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Business to Business Pricing

Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

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Page 1: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Business to Business Pricing

Page 2: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

What is Price?

•Strategic element of marketing mix

•Indication of value or worth of something

•Without it, transactions could not take place

Page 3: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Fig. 15.2

Key Components of the Industrial Pricing Process

•No easy formula for pricing an industrial product. •Decision is multidimensional•Each interactive variable assumes significance.

Page 4: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Strategic Purposes of Pricing

• Achieving target level of profitability• Building good-will or relationships (in

a market with certain customers)• Penetration of a new market or

segment• Maximizing profit for a new product• Keeping competitors out of an

existing customer base

Page 5: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Tactical Purposes of Pricing

• Winning business of new, important customers

• Penetrating a new account• Reducing inventory levels• Keeping business of disgruntled

customers• Encourage customer trials• Encourage purchase of

complementary products

Page 6: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Perceived Value and Evaluated Price

Value Based vs. Cost Based Value Based vs. Cost Based PricingPricing

Value Based Pricing difficult to establish

Cost Based Pricing easy and often mistakenly used

Costs important in determining profit levels

Beyond this, cost has little to do with price

Page 7: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

The Total Offering

Elements of the Offering:

Product

Ancillary Services

Image

Availability

Quantity

Evaluated

Price

Suppliers creatively combine components of total offering that contribute to value for specific customers.

Components will vary depending on specific customer needs and the customer’s cost structure.

Customer perceives price as a cost in its offering.

Some will be able to directly fund purchases.

Others will require financing assistance.

Others may require JIT delivery.

Others may find value in the brand or image of a particular supplier, particularly if that image can add value to the final product (Intel Inside).

Page 8: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Costs Considered in Evaluated Price:

Consumer Perspective Price paid/value exchanged at

purchase Location convenience Handling & storage costs for

customer Inventory financing/holding costs Environmental impact/disposal

cost

Page 9: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Customer Perception of Value and Evaluated Price

Offering A

$ EquivalentValue

Total Benefi

ts

Offering B

Total Benefi

ts

EvaluatedPrice

EvaluatedPrice

Value Valu

e

“A” has more value; customer chooses “A”though “B” has more total benefits

Page 10: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Attributable cost per unitOffering A

$ EquivalentValue

Competitor’sOffering B

Offering A

Minimum Price per Unit for A

Competitor’sPrice for B

Maximum Price per Unit for A

Customer view –Maximumworth of A

Cost

Acceptable Price Range

Maximum/Minimum Price

Page 11: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Benefits of a Particular Product

Functional benefitsFunctional benefits are the design characteristics that might be attractive to technical personnel.

Operational benefitsOperational benefits are durability and reliability, qualities desirable to production managers.

Financial benefitsFinancial benefits are favorable terms and opportunities for cost savings, important to purchasing managers and controllers.

Personal benefitsPersonal benefits are organizational status, reduced risk, and personal satisfaction.

Page 12: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

•A broad perspective needed in examining the costs a particular alternative may present for the buyer.

•Rather than making a decision on the basis of price alone, organizational buyers emphasize the total cost in use of a particular product or service.

Customers’ Cost-in-Use Components

Page 13: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Customers’ Cost-in-Use Components

Page 14: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Contribution Margin

• Difference between– Ongoing attributable costs and– Ongoing attributable revenues.

• Represents the proportion of the revenues that contribute to– Fixed costs– Indirect costs– Profit

Page 15: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

$

Price Cut “A” – this is still OKPrice Cut “B”

AllocatedCost of Mgr’sSalary— “unavoidable”

AttributableCosts

OriginalPrice

New Price $6500

OriginalProfit

Minimum Price – $6000

Below $6000, you lose more $ with each additional unit sold

Contribution to Cover Mgr’s Salary

$10,000

$7,000

$6,000

Price Cut ExampleHow Low Can You Go?

Page 16: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Costs

FixedCosts

Variable Costs

Types of Cost

Page 17: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Expenses that are uniform

per unit of output within a

relevant time period

As volume increases, total

variable costs increase

Variable Costs are…

Page 18: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

THERE ARE TWO CATEGORIES OF

VARIABLE COSTS

1.Cost of Goods Sold

2.Other Variable Costs

Page 19: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

For Manufacturer or Provider of Service

Covers materials, labor and factory overhead applied directly to production

For Reseller (Wholesaler or Retailer)

Covers primarily the cost of merchandise

Variable Costs – Cost of Goods Sold

Page 20: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Other Variable Costs

Expenses not directly tied to

production but vary directly

with volume

Examples include:

Sales commissions, discounts,

and delivery expenses

Page 21: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Expenses that do not fluctuate with output volume within a relevant time period

They become progressively smaller per unit of output as volume increases

No matter how large volume becomes, the absolute size of fixed costs remains unchanged

Fixed Costs

Page 22: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

THERE ARE TWO CATEGORIES OF

FIXED COSTS

1.Programmed costs

2.Committed costs

Page 23: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

• Result from attempts to

generate sales volume

• Examples include:

Advertising, sales

promotion, and sales

salaries

Fixed Costs – Programmed Costs

Page 24: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Costs required to maintain

the organization

Examples include

nonmarketing expenditures,

such as:

rent, administrative cost,

and clerical salaries

Fixed Costs – Committed Costs

Page 25: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Relevant and

Sunk Costs

Page 26: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Future expenditures unique to the decision

alternatives under consideration.

