




已阅读5页,还剩19页未读, 继续免费阅读
版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领
文档简介
Chapter 14: Developing Pricing Strategies and ProgramsDEVELOPING PRICING STRATEGIES AND PROGRAMS14 C H A P T E R LEARNING OBJECTIVESAfter reading this chapter, students should:q Know how consumers process and evaluate pricesq Know how a company should set prices initially for products or servicesq Know how a company should adapt prices to meet varying circumstances and opportunitiesq Know when a company should initiate a price changeq Know how a company should respond to a competitors price changeCHAPTER SUMMARY Despite the increased role of non-price factors in modern marketing, price remains a critical element of the marketing mix. Price is the only one of the 4Ps that produces revenue; the others produce costs.In setting pricing policy, a company follows a six-step procedure. It selects its pricing objective. It estimates the demand curvethe probable quantities it will sell at each possible price. It estimates how its costs vary at different levels of output, at different levels of accumulated production experience, and for differentiated marketing offers. It examines competitors costs, prices, and offers. It selects a pricing method. It selects the final price. Companies do not usually set a single price, but rather a pricing structure that reflects variations in geographical demand and costs, market-segment requirements, purchase timing, order levels, and other factors. Several price-adaptation strategies are available: (1) geographical pricing; (2) price discounts and allowances; (3) promotional pricing; and (4) discriminatory pricing. After developing pricing strategies, firms often face situations in which they need to change prices. A price decrease might be brought about by excess plant capacity, declining market share, a desire to dominate the market through lower costs, or economic recession. A price increase might be brought about by cost inflation or over demand. Companies must carefully manage customer perceptions in raising prices. Companies must anticipate competitor price changes and prepare a contingent response. A number of possible responses are possible in terms of maintaining or changing price or quality.The firm facing a competitors price change must try to understand the competitors intent and the likely duration of the change. Strategy often depends on whether a firm is producing homogeneous or non-homogeneous products. Market leaders attacked by lower-priced competitors can choose to maintain price, raise the perceived quality of their product, reduce price, increase price and improve quality, or launch a low-priced fighter line. OPENING THOUGHT Students should have a good understanding of “price” in their role as consumers. The instructor is encouraged to expand the students definition of “a price” by using examples of different pricing structures (cell phone plans for example), promotional pricing, geographical pricing, and price discrimination. An area for some misunderstanding for students new to marketing is how the firm reviews competitors reactions to price changes. Students will have some degree of difficulty in assuming the “role” of a competitor and formulating defensive and/or offensive plans to price changes. Discriminatory pricing is also an area that students new to marketing can have some difficulty understanding for the first time. Although discriminatory pricing is not illegal, per se, the distinctions are sometimes porous between the two. TEACHING STRATEGY AND CLASS ORGANIZATIONPROJECTS1. At this point in the semester-long marketing plan project, students should be prepared to hand in their pricing strategy decisions for their fictional product/service. In reviewing this section, the instructor should make sure that the students have addressed all or most of the material, concerning pricing, covered in this chapter. 2. Consumer perceptions of prices are also affected by alternative pricing strategies. Marriott Hotels, for example, has different brands for differing price points. Building upon the Marriott example, students are to scan the environment to find examples of a company whose pricing strategy is closely tied to its branding strategy. Caution: students may want to list just the different price points in the same company such as Ford automobiles. What this project is designed to accomplish, is that students should note that the Lincoln line of cars are priced at a premium to the Ford and Mercury divisions. Good students will also have researched the actual percentage difference between the three divisions. 3. Sonic PDA Marketing Plan Pricing is a critical element in any companys marketing plan, because it directly affects revenue and profit goals. Effective pricing strategies must consider costs as well as customer perceptions and competitor reactions, especially in highly competitive markets.You are in charge of pricing Sonics first PDA. Review your SWOT Analysis and Competition Analysis. Also, think about the markets you are targeting and the positioning you want to achieve. Then, answer the following questions about pricing: What should Sonics primary pricing objective be? Why? Are PDA customers likely to be price-sensitive? Is demand elastic or inelastic? What are the implications of the answers for pricing decisions? What price adaptations such as discounts, allowances, and promotional pricing should Sonic include in its marketing plan?Document your pricing strategies and programs in a written marketing plan or type them into the Marketing Mix section of Marketing Plan Pro.ASSIGNMENTSSmall Group Assignments1. Marketers recognize that consumers often actively process price information, interpreting prices in terms of their knowledge from prior purchasing experience, formal communications, informal communications, point-of-purchase, or online resources. Purchase decisions are based on how consumers perceive prices and what they consider to be the current actual pricenot the marketers stated price. In small groups, ask the students to choose a service good, such as education, legal advice, tax advice, or other such services, and have them map