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Transcript of ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition Upper Saddle...
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Pricing Products: Pricing Considerations,
Approaches, and Strategy
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
“The real issue is value, not price.”
-Robert T. Lindgren
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Chapter Objectives• Outline the internal factors affecting pricing
decisions, especially marketing objective, marketing-mix strategy, costs, and organizational considerations
• Identify and define the external factors affecting pricing decisions, including the effects of the market and demand, competition, and other environmental elements
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Chapter Objectives• Contrast the differences in general pricing
approaches, and be able to distinguish among cost-plus, target profit pricing, value-based pricing, and going rate
• Identify the new product pricing strategies of market-skimming pricing and market-penetration pricing
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Price• Price is the amount of money charged for a
good or service
• The only marketing mix element that produces revenue
• Changing too much chases away potential customers, charging too little cuts revenue
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Factors to Considerwhen Setting Prices
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Internal Factors• Marketing Objectives
– Survival– Current Profit Maximization– Market-Share Leadership– Brad Equity Growth– Product-Quality Leadership
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Internal Factors
• Marketing Mix Strategy
• Costs– Fixed vs. Variable Costs
• Organizational Considerations
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
External Factors Affecting Pricing Decisions
• Market and Demand
• Cross Selling and Upselling
• Consumer Perceptions of Price and Value
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
External Factors Affecting Pricing Decisions
• Analyzing the Price – Demand Relationship
• Price Elasticity of Demand
• Factors Affecting Price Sensitivity
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Price Elasticity of Demand
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Factors Affecting Price Sensitivity
• Unique Value Effect
• Substitute Awareness Effect
• Business Expenditure Effect
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Product
Cost
Price
Value
Customers
Cost Based Pricing
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
• BE= Fixed Costs/Contribution (SP-VC)• Example - Meal - SP = $20, VC = $8• Fixed costs are $2400 a day• BE=$2400/$12 = 200• Need to sell 200 meals @ $20 to break-even• VC = 40%, contribution = 60%• BE = $2400/.6 = $4000
Break-even
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Break-even Analysis or Target Profit Pricing
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Customer
Value
Price
Cost
Product
Value-based Pricing
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Customer
Product
Price
Cost
Value
Competition-Based Pricing
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Pricing Strategies
• New-Product Pricing Strategies
• Existing-Product Pricing Strategies
• Psychological Pricing
• Promotional Pricing
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
New-ProductPricing Strategies
• Prestige Pricing
• Market-Skimming Pricing
• Market-Penetration Pricing
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Market Skimming Market Penetration> Setting a high price
for a new product to skim maximum revenues from the target market.
> Results in fewer, more profitable sales.
> Popular night club charges a high cover charge
> Setting a low price for a new product in order to attract a large number of guests.
> Results in a larger market share.
> New Marriott
Setting Initial Product Prices
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Existing-ProductPricing Strategies
• Product-Bundle Pricing• Price-Adjustment Strategies
– Volume Discounts – Discounts Based on Time of Purchase – Discriminatory Pricing – Yield Management
• Non-Use of Yield Management • Last-Minute Pricing
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Product-Bundling Pricing• Transfer surplus reservation price (the maximum
price a customer will pay for a product)– Customer A will pay $60 for a Disney pass and and
$120 for a hotel room,Customer B will pay $95 for the Disney pass and $80 for the hotel room – A hotel selling a two night package with pass for $350 will get both customer
• Price-bundling also reduces price competition – by making it hard to figure price of components – In an airline and hotel package it is difficult to
determine the price of the room
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Key Terms• Cost-plus pricing
• Cross-selling
• Discriminatory pricing
• Fixed costs
• Going-rate pricing
©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism, 4th editionUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458 Kotler, Bowen, and Makens
Key Terms• Price• Survival• Upselling• Value-based pricing• Yield management/Revenue
management