MM Unit - 3
MM Unit - 3
MM Unit - 3
What is a Product?
A product can be a
service, and idea, goods,
or a combination of
these.
Definition
• A product is the item offered for sale. A
product can be a service or an item. It can be
physical or in virtual or cyber form. Every
product is made at a cost and each is sold at a
price.
What are Goods and Services?
•Goods and services are the output of an
economic system. Goods are tangible items sold
to customers, while services are tasks performed
for the benefit of the recipients.
•Examples of goods are automobiles, appliances,
and clothing.
•Examples of services are legal advice, house
cleaning, and consulting services.
Product Service & Classifications
1. Consumer Products
• Consumer products are products and services
for personal consumption
External Factors
Internal Factors •Demand
• Cost of the Product •Competition
•Objectives of the Firm Pricing Decision •Suppliers
•Product Differentiation •Buying Motives
•Management attitude •Government
1. Internal Factors
• Internal Factors are generally well within the
control of the organization.
a)Cost of Product: Cost and Prices of a product
are closely related. No firm can overlook cost
while setting the price.
b)Firms Objectives: Pricing policy of a firm
depends on its pricing objectives such as
maximizing market share, maintaining price
stability ,meeting competition etc…
c) Product Differentiation: In case the product is
different from rival products in quality, size,
colour, packaging etc…
d) Management attitude: The attitude of Top
management towards pricing affects pricing
decisions.
2. External Factors: External factors are
generally beyond the control of an
organization.
a) Demand: Number of buyers, their income,
preference etc.. Determine demand.
b) Competition: Competition is a crucial factor in
price determination. A firm can fix the price
equal to less than or more than the
competitors price.
c) Suppliers: When Suppliers of raw materials
and other inputs increase their prices the
buying firm has to increase the prices of its
finished products.
d) Buying Motives: Consumers who buy for
emotional motives are willing to pay more
than those buying for rational motives.
e) Government: Prices of some products are
sometimes regulated by the government in
public interest.
General Pricing Approaches
1.Cost-Based Pricing
2.Value-Based Pricing
3.Competition-Based Pricing
1. Cost Based Pricing
• A pricing method in which a fixed sum or a
percentage of the total cost is added (as
income or profit) to the cost of the product to
arrive at its selling price.
• Cost-based pricing uses manufacturing or
production costs as its basis for pricing.
Customers
Value
Price
Cost
Product
Cost Based Pricing
2.Value-based Pricing
• The term is used when prices are based on
the value of a product as perceived from the
customer's perspective. The perceived value
determines the customer's willingness to pay
and thus the maximum price a company can
charge for its product.
• A value-based pricing company considers the
value of its product or service, as opposed to
the cost the company incurred to create and
produce it.
Product
Cost
Price
Value
Customer
Value-based Pricing
3. Competition-Based Pricing
• Competitive pricing is setting the price of a
product or service based on what the
competition is charging.
• This pricing method is used more often by
businesses selling similar products, since
services can vary from business to business,
while the attributes of a product remain
similar.
Competition-Based Pricing
New Product Price Strategies
1.Cost-oriented pricing
2.Demand –oriented pricing
3.Competition –oriented pricing
4.Skimming pricing
5.Penetration pricing
1. Cost-oriented pricing
• It is also referred to as ‘cost-plus pricing’. This
pricing method assures that no product is
sold at a loss, since the price covers the full
cost incurred.
• Another common method used under cost
oriented pricing is known as Target Pricing.
This is invariably adopted by manufacturers
who fix a target return on its total cost.
Cover costs
⮚ Material
Variable costs
⮚ Labor
⮚ Capital resources
⮚ Marketing Fixed costs
2. Demand –oriented pricing
• It is a method price of product is changed
according to its demand higher price when the
demand is strong, lower price when it is weak.
• We first determine the customer's willingness
to pay for any good or service.
• Price discrimination is usually adopted under
such market situations.
3. Competition –oriented pricing
• Competitive pricing is setting the price of a
product or service based on what the
competition is charging.
• This pricing method is used more often by
businesses selling similar products, since
services can vary from business to business,
while the attributes of a product remain
similar.
4. Skimming pricing
• High Price, Low Volumes
• Price skimming is a pricing strategy in which
a marketer sets a relatively high price for a
product or service at first, then lowers the
price over time.
• Price skimming is a product pricing strategy by
which a firm charges the highest initial price
that customers will pay.
• Example: Earliest Mobile Phones, Digital
Technology, VCRs etc..
5. Penetration pricing
• Penetration pricing is the pricing technique
of setting a relatively low initial entry price,
usually lower than the intended established
price, to attract new customers.
• The strategy aims to encourage customers to
switch to the new product because of the
lower price.
• For Example, Dell used penetration pricing to
enter the personal computer market, selling
high quality computer products through lower
cost direct channels.
Steps in setting the price
(1) Developing pricing objectives
(2) Assessing the target market's evaluation of
price
(3) Evaluating competitors' prices
(4) Choosing a basis for pricing
(5) Selecting a pricing strategy
(6) Determining a specific price.
Unit – 3
PART B
1.Classifications of Product
2.Product Lifecycle
3.Packaging and Labelling
4.Warranties and Guarantees
5.New product Development Stages
6.Pricing Policies/ Methods
7.Factors affecting price determination