Title: Principlesofmarketing.com Chapter 8
1 Principlesofmarketing.com Chapter 8 pricing
- Pricing as a strategic commitment and tool for
customer satisfaction
2Factors that impact the pricing decision
- Supply (or cost)
- Demand (or revenue)
- Perceptions in the marketplace
- Competition and Competitors pricing strategies
- Government Regulation
- Companys desired pricing position
3Positive and Normative Price
- Positive price the price the organization
decides to set - Normative price the price that groups may
believe is appropriate given certain
circumstances
4Government regulation of prices and response of
businesses
- Three types of federal legislation that impact
marketing - Pro-competitive
- Consumer Protection
- Pro-trade (NAFTA, WTO, etc.)
5Government regulation of prices and response of
businessesPro-competitive Legislation
- Sherman Antitrust Act (1890)
- Clayton Antitrust Act (1914)
- Federal Trade Commission Act (1916)
- Robinson-Patman Act (1936)
- Fair Goods Pricing Act (1970)
6Government regulation of prices and response of
businessesConsumer Protection Legislation
- Pure Food and Drug Act (1906)
- Federal Trade Commission Act (1916)
- Wheeler-Lea Act (1938)
- Pure Food, Drug, and Cosmetices Act (1938)
- Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act (1975)
7Government regulation of prices and response of
businessesPro-Trade Legislation
- U.S. Constitution (1780)
- Domestic legislation already discussed
- NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement)
- GATT (general agreement on treaties and tariffs)
- WTO World Trade Organization and the issue of
globalization
8Pricing Position
- An organization should carefully establish its
desired pricing position - For example, Rolex.com and Timex.com
- Also, bmw.com, etc.
- Remember to think in terms of positioning maps,
especially when thinking about price. This works
with stores, too.
9Can use either a supply based pricing approach or
a demand based pricing approach
- Supply (or cost-based) most common in retailing
is the key stone or the key-stoning approach - Demand-based (microeconomics and price elasticity
of demand) - Understand these approaches, philosophically and
procedurally
10Determining selling price based on cost or
selling price
- Determining selling price based on cost
- SP MU C
- Selling price (SP) ?
- MU 40 of cost
- Cost 6000
- SP MU C
- SP .4 (6000) 6000
- SP 2400 6000
- SP 8400
- Determining selling price based on selling price
- SP MU C
- Cost 6000
- SP MU C
- SP .4(SP) 6000
- SP - .4SP 6000
- .6SP 6000
- SP 10,000
when markup equals fifty percent or .5 of
Selling price, this is called keystoning, use .5
and see what happens!?
11Assignments for next week
- Review the examples in Chapter Eight, and address
the homework examples handed out on Price
Elasticity of Demand