Price Flashcards

1
Q

How important is price for shareholder value?

A

Price is the most important marketing mix variable for corporate value.

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2
Q

What is the implication of price importance?


A

Price competition can have a devastating effect on profitability. It often makes sense to defend prices rather than to defend volume.

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3
Q

Which factors are affecting the management of price?


A

The information revolution is destroying the simplicity of uniform pricing and bringing back individually negotiated prices. With more information available, markets are becoming more price sensitive.

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4
Q

What are the major, traditional pricing concepts?


A

Mark-up pricing and target-return pricing.

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5
Q

What are the fundamental problems with the pricing concepts?


A

They ignore demand, they ignore the perceived value of the product to the customer, they ignore the value created by effective marketing and they ignore competition.

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6
Q

What is the first principle that underlies effective pricing?


A

Pricing should be based on the value that the product offers to customers, not on its costs of production.

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7
Q

What is the second principle that underlies effective pricing?


A

Since different customers attach different values to a given product, prices should be customised.

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8
Q

What is the third principle that underlies effective pricing?


A

Pricing decisions should anticipate the reactions of competitors and their long run objectives in the market.

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9
Q

What is the fourth principle that underlies effective pricing?


A

Pricing should be integrated with a firm’s broad strategic positioning. That is, prices have to be designed to fit into a firm’s market position strategy.

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10
Q

What is the customer surplus?


A

Customer surplus is the difference between the price the customer would be willing to pay for a product and the price the customer actually pays.

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11
Q

What is the solution to minimise consumer surplus?


A

Charge different prices to different customers.

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12
Q

The companies reactions and the ability to shape the responses depend on the nature of the industry, such as?


A

Number of competitors, differences among competitors, price transparency and any short-term price gains from price cutting.

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13
Q

How does cooperation in pricing manifest itself ?

A

In price signaling. Involves tactics to make transparent what a firm’s objective is. Trust among competitors is created. In tit-for-tat. Involves matching the competitor’s price moves, thus not undercutting it.

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14
Q

What has beens the typical approach to the price-strategy relaionship?


A

design the product, determine the costs to make it, observe the competitor’s prices, set own prices for the product and position the product in the target market segment with a brand at the set price.

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15
Q

When does price determines cost?


A

Price determines cost if shareholder value is to be maximised.

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16
Q

What are the typical price segments of a market?


A

Economic, mid-range and luxury.

17
Q

What is a niche business?


A

A company that only competes in of the price segments.

18
Q

How do price cuts within and across price segments impact on buying behavior?


A

Price elasticity within a price segment is normally higher than between brand in different value segments. Switching that occurs between price segments is not symmetrical.

19
Q

How should a price be set to maximise corporate value?


A

There are two fundamental decisions required: decide on a price position and decide on a price variation policy.

20
Q

What is a skimming price?


A

A skimming price is a price set to maximise how much money can be charged for a given product.

21
Q

What are the four conditions under which price skimming yields maximum corporate value?


A

High barriers to entry, demand is price inelastic, high-value segments and few economies of scale.

22
Q

When should a penetration price be selected?


A

A penetration price is a price set to maximise sales volume.

23
Q

What are the four conditions under which price penetration yields maximum corporate value?


A

Low barriers to entry, demand is price elastic, network effects and large economies of scale.

24
Q

Which kinds of price variation exist?


A

Trade promotions and consumer promotions.

25
Q

Why decide on a policy for price promotions?


A

The powerful sales effect of promotional pricing will almost guarantee a competitor response. Almost always does promotional pricing eat into regular sales.

26
Q

What should be the policy for price variations with promotional pricing?


A

Do not start if you can avoid it. Or only use price promotion as an incentive to trial a new product.