|
||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
FREE E-Book
Pricing Course |
|
|
Pricing is one of the four aspects of marketing. The other three parts of the marketing mix are product management, promotion, and distribution.
It is also a key variable in microeconomic price allocation theory.
Pricing involves asking questions like:
A well chosen price should do three things:
From the marketers point of view, an efficient price is
a price that is very close to the maximum that customers are
prepared to pay.
In economic terms, it is a price that shifts most of the consumer surplus to the producer.
The effective price is the price the company receives after accounting for discounts, promotions, and other incentives.
Price lining in the use of a limited number of prices for all your product offerings. This is a tradition started in the old five and dime stores in which everything cost either 5 or 10 cents.
Its underlying rationale is that these amounts are seen as suitable price points for a whole range of products by perspective customers. It has the advantage of ease of administering, but the disadvantage of inflexibility, particularly in times of inflation or unstable prices.
A loss leader is a product that has a price set below the operating margin. This results in a loss to the enterprise on that particular item, but this is done in the hope that it will draw customers into the store and that some of those customers will buy other, higher margin items.
Promotional pricing refers to an instance where pricing is the key element of the marketing mix.
The price/quantity relationship refers to the perception by most consumers that a relatively high price is a sign of good quality.
The belief in this relationship is most important with complex product that are hard to test, and experiential products that cannot be tested until used (such as most services).
The greater the uncertainty surrounding a product, the more consumers depend on the price/quantity hypothesis and the more of a premium they are prepared to pay.
Premium pricing (also called prestige pricing) is the strategy of pricing at, or near, the high end of the possible price range.
People will buy a premium priced product because:
They believe the high price is an indication of good quality
they believe it to be a sign of self worth - "They are worth it" - It authenticates their success and status - It is a signal to others that they are a member of an exclusive group
They require flawless performance in this application - The cost of product malfunction is too high to buy anything but the best - example : heart pacemaker
Demand-based pricing is any pricing method that uses consumer
demand - based on perceived value - as the central element.
These include : price skimming, price discrimination and
yield management, price points, psychological pricing, bundle pricing,
penetration pricing, price lining, and premium pricing.
This article has been adapted from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
![]()