Lesson 6 - Price Level
Lesson 6 - Price Level
Lesson 6 - Price Level
Lesson 6
Jishnu Changkakoti
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The Strategic Pricing Pyramid
Price Level
Price setting
Pricing Policy
Negotiating tactics,
price selling procedures
Price Structure
Metrics, fences, controls
Value Creation
Economic value, offering design, segmentation
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Factors in price setting
• Three key inputs for setting the price level:
• Customer requirements
• Competitive offerings
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The Price Setting Process
Communicate Prices
Define Price Window Set Initial Price
to market
Develop
Set initial price range Determine amount of
communication plan to
based on differential differential value to be
ensure prices are
value & costs captured with price
perceived to be fair
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1. Defining the price window
• We have invented a unique new product - a Price ceiling
toothbrush has a container in which toothpaste is
inserted. So there’s no need to buy a toothpaste
separately any more!
Negative
• For a customer to buy this, what would be a differentiation value
reference price?
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2. Setting the initial price point
• The price point will be set within the price window
(between Rs.60 & Rs.110) based on the following:
B. Price-volume trade-offs
C. Customer response
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How much value to capture in price?
• Judgement should be driven by what will deliver long-term sustainable profitability
• Leaving more value on the table will help customers adopt the new product/
service faster
• Seller saves cost of customer education because she is using price to get
people in
• Quick adoption & market share gain can discourage competitive entry
• However:
• If the product is has sustainable long term differentiation, then launching with a
lower price will forgo a lot of potential margin in the long term
• Unless value is initially established and paid for by early adopters, very difficult
to raise prices later on
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Alignment with business objectives
• Three possible strategies:
1. Skim Pricing
• Not necessarily cheap, but low relative to perceived value in the segment
3. Neutral Pricing
• For our toothbrush, what could be the price for each of these strategies?
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B. Define the Price-Volume trade-off
(profitability analysis)
1. Incremental breakeven analysis
• If I increase price, how much volume can I afford to lose before the price increase becomes
unprofitable
• If I reduce price, how much volume would I have to gain to improve my profitability
• Advantage of doing this - we know the payoffs for price changes without needing to figure out how
competitors will react
• If fixed costs = Rs.10 lakhs, then breakeven vol = fixed costs/contribution margin = 14,286 pieces
• If we take a price increase of 10% to Rs.110, then breakeven volume =12,500 i.e. my volumes can
go down by 13% without any loss of profits
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Profitability analysis (contd.)
2. Simulations
• Best approach in markets with high transaction volumes, standardised products and
non-negotiable pricing
• Used by retailers like Walmart etc. to calculate and reprice on an almost real-time basis
• Even small price improvements can give huge gains due to the very high number of
transactions involved - American Airlines 15% increase
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c. Determine customer response
• Depends on sensitivity to the price-value trade-off
• Size of expenditure
• Shared costs
• Switching cost
• Perceived risk
• Importance of end-benefit
• Price-quality perceptions
• Perceived fairness
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Estimating customer response
• Price experimentation - test out the changes in a controlled sample of
customers first
• Structured inference - use results the managers have seen in the past to
estimate results
• Simulations
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C. Communicating price/ price increases to customers
• Most important:
• They should believe it is fair. Perceived fairness is one of the most powerful factors
driving price sensitivity
• Sometimes giving customers options on how to adjust to the new prices is also
necessary
• Example - a medical device manufacturer was taking a 40% price increase in a key product
2. A letter was sent to customers saying that no price increases had been taken for 8
years, and the new price would still be lower than if they had taken increases
3. Personal meetings were held with key customers to explain that the product was not
generating sufficient returns, which would affect its ability to invest in R&D, & a
significant proportion of the price increase gains would be invested back in R&D
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Selling it to the sales force
1. Marketing should make sure each sales representative understands the big picture so that they buy
into the need for the change
• Present the business case showing the problem, and how the pricing change will help address it
• Make each person understand his/her role in making the strategy work through more effective
communication and negotiation tactics
• e.g. incentives only based on top line revenue will not make them negotiate hard for higher prices
• Training - formal training sessions, mock calls with objection handling, videos showing right and
wrong way to make the call etc.
• Selling tools
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Thank You
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