Marketing Ch. 13
Survival
profits, sales, and market share are less important objectives of the firm than mere survival
A maximizing current profit objective
such as for a quarter or year, it is common in many firms because the targets can be set and performance measured quickly
Average Revenue
the average amount of money received for selling one unit of a product, or simply the price of that unit; AR= (TR/Q)=P
Marginal Cost
the change in total cost that results from producing and marketing one additional unit of a product; MC= change in TC/ 1 unit increase in Q=slope of TC curve
Marginal Revenue
the change in total revenue that results from producing and marketing one additional unit of a product; MR= (Change in TR/ 1 unit increase in Q) = slope of TR curve
Price
the money or other considerations exchanged for the ownership or use of a product or service
Newness of the Product
the newer a product and the earlier it is in its life cycle, the higher the price than can be set
Demand for the Product Class, Product, and Brand
the number of potenital buyers for the product class (cars), product group (family sedans) and specific brand (toyota camry V6) clearly affects the price a seller can charge; greater the demand the higher the price can be set
Price Elasticity of Demand
the percentage change in quantity demanded relative to a percentage change in price; measures how sensitive consumer demand and the firm's revenues are to changes in the product's price; (E)= (percentage change in quantity demanded/ percentage change in price)
Barter
the practice of exchanging products and services for other products and services rather than for money
Value Pricing
the practice of simultaneously increasing product and service benefits while maintaining or decreasing price
Break-even point
the quantity at which total revenue and total cost are equal; BEP quantity= Fixed cost/ (unit price - unit variable cost) FC/ (P - UVC)
Unit Volume
the quantity produced or sold; these firms often sell multiple products at very different prices
Value
the ratio of perceived benefits to price [ Value = (Perceived benefits/ Price)]
Market Share
the ratio of the firm's sales revenues or unit sales to those of the industry (competitors plus the firm itself); companies often pursue a market share objective when industry sales are relatively flat or declining
Dynamic Pricing
the seller changes prices in response to its existing inventory and the prices of competitors; this can damage their relationships with customers, particularly those who unfortunately paid top dollar for items that could have been purchased for less
Fixed Cost
the sum of the expenses of the firm that are stable and do not change with the quantity of a product that is produced and sold
Variable Cost
the sum of the expenses of the firm that vary directly with the quantity of a product that is produced and sold; TC= FC + VC
Total cost
the toal expense incurred by a firm in producing and marketing a product. total cost is the sum of fixed cost and variable cost
Total Revenue
the total money received from the sale of a product: TR= P (product) X Q (quanity)
Five cost concepts in pricing decisions:
total cost (TC), fixed cost (FC), variable cost (VC), unit variable cost (UVC), marginal cost (MC)
Demand Curves lead to three related revenue concepts critical to pricing decisions:
total revenue (TR), average revenue (AR), and Marginal Revenue (MR)
Unit Variable Cost
variable cost expressed on a per unit basis for a product: UVC= VC/Q
Consumer-Driven Pricing Actions
with consumers able to compare prices on the Internet, they can make more efficient buying decisions
Other three factors that influence demand
1) consumer tastes 2) price and availability of similar products 3) consumer income first two influence what consumers want to buy, third factor affects what they can buy
Competitors' prices are important only if a prospective buyer both:
1) knows about those prices and 2) can act to purchase them easily
Six Steps in Setting Price
1. Identifying pricing objectives and constraints 2. Estimate demand and revenue 3. Determine cost, volume, and profit relationships 4. Select an approximate price level 5. Set list or quoted price 6. Make special adjustments to list or quoted price
Final Price equation
Final Price= [List Price] - [(Incentives) + (Allowances)] + [Extra fees]
Profit Equation
Profit= Total revenue- total cost = (Unit Price X Quantity Sold) - (Fixed Cost + Variable Cost)
Price transparency
a consumer's near-instantaneous access to competitors' prices for the same offering
social responsibility
a firm may forgo higher profit on sales and follow a pricing objective that recognizes its obligations to customers and society in general
Competitors' Prices and Consumers' Awareness of Them
a firm must know what sepcific prices its present and potential competitors are charging now as well as what they are likely to charge in the near future
Demand Curve
a graph that relates the qunaitity sold and price, showing the maximum number of units that will be sold at a given price
Break-even chart
a graphic presentation of the break-even analysis;
Break-even analysis
a technique that analyzes the relationship between total revenue and total cost to determine profitability at various levels of output
Seller/Retailer- Driven Pricing Actions
aggressive price changes through the Internet started in 1990's when airlines constantly changed ticket prices to fill seats
Price Equation
all the factors that increase or decrease the final price of an offering
Costs of Producing and Marketing the Product
another profit consideration for marketers is to ensure that firms in their channels of distribution make an adequate profit
A managing for long-run profits objective (for pricing strategy)
companies give up immediate profit by developing quality products to pentrate competitive markets over the long term
marginal analysis
continuing, concise trade-off of incremental costs against incremental revenues; as long as the revenue received from the sale of an additional unit of a product (marginal revenue) is greater than the additional costs of producing and selling it (marginal cost), a firm will expand its output of that product
Price must be right, meaning?
customers must be willing to pay it; it must generate enough sales dollars to pay for the cost of developing, producing, and marketing the product; and it must earn a profit for the company
Reference Values
emerges through the process of comparing the costs and benefits of substitute items that satisfy the same need
Inelastic Demand
exists when a 1 percent decrease in price produces less than a 1 percent increase in quantity demanded, thereby actually decreasing total revenue; price inelasticity that is less than 1 with inelastic demand
Elastic Demand
exists when a 1 percent decrease in price produces more than a 1 percent increase in quantity demanded, thereby actually increasing total revenue
Demand Factors
factors that determine consumers' willingness and ability to pay for products and services
Pricing constraints
factors that limit the range of prices a firm may set
Flash Sales
involve cutting prices for only a few hours so consumers don't have time to calculate the size of the deal they are getting
Pricing Objectives
involve specifying the role of price in an organization's marketing and strategic plans; carried to lower levels in the organization, such as setting objectives for marketing managers responsible for an individual brand
Profit
measured in terms of return on investment (ROI) or return on assets (ROA)
A target return objective
occurs when a firm sets a profit goal, usually determined by its board of directors