Transcript Pricing

Pricing Chapter 7
• Collect Assignment 2
• Pricing to capture maximum value
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Linear Approximation
Cost-plus Pricing
Mark-up pricing
Price Discrimination
• SnowCity Ski Resort - Question 7-9 - Page 186
• A Mickey Mouse Solution for a
Disneyland Dilemma
• Block booking and bundling
• Why are Hotel Minibars So Expensive?
Questions?
• How does pricing contribute to profits?
• Why does Disneyland charge $249 for a 5
day pass instead of pricing each ride?
– They used to charge a price for each ride. (let’s
say $8 per ride)
• Why did movie studios want to engage in
block-booking (bundling)?
• Why are Hotel Minibars So Expensive?
• How can firms make money selling
commodity memory on the internet?
Linear approximation
Requirements: estimates of current price (P1),
quantity sold (Q1), possible new price (P2), quantity
sold with price change (Q2), and marginal cost
A linear demand curve is approximated by
P1=a-( P2 - P1/Q2 - Q1 )Q1
solve for a
More generally, P=a-bQ
Purple Man Project Problem:
• At Purple Man Project – Vegas, the audience is entertained
by purple performers in Sin City.
• The Project has experimented with two prices: $50 and
$70. They carefully tried to hold all other factors constant
during the experiment.
• At the $50 price they averaged an audience of 500. At the
$70 price the averaged an audience of 450.
• The marginal cost of filling another theater seat is zero.
• What is the demand curve facing the Purple Man Project ?
• What is the optimal price and quantity of tickets to sell for
the Purple Man Project?
Cost-plus pricing
• Add a markup to average total cost to yield target
return
• Does this ignore incremental costs and price
sensitivity?
– not if managers have a fundamental understanding of
their markets
– consistently bad pricing policies are not good for the
firm’s long term fiscal health
Mark-up pricing
• Optimal mark-up rule of thumb:
MC *
P* 
1
1
*
where * indicates estimated value
• Requires knowledge or awareness of both marginal
costs and elasticity
Problem:
• As an internet memory sales company
Glenn Ellison has told you your own-price
elasticity of demand for low quality 128MB
PC100 memory modules is 25 in absolute
value.
• Why is your demand so elastic for the low
quality 128MB PC100 memory modules?
• What is your optimal markup???
Price discrimination
• Different prices charged to different customers for
essentially the same product
– examples
• Demand curve shows willingness to pay =
subjective valuation
• Price discrimination tries to turn willingness-topay into profit
Price discrimination
heterogeneous consumers
• Necessary conditions
– identify submarkets
– no transfers across submarkets
• Degrees of discrimination
– Group pricing (market segmentation)
– Personalized pricing
Optimal pricing at Snowfish
different demand elasticities
Snow City Ski Resort
• Page 186
Question 7-9
• Snow City Ski Resort
• Out of town: Qo = 600 - 10P
P=60- (1/10) *Qo
• Local: Ql = 600 - 20P
P=30- (1/20 )*Ql
Combined: Qt = 1200 – 30P
P=40 – (1/30)*Qt
Snow City Ski Resort
a. Marginal revenue (40 –1/30Q) equal to marginal
cost ($10).
Price can be found by substituting this quantity into
the demand curve. The optimal
quantity is 450 tickets (100 local; 350 nonlocal),
price = $25, and profits = $6,750.
Snow City Ski Resort
b. The local skiers have more elastic demand.
The point elasticity for the local-skier market
is 5 versus .714 for the out-of-town market.
P
25 500
local  B   20 

5
Q
100 100
P
25 250
out of towners  B   10 

 0.714
Q
350 350
Hint: point elasticities are covered in the appendix to chapter 4
Snow City Ski Resort
c. What are the optimal price and quantity for
each market segment???
• Snow City should charge $35 to out-of-town
skiers and sell 250 tickets.
• The price and quantity for local skiers are $20 and
200 tickets.
• Total Revenue from OT =PQ=$35*250=$8750
• Total Revenue from Locals=$20*200=$4000
• Total cost = $10*450=$4500
• Total profits are $8750+$4000-$4500=$8,250
d. What techniques might the resort use to
implement such a pricing policy?
A Mickey Mouse Solution for a Disneyland Dilemma
• Two-part tariffs
– up-front (entry) fee for the right to purchase
– additional fee per unit purchased equal to marginal cost
• At Disneyland MC=0 per ride approximately
– best when customers have relatively homogenous demand for
product
– Must be able to prevent resale!!!! So it works for the Mouse!
Price
Entry Fee
Per unit price =Marginal cost
Demand
0
Quantity sold
Quantity
EA Sports: “Its in the game.”
• Consider the following information about the demand for last year’s
video games. There are an equal number of consumers in each
group. This table shows that maximum that each type of consumer
is willing to pay for each game:
Product
a.
b.
Group 1
consumers
Group 2
consumers
Madden 2004
$20
$14
Tiger Woods 2004
$13
$18
Why is EA Sports still selling old versions of its video games?
As Vice-President for EA Sports explain your optimal bundling and
pricing strategy to maximize EA Sports profits from the sale of 2002
games. Be sure to explain why your strategy is optimal.
Application:
Smart Pricing Case
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What is smart pricing?
Any similarities to price discrimination?
How does it capture willingness-to-pay?
Infrastructure needs
Benefits & costs
Add-on Pricing
– Glenn Ellison’s cool research
– Why are Hotel Minibars So Expensive?
– How can firms facing vigorous price competition mark-up
prices above marginal cost to stay in business???
– Even in the face of highly elastic demand for commodity
products (computer memory) on the internet??
Looking Forward
• Return and Review Assignment 2
• Readings – Game Theory
Managerial Economics Chapter 9
• Holland Sweetener versus Monsanto, p.
245
• Please bring lots of change to
next week’s class for fun and
games