Expected to occur in the future as a result of some marketing action

Differ among marketing alternatives being considered

In general, opportunity costs are considered relevant costs

Relevant Costs are…

Page 27: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

The direct opposite of relevant costs.

Past expenditures for a given activity

Typically irrelevant in whole or in part to future decisions

Examples of sunk costs:

Past marketing research and development expenditures

Last year’s advertising expense

Sunk Costs are…

Page 28: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

“Landed CostLanded Cost” of a Product

• Cost of the product at the source, plus the cost to transport the product to its destination.

• If landed cost is lower than that of other sources, there should be a demand for that product & for transportation of that product.

Page 29: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Landed Cost Examples

Chicago

ProductionCost = $ 3

Boston

ProductionCost = $ 4

Transportation CostsChicago to Boston < $ 1Chicago producer has aLanded Cost Advantage

Chicago

ProductionCost = $ 3

BostonTransportation Costs

Chicago to Boston > $ 1 ProductionCost = $ 4

Boston producer has aLanded Cost Advantage

Chicago

ProductionCost = $ 3

BostonTransportation Costs

Chicago to Boston = $ 1Neither producer has aLanded Cost Advantage

ProductionCost = $ 4

Page 30: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Landed Cost can determine the

Extent of the MarketExtent of the Market between 2 competing companies

• Extent of the Market is– Point at which lowest price (or landed

cost) is equal for products of two firms.

– Market area Market area for a seller is area where seller has a landed cost advantage over its competitor (assuming buyer will select seller with the lowest price).

Page 31: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Extent of Market Illustration

• 2 producers (A & Z) located 200 miles apart.• A’s production cost = $ 50.00/unit• Z’s production cost = $ 50.00/unit• A’s transportation cost = $ 0.60/unit/mile• Z’s transportation cost = $ 0.50/unit/mile• Extent of Market is point at which

– Landed cost (LC) of A = to LC of Z, or

– Where x is the distance from A’s plant to the limit of the market area, and

– 200 – x is the distance from Z’s plant to the market area

Continued on next slide

Page 32: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Extent of Market Illustration (continued)

LC (A) = LC (Z)

Production (A) + Transportation (A) = Production (Z) + Transportation (Z)

$ 50 + $ 0.60 (x) = $ 50 + $ 0.50 (200 – x)

$ 50 + $ 0.60 (x) = $ 50 + $ 100 - $ 0.50 (x)

$ 50 + $ 0.60 (x) + $ 0.50 (x) = $ 50 + $ 100

$ 0.60 (x) + $ 0.50 (x) = $ 50 + $ 100 - $ 50

$ 1.10 (x) = $ 100

X = 90.9 miles from A

Thus, A has a market area that extends 90.9 miles from its plant, and Z has a market area that extends 109.1 miles from its facility.

Telling us that, The firm with the lower transportation cost (Z) has a greater market area

than the firm with the higher transportation cost (A).

Page 33: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Trade Margin (Markup)

Suppose a retailer pays $10 for an item and sells it for $15. Markup is thus $5 ($15-$10):

Margin as a percentage of cost:Margin/Cost x 100 =

($5 / $10) x 100 = 50 %

Margin as a percentage of selling price:Margin/Price x 100 =

($5 / $15) x 100 = 33.333 %

Page 34: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Break-even point is the unit or dollar sales

at which an organization neither makes a

profit nor a loss.

At the organization’s break-even sales

volume:

Total Revenue = Total Cost

Break-Even Analysis

Page 35: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

LOSS

PROFIT

Total Revenue

Fixed Cost

BE PointTotal Cost

Variable Cost

Unit Volume

Dollars

0

Break-even Analysis Chart

Page 36: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Break-even AnalysisExample

Fixed Costs = $50,000

Price per unit = $5

Variable Cost = $3

Contribution = $5 - $3 = $2

Breakeven Volume = $50,000 $2

= 25,000 units

Breakeven Dollars = 25,000 x $5

= $125,000

Page 37: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Problems with Using Price Elasticity to Set Price

• Fails to consider competitors’ response

• Demand may be inelastic for given price, but elastic for larger amount

• Measured in sales revenue, not profit margins

• Fails to consider product line effects

• Ignores low price societal benefits

Page 38: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Pricing Across Product Life Cycle(Life-Cycle Costing)

• Introduction phase:– Price skimming: Introductory price set relatively high,

thereby attracting buyers at top of product’s demand curve.

