Title: Chapter 8 Pricing Decisions
1Chapter 8Pricing Decisions
- Learning objectives
- Define the term price
- Identify the factors involved in deciding on a
price for products - Discuss three options for setting pricing goals
- List the basic, dynamic and advanced pricing
strategies - Explain market-penetration and price-skimming
strategies - Describe the cost-plus pricing strategy and the
mark-up pricing strategy - Differentiate between fixed and variable cost
- Summarise the effect of the Internet environment
on pricing strategies - Recommend a pricing strategy for a given
organisation
2Defining price
- Price is the value expressed in terms of Rand and
cent. - It is the value which is connected to products
and services. - The amount of money needed to obtain a product
and the benefit or utility that goes with it.
3Meaning of price
- Price is the exchange value in a product or
service. - It is directly linked to the benefits and value
that a product or service gives. - Price decides the demand for the product and
services, as well as the profit levels. - The right price should answer the following
questions - Who is the primary target market?
- What is the market position of the organisation?
- What are the perceptions of customers about
competing brands and products? - What is the total cost of delivery?
- What are the sales and profit projections of the
organisation?
4Meaning of price to consumers
- Consumers must give up some of their spending
money to obtain a product. - Main goal of consumers- to buy products and
services to get the highest possible satisfaction
of their needs. - Consumers add value to products due to
satisfaction of the needs they get from using the
product or service. This is called yield value. - Yield value- highest amount the consumer is
willing to pay to use the need-satisfaction
provided by the product. - Replacement value- the amount consumers must pay
to obtain a product. - Consumer surplus- The extra need-satisfaction
consumers get.
5Meaning of price to business organisations
- Organisation has to decide on prices to sell
their products and services. - Without prices no sale can take place.
- Prices must be set in order to exist and survive.
- Prices are critical for organisations that use
low prices to differentiate themselves from
competition. - Two types of organisations
- Price-takers
- External things fix the price
- For example, the government sets fixed prices for
petrol. - Price-makers
- They have control over the decision of the prices
they charge. - For example, a cafeteria can put whatever prices
they like on their products- chocolates, cool
drinks etc.
6Factors involved in deciding on prices for
products
- Substitute products- availability of very similar
substitutes influence prices. - Complementary products- demand for a product is
affected by the price competitors charge for
complementary products and services that go with
the product. - Income of consumers- directly affects demand for
products and services. - Size of market- the greater the size of market,
the greater the demand for products and services,
e.g. Mango. - Consumer taste- consumer likes and dislikes.
- Marginal revenue- organisations have to lower
their prices to sell more of a product, thus each
extra unit of a product they sell makes them less
money than the previous unit. - Price elasticity- demand will change if price
changes. It is the percentage change in the
quantity demanded when price changes, divided by
the percentage change in price.
7Factors that affect price setting
- Organisations pricing decisions are affected by
an organisations internal and external
environment. - Internal factors
- Marketing goals
- Organisational costs
- Other decisions an organisation makes
- External factors
- The nature of the market demand
- Consumer behaviour
- Competition
- Supplier activities
- Authority and government activities
- Economic conditions
8Three options for setting pricing goals
- An organisations pricing strategy depends on the
pricing goals of the organisation. - These goals should be in line with the goals of
the organisation. - Organisations choose from three main types of
pricing goals - Profit-oriented goals
- Sales-oriented goals
- Goals to keep things as they are
9Types of pricing goals
Pricing Goal Explanation
Profit- oriented goals Organisation wants to get a positive rate of return on its investment in producing and making its products.
Targeting the highest return on investment The organisation sets a price to make sure that it gets a specified percentage return on investment.
Getting the highest profits possible The organisation wants to earn a quick return on investments. This may, however, attract competition.
Sales-oriented goals An organisation with sales-oriented goals wants to sell a lot of its product or get a bigger share of sales compared to the share of competitors.
Selling more of the product Organisations set prices at a level that will sell more products. Organisation wants to have a certain share of the market. If an organisation prices its products and services very low to get market share, it runs the risk of not making any profit or it may start a price war against other organisations.
Increasing the market share or keeping it the same Organisations think if they can get a big market share its rate of investment (ROI) will increase. It produces as much as it possibly can, makes its prices lower that their competitors and reduce prices even more in line with the cost benefits it receives.
Goals to keep things as they are Organisations want to keep things stable or keep the existing good environment for its operations. Wants to avoid its sales going down and to keep the effects of outside influences.
Stabilising prices in the industry This goal is suitable for the standardised product of a market leader that sets prices.
Meeting the competition When there is no price leader, an organisation can deliberately price its products to meet the competition in the market place.
10The main pricing strategies
- Price is an active factor in the pricing
strategy. - Organisations choose to price their products at
or near the prices of their main competitors. - A price strategy uses the organisations
positioning strategy to set a competitive price
in a particular market segment. - The freedom an organisation has to price a new
product and to develop a price strategy for that
product depends on the market conditions and
other variables in the marketing mix. - Various pricing strategies from which an
organisation can choose will be discussed.
11Basic, dynamic and advanced pricing strategies
- Basic pricing strategies
- Marketers rely on a few basic strategies to set
prices. - Difficult to set prices and marketers do not have
all the information about demand, cost and
competitors. - Basic strategies for setting prices consider some
or all of the following cost, profit, value and
competition. - Types of basic pricing strategies
- Strategies based on COST
- Cost-plus pricing organisation decides prices by
adding the set profit it wants to its cost. - Mark-up pricing organisation sets prices by
calculating product costs per unit and then
deciding the mark-up percentage that it needs to
cover selling costs and profits. - Target pricing organisation sets prices to get a
specific rate of ROI for a set amount of the
product. - Break-even analysis
- Strategies based on VALUE
- Demand-minus pricing
- Chain-mark-up pricing
- Price discrimination
- Strategies based on COMPETITION
- Going-rate pricing
- Leadership pricing
12Basic, dynamic and advanced pricing strategies
contd.
- Dynamic pricing strategies
- Pricing environment of the Internet encourages a
kind of pricing strategy in which prices are not
set but change. - Technological and financial globalisation makes
exchanges over the Internet particularly
important for marketers. - Exchanges over the Internet
- Advanced pricing strategies
- Includes ways of adjusting prices according to
the amount of goods purchased, which are
incentives to customers to buy more products at
once or to buy them more often. - Includes ways of structuring products and prices
by combining several products into a single
package called a bundle. - Advance strategies that customise prices for
various consumers, as well as strategies that
respond to or create high demand for a product. - Volume discount pricing
- Using a two-part pricing structure
- Bundle pricing
- Pure bundling
- Mixed bundling
- Price discrimination
- Frenzy pricing schemes
13Questions
- The marketing manager of All Gold needs to set
prices for a new product- chutney. What are the
factors that he must take into consideration when
determining the price for the specific product?
Please give appropriate examples. - (14)
- There are two pricing strategies for new
products. Please name them, discuss them
theoretically and give relevant examples. - (10)