Top Banner
1 Pricing Policy in Marketing Copyright © 2001 by McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited Presented by: Rohit Ranganathan
18

Pricing Policy in Marketing

May 06, 2015

Download

Documents

Pricing is one of the most important elements of the marketing mix, as it is the only mix, which generates a turnover for the organization.
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Pricing Policy in Marketing

1

Pricing Policy in Marketing

Copyright © 2001 by McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited

Presented by:

Rohit Ranganathan

Page 2: Pricing Policy in Marketing

2

Agenda

– Price competition and value pricing

– Pricing strategies for market entry

– Price discounts and allowances

– Geographic pricing strategies

– Special strategies

Page 3: Pricing Policy in Marketing

3

Pricing

• Pricing is one of the most important elements of the marketing mix, as it is the only mix, which generates a turnover for the organisation.

• Pricing is difficult and must reflect supply and demand relationship. Pricing a product too high or too low could mean a loss of sales for the organisation. (e.g. Honda Civic Hybrid)

Page 4: Pricing Policy in Marketing

4

Pricing Factors

• Pricing should take into account the following factors:

Fixed and variable costs.

Competition

Company objectives

Proposed positioning strategies.

Target group and willingness to pay.

Page 5: Pricing Policy in Marketing

5

Pricing Strategy

• How does a company decide what price to charge for its products and services?

• Some firms have to decide what to charge different customers and in different situations (e.g. car dealer)

• They must decide whether discounts are to be offered, to whom, when, and for what reason (e.g. frequent flyer)

Page 6: Pricing Policy in Marketing

6

Price vs. Non-price Competition

• In price competition, a seller regularly offers products priced as low as

possible and accompanied by a minimum of services.(e.g. TATA Nano)

– With value pricing, firms strive for more benefits at lower costs to

consumer. (Metro Cash-n-Carry)

• In non-price competition, a seller has stable prices and stresses other

aspects of marketing (e.g. Mercedes Benz)

– With relationship pricing, customers have incentives to be loyal - get

price incentive if you do more business with one firm. (Future Group

Loyalty Card)

Page 7: Pricing Policy in Marketing

7

Non-price Competition

• Some firms feel price is the main competitive tool; customers always want low prices (e.g. Big Bazaar)

• Other firms are looking for ways to add value, thereby being able to avoid low prices (Apple)

• Sometimes prices have to be changed in response to competitive actions (e.g. Low Cost Airlines)

• Many firms would prefer to engage in non-price competitionnon-price competition by building brand equity and relationships with customers (e.g. Kingfisher)

Page 8: Pricing Policy in Marketing

8

Relationship Pricing

• Uses price as a method to build long-term relationships with the best customers (IT Companies)

• Focuses on giving better deals to better customers (Jet Privilege Program)

• Goal is to price relative to the value of the customer to the firm, while building loyalty and stimulating repeat buying

Page 9: Pricing Policy in Marketing

9

The Price Determination Process

• In pricing, an organization first must decide on its pricing goal.

• The next step is to set the base price for a product.• The final step involves designing pricing strategies that

are compatible with the rest of the marketing mix.• Many strategic questions must be answered:

– Will our company compete on the basis of price or other factors?

– What kind of discount schedule (if any) should be adopted?

Page 10: Pricing Policy in Marketing

10

SELECT PRICING OBJECTIVE

SELECT METHOD OF DETERMINING THE BASE PRICE:

Cost-pluspricing

Price based onboth demandand costs

Price set inrelation tomarket alone

DESIGN APPROPRIATE STRATEGIES:

Price vs. non-pricecompetitionSkimming vs. penetrationDiscounts and allowances

Freight paymentsOne price vs. flexible price Psychological pricing

Leader pricing Everyday low vs.high-low pricingResale pricemaintenance

The Process: An Illustration

Page 11: Pricing Policy in Marketing

11

Market Entry Pricing Strategies

• Market-Skimming Pricing Pricing: Setting a high initial price for a new product.

– Works if product is new, distinctive and desired– Early in Product Life Cycle, when demand inelastic– Protected by entry barriers, e.g. patents(e.g. Mitsubishi Pajero)

• Market-Penetration Pricing: Setting a low initial price for a new product.

– Works if large market, elastic demand– Economies of scale are possible– Fierce competition(e.g. TATA DOCOMO)

Page 12: Pricing Policy in Marketing

12

Discounts and Allowances

• Quantity discount:Quantity discount: The more you buy, the cheaper it becomes. (Megamart)

• Trade discountsTrade discounts:: Reductions from list for functions performed - storage, promotion.

• Cash discountCash discount:: A deduction granted to buyers for paying their bills within a specified period of time, (after first deducting trade and quantity discounts from the base price) (MSEDL)

Page 13: Pricing Policy in Marketing

13

Other Discounts and Allowances

• Seasonal Discounts (e.g. Shoppers Stop Season Sale)

• Promotional Discounts (e.g. launch of a new product / service) (Aircel launch in Mumbai)

Page 14: Pricing Policy in Marketing

14

The Competition Act

• Predatory pricing:Predatory pricing: Selling at unreasonably low prices to lessen competition.(Local Broadband provider)

• Price discriminationPrice discrimination:: The use of different prices for different customers. – It is illegal if a price advantage is granted to one, but not

another, where both compete and the articles are similar.

(Car Dealers)

Page 15: Pricing Policy in Marketing

15

Geographic Pricing Strategies

• Point-of-Production pricing:Point-of-Production pricing: Price quoted at factory - buyer pays transportation. (factory outlets)

• Uniform delivered pricing:Uniform delivered pricing: Same delivered price quoted to all; works if transportation costs small. (Maggi)

• Zone-delivered pricing:Zone-delivered pricing: Set same price within several zones, e.g. Bread

• Freight-absorption pricing:Freight-absorption pricing: Seller absorbs transport cost to penetrate market. (Sangam Direct)

Page 16: Pricing Policy in Marketing

16

Psychology of Pricing

• The psychology of pricing suggests that price will convey a message about the product or service being sold– leader pricing– bait pricing– prestige pricing

• Price lining involves setting prices at a small number of fixed levels within a retail store

Page 17: Pricing Policy in Marketing

17

Questionable Pricing Practices

• Resale price maintenanceResale price maintenance involves a supplier requiring that intermediaries sell a product at a certain price.

• Some firms reduce prices, possibly even below cost, to attract customers; this form of “loss-“loss-leader”leader” pricing is not illegal unless it persists for a long time with the goal of eliminating competition (predatory pricing)

Page 18: Pricing Policy in Marketing

18

THANK YOU