out their perception of prices and what they consider to be the current actual price. Finally, students should compare and contrast their perceptions with the stated or published prices for these services. In completing this assignment, students should explain the differences between perception and stated prices in terms of consumer buying behavior models from Chapter 6 of this text. 2. Many consumers use price as an indicator or quality. As a group assignment, students should choose a product produced by a firm. Subsequently, the students should conduct a small research project (utilizing the material learned from Chapter 4) and either, confirm, or deny this relationship for the chosen product. For example, do more women or men rely on price as an indicator of quality for product X? If there is a difference, what is the quantifiable difference in terms of marketing research data? Does this difference suggest that marketers must or can revise, or revamp price clues to reach their target market? Individual Assignments1. Table 14.1 lists some possible consumer reference prices. Students should read Russell S. Winers, “Behavioral Perspectives on Pricing,” and “Buyers Subjective Perceptions of Price Revisited,” in Issues in Pricing: Theory and Research, ed. Timothy Devinney, Lexington, MA: Lexington Books, 1988, pp. 3557. Students should comment on whether or not these consumer reference prices are applicable to todays consumers; whether this list is inclusive, or are there new consumer reference price points that have developed due to the use of the Internet? 2. Table 14.3 lists nine factors that the authors contend leads to less price sensitivity in consumers. Choosing a product that is available online and in stores (books or tires, for example) students are to research the various pricings available to consumers through the various Internet shopping gateways and retailers. After collecting this data, ask the students to comment on whether or not, the variety of price points found, can lower price sensitivity to the item or increase consumers price sensitivity because of the variety of differing prices found for the same item. Think-Pair-Share1. For many firms pricing is the domain of the financial disciplines in the company. Using accepted accounting and financial processes, some companies price strictly according to these models. Assign students the assumed role of “defenders” of this practice and others as “innovators,” challenging these models and supporting some of the newer pricing models such as “perceived” and “value” pricing for products. Have the students come prepared to defend their positions using the concepts developed in this chapter. 2. Paul W. Farris and David J. Reibstein, in their article, “How Prices, Expenditures, and Profits Are Linked,” Harvard Business Review (November-December 1979); pp. 173184, found a relationship between relative price, relative quality, and relative advertising (their findings are summarized in the chapter). Students should read the full report, and then be prepared to discuss the validity of this study in light of the consumer information explosion that has occurred due to the emergence of the Internet. Are these relationships still valid today? If not, why or what has caused them to change? MARKETING TODAYCLASS DISCUSSION TOPICSPrice discrimination occurs when a company sells a product or service at two or more prices that do not reflect a proportional difference in costs. Sellers can however, charge different amounts to different classes of buyers in the case of customer-segment pricing, product-form pricing, image pricing, channel pricing, location pricing, and timing pricing. Airlines and other yield pricing industries use these practices on a daily basis. Other industries offer senior citizen and student discounts. Yet other companies are guilty of first or second-degree price discrimination. Knowing now what you know about the concepts of pricing decisions facing firms, is price discrimination (first, second, or third degree) a philosophy that aids a company in brand building, defeats the purpose of price as a “clue” to quality, or is price discrimination one of the “realities” of the marketplace that companies must follow to remain competitive? Additional comments can be solicited from the students regarding the ethics of legal price discrimination as it pertains to society as a whole. For example, is the practice of senior citizen discounts inherently unethical because it differentiates one segment of society from another? END-OF-CHAPTER SUPPORT MARKETING DEBATEIs the Right Price a Fair Price? Prices are often set to satisfy demand or to reflect the premium that consumers are willing to pay for a product or service. Some critics shudder, however, at the thought of $2 bottles of water, $150 running shoes, and $500 concert tickets. Take a position: Prices should reflect the value that consumers are willing to pay versus prices should primarily just reflect the cost involved in making a product or service. Pro: Price, perhaps more than any other element of the marketing mix, communicates value to the consumer. In the consumer-decision making process, we have learned that customers are value-maximizers. They form an expectation of value and act on it. A buyers satisfaction is a function of the products perceived performance and the buyers expectations. So, if the product meets these consumers value definitions and the given price point reflects these values, price is seen as acceptable. If the price and the products value definition in the minds of the consumer are not consistent, sales will decline and prices will drop until prices reach equilibrium with the consumers definition of value. Con: Marketers have an obligation to the consumers to produce products (or services) that meet consumer needs at the lowest price possible. Fair pricing does not assign any consumer “value” definition into its equation and it should not because each consumer will have differing definitions of “value” according to their prejudices. When marketers try to “assign” a “value definition” to its product, it runs the risks of alienating current customers