We have already discussed the different factors affecting pricing
decisions and approaches that can
be used to price the product/services, today we will discuss
price-adjustment strategies. Price adjustment
strategies account for customer differences and start changing
situations, and strategies
for initiating and responding to price changes
PRICE THE 2ND P OF MARKETING MIX.
A. Price-Adjustment Strategies
Companies usually adjust their basic prices to account for various
customer differences and
changing situations. Fig summarizes six price-adjustment strategies:
discount and allowance pricing, segmented pricing, psychological
pricing, promotional pricing, geographical pricing, and international
pricing.
a. Discount and Allowance Pricing
Most companies adjust their basic price to reward customers for
certain responses, such as early payment of bills, volume purchases, and
off-season buying. These price adjustments—called discounts and
allowances—can take many forms.
A cash discount is a price reduction to buyers who pay
their bills promptly. A typical example is "2/10, net 30," which means
that although payment is due within 30 days, the buyer can deduct 2
percent if the bill is paid within 10 days. The discount must be granted
to all buyers meeting these
terms. Such discounts are customary in many industries and help to
improve the sellers' cash situation and reduce bad debts and
creditcollection costs.
A quantitydiscount is a price reduction to buyers who
buy large
volumes. A typical example might be "Rs10 per unit for less than 100
units, Rs9 per unit for 100 or more units." By law, quantity discounts
must be offered equally to all customers and must not exceed the
seller's cost savings associated with selling large quantities.
These savings include lower selling, inventory, and transportation
expenses. Discounts provide an
incentive to the customer to buy more from one given seller, rather than
from many different
sources.
A functional discount (also called a trade discount) is
offered by the seller to trade channel
members who perform certain functions, such as selling, storing, and
record keeping.
Manufacturers may offer different functional discounts to different
trade channels because of the
varying services they perform, but manufacturers must offer the same
functional discounts within
each trade channel.
A seasonal discount is a price reduction to buyers who
buy merchandise or services out of
season. For example, lawn and garden equipment manufacturers offer
seasonal discounts to
retailers during the fall and winter months to encourage early ordering
in anticipation of the heavy
spring and summer selling seasons. Hotels, motels, and airlines will
offer seasonal discounts in
their slower selling periods. Seasonal discounts allow the seller to
keep production steady during an
entire year.
Allowances are another type of reduction from the list
price. For example, trade-in allowances are
price reductions given for turning in an old item when buying a new one.
Trade-in allowances are
most common in the automobile industry but are also given for other
durable goods. Promotional
allowances are payments or price reductions to reward dealers for
participating in advertising and
sales support programs.
b. Segmented Pricing
Companies will often adjust their basic prices to allow for
differences in customers, products, and
locations. In segmented pricing, the company sells a product or service
at two or more prices, even
though the difference in prices is not based on differences in costs.
Segmented pricing takes several forms. Under customer-segment pricing,
different customers pay
different prices for the same product or service. Museums, for example,
will charge a lower
admission for students and senior citizens. Under product-form pricing,
different versions of the
product are priced differently but not according to differences in their
costs. Using location
pricing, a company charges different prices for different locations,
even though the cost of offering
at each location is the same. For instance, theaters vary their seat
prices because of audience
preferences for certain locations. Finally, using time pricing, a firm
varies its price by the season,
the month, the day, and even the hour. Public utilities vary their
prices to commercial users by time
of day and weekend versus weekday. The telephone company offers lower
off-peak charges, and
resorts give seasonal discounts.
For segmented pricing to be an effective strategy, certain conditions
must exist. The market must
be segmentable, and the segments must show different degrees of demand.
Members of the segment paying the lower price should not be able to turn
around and resell the product to the segment paying the higher price.
Competitors should not be able to undersell the firm in
the segment being charged the higher price. Nor should the costs of
segmenting and watching the market exceed the extra revenue obtained
from the price difference. Of course, the segmented
pricing must also be legal. Most importantly, segmented prices should
reflect real differences in customers' perceived value. Otherwise, in
the long run, the practice will lead to customer resentment and ill
will.
c. Psychological Pricing
Price says something about the product. For example, many consumers
use price to judge quality.
An Rs1000 bottle of perfume may contain only Rs300 worth of scent, but
some people are willing
to pay the Rs 1000 because this price indicates something special.
In using psychological pricing, sellers consider the psychology of
prices and not simply the
economics. For example, one study of the relationship between price and
quality perceptions of
cars found that consumers perceive higher-priced cars as having higher
quality. By the same token,
higher-quality cars are perceived to be even higher priced than they
actually are. When consumers
can judge the quality of a product by examining it or by calling on past
experience with it, they use
price less to judge quality. When consumers cannot judge quality because
they lack the information
or skill, price becomes an important quality signal:
Another aspect of psychological pricing is reference pricing—prices that
buyers carry in their
minds and refer to when looking at a given product. The reference price
might be formed by
noting current prices, remembering past prices, or assessing the buying
situation. Sellers can
influence or use these consumers' reference prices when setting price.