– Market penetration pricing: Low price is used as an entering wedge.

• Growth phase• Maturity phase• Decline stage

Page 39: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Strategies in the Introduction Stage of Strategies in the Introduction Stage of the PLCthe PLC

• Rapid-skimming strategyRapid-skimming strategy– Launch new product at high price

– High promotion level

– Makes sense if:• large part of potential market is unaware of the

product• those who become aware are eager & willing to pay• need to build brand preference quickly due to

potential competition

Page 40: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Strategies in the Introduction Stage of Strategies in the Introduction Stage of the PLCthe PLC

• Slow-skimming strategySlow-skimming strategy– launch new product at high price

– low promotion

– helps maintain high profit per unit

– makes sense if:• market size is limited

• most of market is aware of product

• buyer willing to pay high price

• no significant potential competition

Page 41: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Strategies in the Introduction Stage of Strategies in the Introduction Stage of the PLCthe PLC

• Rapid-penetration strategyRapid-penetration strategy– launch new product at low price

– spend heavily on promotion

– allows fastest market penetration & share

– makes sense if:• large market that is unaware of product

• buyers are price-sensitive

• strong potential competition exists

• can rapidly enjoy economies of scale

Page 42: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Strategies in the Introduction Stage of Strategies in the Introduction Stage of the PLCthe PLC

• Slow-penetration strategySlow-penetration strategy– launch new product at low price– low level of promotion– encourages rapid product acceptance– allow slightly higher profits than rapid-penetration– makes sense if:

• market is price-sensitive

• market is not promotion-sensitive

• large market that is aware of the product

• some potential competition

Page 43: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Price-Leadership Strategy

• One (or a very few) firm(s) initiate price changes, with most or all the other firms in the industry following suit.

• When price leadership prevails, – price competition does not exist.

– burden of making critical pricing decisions is placed on leading firm(s) and

– others simply follow the leader.

Page 44: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Characteristics of Successful Price Leaders

• Large share of industry’s production capacity• Large market share• Commitment to particular product class/grade• New, cost-efficient plants• Strong distribution systems• Good customer relations• Effective market information systems• Sensitivity to price/profit needs of industry• Sense of timing as to when make price changes• Sound management organization for pricing• Effective product-line financial controls

Page 45: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Competitive Bidding

• Buyer sends inquiries (requests for quotationsrequests for quotations or RFQsRFQs) to firms able to produce in conformity with requested requirements.

• Requests for proposalsRequests for proposals (RFPsRFPs) involve the same process, but – here buyer is signaling that everything is preliminary

and– that a future RFQ will be sent once specifics are

determined from the best proposals.

Page 46: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Competitive Bidding

• Closed biddingClosed bidding– often used by business and governmental

buyers

– involves a formal invitation to potential suppliers to submit written, sealed bids for a particular business opportunity.

• Open biddingOpen bidding– more informal and allows suppliers to make

offers (oral and written) up to a certain date.

Page 47: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Whether or Not to Bid

• Is the dollar value of the contract large enough to warrant the expense involved in making the bid?

• Are the product specs precise enough to allow the cost of production to be accurately estimated?

• Will acceptance of the bid adversely affect production and/or ability to serve other customers?

• How much time is available to prepare the bid?

• What is the likelihood of winning the bid given the presence and strength of other bidders?

Page 48: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Negotiating Situations in B2B Sales

Page 49: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Stages of Negotiation Process in B2B Sales

• Preparation– Data Collection and Analysis– Determination of Negotiation Strategy

• Information Exchange– Elicit Information not yet obtained– Test Hypothesis about nature of situation

• Engage in Negotiation – Opening– Discussion positions– Concessions– Closing

• Obtain Commitment

Page 50: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Final Negotiation Considerations

• Who has the authority to make final decisions?

• What are the bargaining styles of participants in bargain decision?

• Is bargain perceived as transaction, relationship or both?

• What evaluated price range is the customer expecting?

Page 51: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Types of Leases

• Operating LeaseOperating Lease– short-term and cancelable

– lessor generally provides maintenance/service

– rarely contains purchase option

• Direct-financing LeaseDirect-financing Lease– long-term and non-cancelable

– lessee responsible for operating expenses

– lessee has option of purchasing the asset

Page 52: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Leasing in the Business Market

• Advantages to buyerbuyer– No down payment– No risk of ownership

• Advantages to sellerseller– Increased sales– Ongoing business relationship with

lessee– Residual value retained

Page 53: Business to Business Pricing. What is Price? Strategic element of marketing mix Indication of value or worth of something Without it, transactions could

Operating Leverage

Extent to which fixed costs and variable costs are used in the production and marketing of products and services.

Firms with high total fixed costs relative to total variable costs are defined as having high operating leverage.

Higher operating leverage results in a faster increase in profit once sales exceed break-even volume. The same happens with losses when sales fall below break-even volume.