Pricing Decisions and Market Success: Priceline and Uber

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Auction pricing

A common price-setting method

Competitive pricing

A common price-setting method

Economic-value-to-customer pricing

A common price-setting method

Markup pricing

A common price-setting method

Target-rate-of-return pricing

A common price-setting method

By-product pricing

A product-mix pricing strategy

Captive-product pricing

A product-mix pricing strategy

Loss-leader pricing

A product-mix pricing strategy

Optional-feature pricing

A product-mix pricing strategy

Product bundling

A product-mix pricing strategy

Two-part pricing

A product-mix pricing strategy

Pricing policy

A six-step procedure followed by a company

Price endings

Affect consumers' perceptions of prices

Price-quality inferences

Affect consumers' perceptions of prices

Name Your Own Price

Allowed customers to set their own prices for airline tickets

Uber's success

Attributed to ease of use and fair pricing

Priceline's success

Attributed to focus on profitable segments of online travel

Purchase decisions

Based on how consumers perceive prices

Reference prices

Influence consumers' perceptions of prices

Uber's customer value proposition

Convenience and fair pricing

Elastic demand

Demand that is responsive to a change in price

Price setting

Driven by costs, competitors, and customers

Marketing element

Elements that produce costs, except for price

Price ceiling

Established by customers' assessment of unique features

Uber's growth

Expanded to over 700 metropolitan areas worldwide

Optimal market price

Helps the company achieve its objectives

Priceline

Launched in 1998 with the "Name Your Own Price" service

Aggressive pricing actions

Lowering or raising prices to gain market position and grow profits

Pricing decisions

More challenging in a changing economic and technological environment

Competitor price changes

Must be anticipated and responded to

Uber

Originated in 2008 as a smart-phone app for calling taxis

Product-mix pricing

Pricing strategy for a product that is part of a product mix

Competitors' prices

Provide an orienting point for price setting

Trade support

Securing trade support by selecting the right mix of push and pull strategies

Costs

Set a floor for the price

Demand curve

Shows the market's probable purchase quantity at alternative prices

Pricing objective

The goal a company wants to achieve through pricing

Price

The only marketing element that produces revenue

Incentives

Tools designed to stimulate purchase of products or services

Surge pricing

Uber's practice of charging higher prices during times of high demand

Pull strategies

Use advertising and incentives to persuade consumers to demand the product from intermediaries

Push strategies

Use manufacturer's sales force to induce intermediaries to carry, promote, and sell the product


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