and missing other potential customers. Therefore, assigning a “fair” price, composed of actual costs plus fair margins, allows the marketer to maximize their customer bases. MARKETING DISCUSSIONThink of the various pricing methodsmarkup pricing, target-return pricing, perceived value pricing, value pricing, going rate pricing, and auction-type pricing. As a consumer which method do you personally prefer to deal with. Why? If the average price were to stay the same, which would you prefer: (1) for firms to set one price and not deviate, or (2) to employ slightly higher prices most of the year, but slightly lower discounted prices or specials for certain occasions. Student answers will differ. However, the following notation from research is worth re-enforcing during the class discussions. The two different pricing strategies have been shown to affect consumer price judgments: Deep discounts (EDLP) can lead to lower perceived prices by consumers over time than frequent shallow discounts (high-low) even if the actual averages are the same. MARKETING SPOTLIGHTeBayDiscussion Questions:1)What are the key success factors for eBay?a. They have allowed customers to state their perceived value of the product and the buyers image of product performance.b. Channel deliverables.c. Warranty quality.d. Customer support.e. Supplier reputation.f. Trustworthiness.g. Esteem.h. Allows customers to view the going-rate pricing of products immediately.i. Accounted for geographical pricing.(i) Market-segment pricing.(ii) Purchase timing.(iii) Order levels.(iv) Delivery frequencies.(v) Guarantees.j.Allowed companies to adjust prices to accommodate differences in customers, products, locations and so on.k.Allowed companies to test new pricing levels, product specifications, and new products.l.Who has eBay appealed to?(i) Price buyers.(ii) Value buyers.(iii) Loyal buyers.2) Where is eBay vulnerable?a. Changes to technology.b. Problems in/with technology.c. Credibility of the sellers.d. Governmental regulation.e. Competitive reactions:(i)Other auction-type Web sites. (ii) Companies starting their own auction-type operations.3) What should eBay watch out for?a. Consumer changes in buying patterns and priorities.b. Consumers loss of enthusiasm for the process (newness wears off). c. Competition.d. Governmental controls or changes in laws (taxation). 4)What recommendations would you make to senior marketing executives moving forward?a. Continue to build upon the key aspects of the consumers image of the firm.b. Continue to build upon the trustworthiness and reputation of the firm.c. Monitor competition. DETAILED CHAPTER OUTLINE Price is the one element of the marketing mix that produces revenue; the other elements produce costs. Prices are perhaps the easiest element of the marketing program to adjust. Price also communicates to the market the companys intended value positioning of its product or brand. A well-designed and marketed product can command a price premium. Pricing decisions are clearly complex and difficult. Holistic marketers must take into account many factors in making pricing decisionthe company, customers, competition, and marketing environment. Pricing decisions must be consistent with the firms marketing strategy and its target markets and brand positionings. UNDERSTANDING PRICING Price is not just a number on a tag or an item. A) Throughout most of history prices were set by negotiation between buyers and sellers. B) Setting one price for all buyers is a relatively modern idea.C) Today the Internet is partially reversing the fixed pricing trend.D) Traditionally, price has operated as the major determinant of buyer choice. E) Price remains one of the most important elements determining market share and profitability. How Companies Price Companies do their pricing in a variety of ways. A) In small companies, prices are often set by the boss.B) In large companies, pricing is handled by division and product-line managers.C) In large companies, top management sets general pricing objectives, policies, and often approves the prices proposed by lower levels of management. D) In industries where pricing is a key factor, companies will often establish a pricing department to set or assist others in determining appropriate prices. E) Many companies do not handle pricing well. F) Others use price as a key strategic tool. 1) There are customized prices and offerings based on segment value and costs. G)Effectively designing and implementing pricing strategies requires a thorough understanding of consumer pricing psychology and a systematic approach to setting, adapting, and changing prices. Consumer Psychology and Pricing Marketers recognize that consumers often actively process price information, interpreting prices in terms of their knowledge from prior purchasing experiences, formal communications, and point-of-purchase or online resources. A) Purchase decisions are based on how consumers perceive prices. B) What they consider the current actual pricenot the marketers stated price. C) Consumers may have a lower price threshold below which prices may signal inferior or unacceptable quality.D) Upper price threshold above which prices are prohibitive and seen as not worth th
温馨提示
- 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
- 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
- 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
- 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
- 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
- 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
- 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。
最新文档
- 提升人才资源配置促进企业转型
- 2025至2030年中国电子存包柜行业投资前景及策略咨询报告
- 2025至2030年中国灯泡座行业投资前景及策略咨询报告
- 2025至2030年中国橱柜型材行业投资前景及策略咨询报告
- 2025至2030年中国桩基静栽荷测试分析仪行业投资前景及策略咨询报告
- 四川省泸州市2022-2023学年高二下学期期末数学理科试题(学生版)
- 2025年春人教版9年级下册化学全册课件
- 山东省青岛市十九中2020-2021学年高二上学期期中生物试题(原卷版)
- 2025年广东省广州市南沙区中考物理一模试卷(含解析)
- 中小学美术评价数据化与信息化应用分析
- 2024-2025学年部编版四年级语文下册期末模拟试卷
- 2025年中考历史考试纲要解读
- 2025年统编版八年级下册道德与法治期末复习课件327张
- 财务培训:AI与财税合规的未来
- 2025年四级调饮师职业技能鉴定理论考试题库(含答案)
- 直招军官面试题库及答案
- 静密封管理制度
- 高中主题班会 你好高二!课件-高二上学期第一次主题班会
- 乙状结肠破裂护理业务查房
- 医院职能科室科务会制度
- 《中国脑卒中防治报告(2023)》
评论
0/150
提交评论