Promotes sale of products that might not purchased otherwise
  26. 26. Bundling at Disney World Products:  Each Park Entrance  “Hopper” Option  Where is the 1 day hopper? (These are the 2005 prices)

×