Pricing (Ch. 9) Flashcards

1
Q

What is a price?

A
  • The amount of money charged for a product / service
    The sum of values that customers exchange for having or using the product or service
  • Profit maker
  • major factor affecting buyer choice
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2
Q

Considerations when Setting price

A

3 Cs: Customer, Company, Competitor
- Customer perceptions of value identify the price ceiling
- Company product costs determine price floor
- Competitor pricing strategies, market environment and external forces

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3
Q

Cost based pricing

A

Based on costs of producing, distributing and selling

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4
Q

Standard Markup Pricing

A

Adding a standard markup to the cost ($30 cost + 40% markup)
- Ignores customer demand and competitors’ prices
- Simple & fair

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5
Q

Break-even pricing

A

Setting prices to break even on producing and marketing a product

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6
Q

Competition Based Pricing

A

setting prices based on competitors strategies
- little attention paid to company’s costs

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7
Q

Value (Customer) Based Pricing

A

uses buyers’ perceptions of value
- perceived value reflects more than just the functional benefits of the product

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8
Q

Good Value Pricing

A

the price relative to the value you’re receiving

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9
Q

Internal vs. External Factors affecting Pricing Decisions

A

Internal: marketing strategy, costs, organizational considerations
External: nature of market/demand, competition, state of economy

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10
Q

4 Types of Markets

A

Pure Competition: Many buyers and sellers, little effect on the market price
Monopolistic Competition: Many buyers and sellers who trade over a range of prices
Oligopolistic Competition: Few sellers and sensitive to each other’s pricing & marketing strategies
Pure monopoly: single seller in market

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11
Q

Examples of Each Type of Market
Pure Competition
Monopolistic Competition
Oligopolistic Competition
Pure Monopoly

A

Pure: potatoes, wheat, carrots
Monopolistic: clothes, cars, computers
Oligopolistic: Airlines, gas station
Monopoly: Canada Post

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12
Q

What are some elastic products

A

If a product is a luxury, has many substitutes, makes up a large portion of income it is elastic
- Marketing cannot affect elasticity of demand

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13
Q

Skimming pricing

A
  • High price to reap maximum profit from early adopter segments
  • Can encourage competition
  • Product must have a unique aspect to it or people won’t pay high prices
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14
Q

Penetration pricing

A
  • Low price to gain max market share
  • Can discourage competition
  • Used when the product is easily copied
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15
Q

Risks of Skimming Pricing

A
  • Price is too high for early adopters, risk takers
  • If product is not unique enough, skimming pricing won’t work
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16
Q

Risks of Penetration Pricing

A
  • Future price hikes can harm customer relationships, and they’ll discontinue buying
17
Q

Product line pricing

A

increasing product price when new models are introduced

18
Q

Option product pricing

A

Pricing optional or accessory products sold with the main product
- Add ons / upgrades

19
Q

Captive pricing

A

Pricing products that must be used with the main product (replacement cartridges for inkjet printers)

20
Q

Product bundling pricing

A

Selling a combination of products together in a group at a reduced price
(Telus Optik Packages, Shampoo + Conditioner)

21
Q

Are price reductions always a good thing?

A

No, sometimes lowering a price can turn off consumers because a product may have been more exclusive with the higher price

22
Q

Consumers get angry when prices increase, what can companies do to avoid price increases?

A
  • Companies can change the material, weight or shape of the package to hide it from customers
  • Shrinkflation is another term for this
23
Q

What is the effect of prices on consumers?

A
  • Price signals quality information
  • Prices do things psychologically to people, and influence purchase decision
24
Q

Segmented Price Adjustment

A

Offering a different price to different customer segments (child vs. adult), even though there is no difference in cost

25
Q

Psyhological Price Adjustment

A

Using prices to signal quality, when consumers cannot easily judge quality
- $10 perfume vs $100 perfume

26
Q

Promotional Price Adjustment

A

Offering discounts to reward customers for early payment, bulk purchase or off season purchases

27
Q

Geographical Price Adjustment

A

Charging different prices based on customer location (within/outside the country, shipping costs)