What is a price? - Hogeschool van Amsterdam
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Transcript What is a price? - Hogeschool van Amsterdam
An introduction to pricing
Hoorcollege marketing blok 2 week 5
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Learning goals
By the end of this week’s colleges and the reading
you should:
Understand the roles of pricing in the marketing mix
Be aware of the factors that affect the price set
Understand the strategies available to marketers when
setting prices
Know some of the tactics available for changing prices
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Agenda
The importance of price
What is price?
Factors that influence pricing decisions
Setting prices: pricing strategies
Tactics for changing price
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The importance of price
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Price is important
Price is one of the most important factors in the buying
decision
If it is perceived as too high by the target customer, demand will
be low
Price is the only income generator in the marketing mix
If the price is too low, profits will not be optimal
Price suggests a positioning to the consumer
If the price is out of step with the rest of the marketing mix it will
weaken the offer
Price is what the customer pays in the exchange process
The customer must feel they are getting a fair deal
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What is price?
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What is a price?
All products and services have a price
Gratis is also a price
A price the thing (usually money) that is charged in
exchange for a product or service
More broadly a price is the sum of all values that
consumers exchange for the benefits of having or
using a product or service
This might include things such as extra warranty and cost
of ownership
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Perception (perceptie) is very
important
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are needed to see this picture.
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drink of
water
Cool!
If the consumer feels the
price is too high they will
try to find an alternative or
may even go without
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I’m thirsty
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Perception of what is “too much” (or
too little) varies by consumer
Waste
of
money
Cool!
US$ 23,000
Knowing what your target customer understands
as valuable is essential to setting a price
What’s in it for them?
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Factors affecting price setting
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Price setting can be complex
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But in most cases there are two key
factors
The highest price that can
be charged is the maximum
the target customer
perceives as being “worth it”
The minimum is (usually)
what is necessary not to
lose money
The other factors affect
where you can sit between
these two
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Setting prices: pricing strategies
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Deciding strategy
In order to set a price you first need to understand
What the target customer sees as the maximum price that
is “worth it”
And
What your minimum price is based on the costs you have
Then you decide you pricing strategy
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New product or new price?
A new price might be for a new product or for an
existing one
Deciding the price of a new product tends to be
different from changing the price of an existing
product
With new products you often have less information
to work with
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New product pricing
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New product pricing
Two types of “new” product
Imitative products
Products that the consumer can compare easily with another
offer meeting the same need
Innovative products
Products that the consumer cannot compare with another
solution
These are rarer than many think
Each requires a different approaches
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Imitative products
The issue you here is how to position the product
against existing offers
There are two variables involved
Relative price compared to alternatives
Relative quality compared to alternatives
These offer 4 possible strategies
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Price positioning strategies for
imitative products
Relative Price
High
Low
High
Premium
strategy
Good-value
strategy
Low
Overcharging
strategy
Economy
strategy
Relative
Quality
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Beware of being a “me too” offer
Relative Price
High
High
Low
Premium
strategy
Good-value
strategy
Relative
Quality
Me
too
Low
Overcharging
strategy
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Economy
strategy
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Innovative products
These products have no reference
Although they may be an innovative replacement for an
existing offer
Price is set based on an deep understanding of the
target customer’s idea of value
There are two main strategies
Market-skimming pricing
Market-penetration pricing
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Market-skimming
This involves setting the starting price high to skim
layers of the market
The price must be dynamic and adjusted over time to
maintain sales
Stage 1
Set a price that is just “worth it” for some segment (usually
innovators) of the market
Stage 2
As sales slow down because the market segment is
saturated or competitors enter the market the price is
reduced for the next segment (early adopters)
And so on...
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Market-skimming for & against
Advantages
Risks
Positions product in terms of
Failure to react to product
life cycle development
Uniqueness
Quality
Allows quicker recovery of
development costs
Setting the price too high
Over-estimating the target
customer’s sense of what
is valuable
Product not really unique
Fast competitor reaction
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Market-penetration
This involves setting a price that is low enough to
attract large numbers of buyers
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Conditions favouring marketpenetration
Price sensitive market
Production and distribution costs will fall as a result
of high volumes
The low price helps keep competition out of the
market
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Advantages of penetration
Develop a market for a new offer quickly
Take advantages of economies of scale
Keep competition out of the market
Develop dominant market position
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Market-skimming versus penetration
Market-skimming works
best when:
The product is genuinely
unique
Competitors cannot copy
the product quickly
E.g. it is protected by a
patent
The product offers real
value to some market
segments
The market is not price
sensitive
Production and distribution
costs will not fall quickly
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Market penetration works
best when:
The market is price
sensitive
Production and distribution
costs will fall based on
increased volumes
The product is easily
copied
The value of the product is
less clear
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“Normal” pricing
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There is no such thing as “normal”
pricing, but
Pricing existing or updated products is easier (a little
like imitative new products)
There are 13 different strategies
These can sometimes be used in combinations
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“Normal” pricing strategies
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“Gratis” pricing isn’t really gratis
Even when it’s gratis, someone has
to pay
This
had
better
be
worth it!
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Gratis…
Cool!
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Ways of keeping things “gratis”
Advertising
Selling database customer information
Selling-up
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Some tactics for changing price
These really are used
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Changing price is sometimes
necessary…but risky
A price rise can mean
Angry customers
Potential reduction in market share if competitors do not
increase
A price decrease can mean
A potential decrease in profit
Image problems
Sometimes it is better not to change price, but find a
more creative way to handle the price
This may not be the case for economy brands
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Some ways to avoid increasing price
Change the product (e.g. make it smaller)
Bundle the product
Separate extras and make the options
Change discount to intermediaries
Charge for deliver and extras
Move away from lower margin products in line-up
Offer “prompt payment” discounts
Late payment penalties
Change minimum order size
Leave the market
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Some ways to avoid decreasing price
Short-term promotions
Bundle pricing
Value packs
Increase warranty
Increase intermediary discounts
Extend payment terms
Increase product quality
Offer better service
Leave the market
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Summary
Price is the only element of the marketing mix that
makes money
Poor pricing can ruin your marketing mix
Pricing of new products is more complex than
existing products
Where possible avoid changing price
Unless you are a economy brand
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