Solution Manual for Pricing Strategies: A Marketing Approach, 1st Edition
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Schindler, Pricing Strategies โ Instructor Resources
Chapter 2: Answers to the End-of Chapter Questions
Exercises
1. A well-known local wine shop uses keystone pricing for its line of modular wine racks.
(a) Given this pricing practice, use the cost information here to calculate the retail prices for
the following items. Show your calculations:
12-bottle rack, natural finish
12-bottle rack, mahogany finish
24-bottle rack, natural finish
Per-item cost
Per-item cost
Per-item cost
$22.50
$26.25
$36.00
P = $22.50 + 1 x $22.50 = $45.00
P = $26.25 + 1 x $26.25 = $52.50
P = $36.00 + 1 x $36.00 = $72.00
(b) What is the markup percentage being used for these wine racks?
M = ( $22.50 / $22.50 ) x 100 = 100%
(c) If these wine racks are sold at the prices you calculated in Part (a), what would be the
shopโs percent gross margin for these items?
%GM = ( $22.50 / $45.00) = 50%
$ gross margins would be $22.50, $26.25, and $36.00
2. You are the manager of a successful gift shop. After a meeting with her accountant, the
owner of the shop has told you that the shopโs cost of goods sold should be about 30 percent
of total sales revenue and that the price of each of the items that the shop sells should be in
line with this.
(a) Based on the ownerโs instructions, give the price you would set for the following items.
Show the formula(s) you used in your calculations:
Item A
Item B
Item C
Per-item cost:
Per-item cost:
Per-item cost:
$26.00
$9.25
$103.60
P = C / [1 โ (%GM/100)]
If costs are 30%, then %GM = 1 โ 30% = 70%
P = 26 / (1โ.7) = $86.67
P = 9.25 / (1โ.7) = $30.83
P = 103.6 / (1โ.7) = $345.33
Or, M = %GM x [100/(100โ%GM)]
M = 70% x (100/30) = 233%
P = C + [(M/100) x C]
P = 26 + (2.33 x 26) = 26 + 60.58 = $86.58
P = 9.25 + (2.33 x 9.25) = 9.25 + 21.55 = $30.80
P = 103.6 + (2.33 x 103.6) = 103.6 + 241.39 = $344.99
These prices differ from those obtained from the %GM formula only by round-off error.
(b) Is the owner using cost-based, competition-based, or customer-based pricing? What are
the pros and cons of the ownerโs pricing procedure?
Cost-based pricing (in particular, markup pricing)
Pros: Simple to understand and implement; easy way to keep in line
Cons: May result in a price that is so high that few buy or so low that most customers
would have paid more
Not useful for maximizing total profits
3. The manager of a local convenience store is expanding his line of small toy items. To
price these new items, the manager is looking at the prices being charged by competing
retailers in his area. For the popular โTitan Joe Action Figure,โ he has observed the following
prices:
Downtown department store:
Chain drug store:
Well-known local variety store
Large discount department store:
Discount toy store
$14.00
$11.99
$10.99
$9.97
$9.55
If the manager is inclined to use parity pricing, what price should he set for the Titan Joe
Action Figure? Explain your reasoning.
Parity pricing is to price at the same level as competitors.
But, which competitors? Answer should show understanding of these alternatives:
Prices: Those that are highest, lowest, or middle in the range?
Competitors:
Largest? (discount dept. store chain?)
Fastest growing? (discount toy store?)
Most prestigious? (downtown dept. store?)
Most similar to price-setting company? (chain drug store?)
4. A homeowner has asked a local real estate agent for advice on the price he should set for his
house. The real estate agent notes that the only comparable house in the neighborhood that is
currently for sale is asking $350,000. Both houses are on a hill that overlooks a beautiful
lake, but the ownerโs house is forty feet farther up the hill than the comparable house. The
agent estimates that, in this area, customers will pay an additional $10,000 for a house for
each ten added feet of elevation associated with the houseโs location. The ownerโs house has
an old, outdated kitchen, but the sellers of the comparable house have just spent $24,000 to
remodel their kitchen.
