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Price
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The money or other considerations exchanged for the ownership or use of a product or service
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Price Equation
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Final Price = [List Price] - [(Incentives)+(Allowance)] + [ Extra Fees]
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Value
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The ratio of perceived benefits to price
= Perceived Benfits Price |
Perceived benefits increase, ______________.
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Price increases
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Value Pricing
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The practice of simultaneously increasing product and service benefits while maintaining or decreasing price
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When it comes to pricing, people believe _________________.
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The statement that a higher price usually means a higher quality
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Profit Equation
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Profit = Total Revenue - Total Cost
= (Unit Price * Quantity Sold) - (Fixed Costs + Variable Costs) |
Price vs. Quantity Sold Relationship
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Price effects the quantity sold:
- quantity sold affects the amount of cost a company has which means price indirectly affects costs as well |
Pricing Decisions
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Influence both total revenue (sales) and total cost, which makes pricing one of the most important decisions marketing executives face
(6 steps in setting prices) |
Step One of the Pricing Process
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Identify Pricing Objectives and Constraints:
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Pricing Objectives
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- involve specifying the role of price in an organization's marketing and strategic plans
- (profit, sales, market share, unit volume,survival, social responsibility) |
Pricing Objectives: Profit
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- managing for long-run profits: companies give up immediate profit by developing quality products to penetrate competitive markets over the long term
- maximizing current profits: common in many firms where they just look to make money in the short term - target return: occurs when a firm sets a profit goal, usually determined by its board of directors |
Pricing Objectives: Sales
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- goal may be to increase sales revenue, which in return will lead to increases in market share and profit
- cutting price on one product in a firms line may increase sales revenue but reduce those of related products |
Pricing Objectives: Market Share
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-companies often pursue a market share objective when industry sales are relatively flat or declining
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Pricing Objectives: Unit Volume
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- many firms use this objective
- firms often sell multiple products at very different prices and need to match the unit volume demanded by customers with price and production capacity - could be counterproductive if drastic price cuts drive down the profit |