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![]() International
Marketing MKT630
VU
Lesson
# 42
PRICING
IN INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
Price:
A part of the marketing
mix:
The
price
is
what the customer pays. It
includes direct
and
indirect
costs
as well as opportunity
costs.
Direct
costs
are cash outlays a customer
makes in order to obtain something. An
example would be
admission
to a national park. Direct
costs are, in many cases, a
relatively small part of the
total cost.
Indirect
costs
are costs associated with
obtaining something. An example would be
the cost of driving to
a
national park, food and
entertainment along the way,
etc. The total of the
indirect costs is often
more,
sometimes
much more, than the direct
cost.
The
total
cost
is obtained by adding the direct and
indirect costs.
Opportunity
costs
are what we give up when we
do something. They can have various types
of value,
sometimes
monetary, sometimes not.
Opportunity costs include
other things you could be
doing instead
of
going to a national park. Examples
might include mowing the
lawn or going to a baseball
game
(which
would be non-monetary) and not
working overtime on Saturday in
order to go to a national
park
(which
would be monetary),
The
price
the
park visitor pays to go to a
national park is the total of
all costs, including direct,
indirect,
and
opportunity. The perceived
benefits of going to a national
park have to be at least as great as
the
total
of the costs if a potential park
visitor is going to make a decision to go
to a park.
Determining
the price:
How
do you set monetary prices?
There are basically two
ways. I call these cost-based
pricing
and
value-based
pricing.
Cost-based
pricing
is based on the total of all
costs associated with
delivering a product or service to
a
customer.
An example of cost-based pricing
would be when an organization
identifies all of the
costs
associated
with producing a product or service,
adds them up, adds a margin
for profit (in the
business
sector)
and arrives at the "price" the
customer is to be charged. This type of
pricing is the "floor"
for
pricing
decisions in that it is as low as the
price can be and still cover
all of the costs associated
with
delivering
the product or service. I'm unaware of
applications of this type of
pricing in the park service
world,
unless it might be applied by
concessionaires.
Value-based
pricing
is based on an organization's perception
of the value the potential customer
(park
visitor)
might place on the product or service. An
example of value-based pricing would be
when an
organization
believes that people would
pay Rs20 for a service and
decides to price it at Rs20
even
though
the price might be set at
Rs10 based on a cost-based
model. This type of pricing
is the "ceiling"
for
pricing decisions in that it is as high
as the price can be and still
find a willing customer. It has
no
relationship
to the cost of production, rather it is
influenced by perception of alternatives
customers
face.
A
subset of value-based pricing is
supply/demand
pricing.
In this type of pricing, an
organization has a
limited
supply of the product or service and
decides to price it just
barely low enough to sell
all of the
limited
supply. There is no relationship to the
cost of production. Sometimes
applications
supply/demand
pricing are labeled as
gouging because the organization is
perceived as taking advantage
of
the situation.
Political
factors undoubtedly
influence some pricing decisions,
such as utilities and
essential
commodities.
I would interpret this as
politicians using a value-based price
model in order to
obtain
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![]() International
Marketing MKT630
VU
public
favor. No concern is shown for the
cost of production. Part of the
logic of this type of
decision is
the
reality that a park is a
public resource and is, at
least to some extent, a
public good the value
of
which
should be available to as many citizens
as possible.
In
summary, pricing is quite complex.
The most responsible means of
pricing would probably
give
some
consideration to all of these
pricing concepts, attempting to
balance the needs and desires of
the
public
for access with the real
costs associated with
delivering the product or service.
Responsible
pricing
would recognize market segmentation
concepts as expressed in differing
demand levels and
abilities
to pay and attempt to maximize revenue
through pricing accordingly.
The result would be
either
maximizing
gain or minimizing
loss.
Importance
of price in marketing mix:
·
Price is the amount of money
charged for a product or a service, or
the sum of the values that
consumers
exchange for the benefits of having or
using the product or service
·
Price is the only element in
the marketing mix that
produces revenue.
·
Price is also
the most flexible element of the
marketing mix.
·
The most common
mistakes in setting prices
are;
pricing
that is too cost
oriented
prices
that are not revised enough
to reflect the market changes
pricing
that does not take rest of
the marketing mix into account
prices
that are not varied
enough for different
products, market segments & purchase
occasions
Factors
influencing international
pricing:
·
Factors
internal to an international
firm
strategic
objectives
·
cost
leader, differentiation,
focus
·
gain
market share, protect market share, to maintain
status quo
·
revenue,
profit or market share maximization
marketing mix
policies
·
product,
place & promotion
costs
·
short
term vs long term cost
focus
·
full
cost, variable cost,
marginal cost pricing
organizational
considerations
·
transfer
pricing
·
cost
vs profit center
·
Factors
external to an international
firm
nature of market
(buyer or seller)
level of
market development/sophistication
market demand
and consumers' ability to
buy
competitive
situation & consumer surplus
product
life-cycle-stage
type of
packaging, environmental
issues
distribution &
marketing costs
transportation
costs
government
policies, tariffs, taxes &
other restrictions
country of
origin image
after-sales service,
warranties & guaranties
exchange rate
fluctuation
environmental
factors
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Marketing MKT630
VU
hidden
costs
Factors
contributing the selection of
final price:
·
Psychological
effects of price
·
Influence
of other marketing mix
elements
·
Company
pricing policies
·
Costs
·
Impact
of price on other parties
distributors
or dealers
company
sales force
competitors
Managing
price escalation in foreign
markets:
·
Rearrange the
distribution channel
length
of channel / exorbitant
margins
·
Eliminate
costly features (or make them
optional)
no-frills
versions - sell core products
·
Downsize the
product
offer
smaller version or a lesser
count
·
Assemble or manufacture the
product in foreign
markets
closer
proximity to customers - lower
costs
·
Adapt the
product to escape tariffs
and taxes
by
shifting it to different tax
classification
Pricing
in inflationary environments:
-
Modify
components, ingredients, parts
and/or packaging materials
-
Source
materials from low-cost suppliers
-
Shorten
credit terms
-
Include
escalator clauses in long-term
contracts - to hedge against
inflation
-
Quote
prices in a stable currency
-
Pursue
rapid inventory
turnovers
-
Draw
lessons from other
countries
Exporters
strategies under varying currency
conditions:
When
domestic currency is WEAK...
Stress price
benefits
Expand product
line and add more costly
features
Shift sourcing
manufacturing to domestic market
Exploit export
opportunities in all
markets
Use a
full-costing approach, but employ
marginal-cost pricing to penetrate new or
competitive
markets
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Marketing MKT630
VU
Speed
repatriation of foreign-earned income and
collections
Minimize
expenditures in local or host
country currency
Buy
needed services (advertising, insurance,
transportation, etc.) in domestic
market
Bill
foreign customers in their
own currency
When
domestic currency is
STRONG...
-
Engage in
non-price competition by improving
quality, delivery, and after-sale
service
-
Improve
productivity and engage in vigorous
cost reduction
-
Shift sourcing
and manufacturing overseas
-
Give priority
to exports to countries with relatively strong
currencies
-
Trim profit
margins and use marginal-cost
pricing
-
Keep the
foreign-earned income in host country;
slow down collections
-
Maximize
expenditures in local or host
country currency
-
Buy needed
services abroad and pay for them in
local currencies
-
Bill foreign
customers in the domestic currency
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