For example, a company
could display its product next to more expensive ones in order to imply
that it belongs in the same
class. Department stores often sell women's clothing in separate
departments differentiated by
price: Clothing found in the more expensive department is assumed to be
of better quality.
Companies can also influence consumers' reference prices by stating high
manufacturer's suggested
prices, by indicating that the product was originally priced much
higher, or by pointing to a
competitor's higher price.
d. Promotional pricing,
Companies will temporarily price their products below list price and
sometimes even below cost.
Promotional pricing takes several forms. Supermarkets and department
stores will price a few
products as loss leaders to attract customers to the store in the hope
that they will buy other items
at normal markups. Sellers will also use special-event pricing in
certain seasons to draw more
customers. Manufacturers will sometimes offer cash rebates to consumers
who buy the product
from dealers within a specified time; the manufacturer sends the rebate
directly to the customer.
Rebates have been popular with automakers and producers of durable goods
and small appliances,
but they are also used with consumer-packaged goods. Some manufacturers
offer low-interest
financing, longer warranties, or free maintenance to reduce the
consumer's "price." This practice
has recently become a favorite of the auto industry. Or, the seller may
simply offer discounts from
normal prices to increase sales and reduce inventories.
Promotional pricing, however, can have adverse effects. Used too
frequently and copied by
competitors, price promotions can create "deal-prone" customers who wait
until brands go on sale
before buying them. Or, constantly reduced prices can erode a brand's
value in the eyes of
customers. Marketers sometimes use price promotions as a quick fix
instead of sweating through
the difficult process of developing effective longer-term strategies for
building their brands. In fact,
one observer notes that price promotions can be downright addicting to
both the company and the
customer. The point is that promotional pricing can be an effective
means of generating sales in
certain circumstances but can be damaging if taken as a steady diet.
e. Geographical Pricing
A company also must decide how to price its products for customers
located in different parts of
the country or world. Should the company take risk of losing the
business of more distant
customers by charging them higher prices to cover the higher shipping
costs? Or should the
company charge all customers the same prices regardless of location?
Because each customer picks
up its own cost, supporters of FOB pricing feel that this is the fairest
way to assess freight charges.
The disadvantage, however, is that Peerless will be a high-cost firm to
distant customers?
Uniform-delivered pricing is the opposite of FOB pricing. Here, the
company charges the same
price plus freight to all customers, regardless of their location. The
freight charge is set at the
average freight cost. Other advantages of uniform-delivered pricing are
that it is fairly easy to
administer and it lets the firm advertise its price nationally.
Zone pricing falls between FOB-origin pricing and uniform-delivered
pricing. The company sets
up two or more zones. All customers within a given zone pay a single
total price; the more distant
the zone, the higher the price. Using base point pricing, the seller
selects a given city as a "basing
point" and charges all customers the freight cost from that city to the
customer location, regardless
of the city from which the goods are actually shipped. If all sellers
used the same basing-point city,
delivered prices would be the same for all customers and price
competition would be eliminated.
Industries such as sugar, cement, steel, and automobiles used
basing-point pricing for years, but
this method has become less popular today. Some companies set up
multiple basing points to
create more flexibility: They quote freight charges from the
basing-point city nearest to the
customer.
Finally, the seller who is anxious to do business with a certain
customer or geographical area might
use freight-absorption pricing. Using this strategy, the seller absorbs
all or part of the actual freight
charges in order to get the desired business. The seller might reason
that if it can get more
business, its average costs will fall and more than compensate for its
extra freight cost. Freightabsorption
pricing is used for market penetration and to hold on to increasingly
competitive
markets.
f. International Pricing
Companies that market their products internationally must decide what
prices to charge in the
different countries in which they operate. In some cases, a company can
set a uniform worldwide
price. The price that a company should charge in a specific country
depends on many factors,
including economic conditions, competitive situations, laws and
regulations, and development of
the wholesaling and retailing system. Consumer perceptions and
preferences also may vary from
country to country, calling for different prices. Or the company may
have different marketing
objectives in various world markets, which require changes in pricing
strategy. Costs play an
important role in setting international prices. Travelers abroad are
often surprised to find that
goods that are relatively inexpensive at home may carry outrageously
higher price tags in other
countries. In some cases, such price escalation may result from
differences in selling strategies or
market conditions. In most instances, however, it is simply a result of
the higher costs of selling in
foreign markets—the additional costs of modifying the product, higher
shipping and insurance
costs, import tariffs and taxes, costs associated with exchange-rate
fluctuations, and higher channel
and physical distribution costs.
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