What is the selling price that the real estate agent should recommend?
VTC analysis:
reference value
pos. diff. value
neg. diff. value
$350,000
value of comparable house
40,000
hill: 4 x $10,000
24,000
value of kitchen in comparable house
$366,000
Real estate agent might recommend a selling price should be somewhat below the VTC, say,
$350,000.
+
โ
5. Lincoln Manufacturing has just developed a more durable commercial carpeting. It has all
the advantages of the currently available commercial carpeting and lasts twice as long.
Lincolnโs materials and labor costs for producing this new carpeting are $14.50 per square
yard. Buyers of commercial carpeting must have it installed by independent contractors
whose installation charges for this new carpeting average $10 per square yard.
The price of the currently available commercial carpeting averages $12 per square yard.
Independent contractors charge $8 per square yard for installing the currently available
commercial carpeting.
(a) Use VTC analysis to calculate the VTC for commercial buyers of a square yard of
Lincolnโs new carpeting.
reference value
pos. diff. value
pos. diff. value
neg. diff. value
$12
+ 12
+ 8
โ 2
$30
price of next closest substitute (sq yard of current carpet)
price of sq yard of replacement carpet saved
price of replacement installation saved
$10 โ $8, more expensive installation
(b) Recommend a price for a square yard of Lincolnโs new carpeting, and justify your
recommendation. Your justification should make use of your estimate of the VTC of
Lincolnโs new carpeting.
Price should be lower than $30 (= VTC) โ there should be some inducement to purchase
Price needs to be above $14.50 (= variable costs) โ each sale should make some contribution
to covering fixed costs
There should be a plausible argument for where within this range the price should be.
Review and Discussion Questions
1. What are the three possible starting points for the process of setting an initial price that are
described in this chapter?
Three starting points for the process of setting an initial price are: cost of product, competitorsโ
prices, and customer needs.
2. Suppose that you have a service business such as house painting. Describe how you would
use cost-plus pricing in developing an estimate for a potential customer.
First of all, the company may calculate its cost to do the job. Then, it determines how much should
be added to this cost by considering factors such as the number of such jobs it is likely to do in a
year, its overhead costs, and its desired final profits.
3. If an item costs $10 and you apply a 60 percent markup, what would be the itemโs price? If
you used keystone pricing in this case, what then would be this itemโs price?
An item costs $10 and you apply a 60 percent markup, the itemโs price would be:
P = C + [(M/100) x C] = $10 + [(60/100) x $10] = $16
If using keystone pricing, the markup would be 100 percent, and the itemโs price would be:
P = $10 + [(100/100) x $10] = $20
4. If managementโs profit guidelines mandate gross margins of 25 percent, calculate the markup
percentage that would be equivalent to this gross margin.
If managementโs profit guidelines mandate gross margins of 25%, the markup percentage that
would be equivalent to this gross margin is:
M = %GM x [100/(100โ%GM)] = 25% x [100/(100-25)] = 33%
5. If an item will be priced according to a 55 percent gross margin and the item costs $20, use
that gross margin percentage to directly calculate the itemโs price.
If an item will be priced according to a 55% gross margin and the item costs $20, the itemโs price
would be:
P = C / [1 โ (%GM/100)] = $20 / [1 โ (55/100)] = $44.44
6. Describe how you would research industry norms on gross margins to inform your
companyโs decisions regarding pricing-related profit goals.
A source of industry norms on gross margin is the publically available reports, such as the Form
10-K, that every company must file with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
7. Cost-based pricing is sometimes justified by arguing that it ensures that a company receives a
good profit on the products that it sells. Describe a problem with this justification. What does
this problem have to do with the main disadvantage of cost-based pricing?
Although a cost-based price might ensure good per-item profits, it may not ensure good total
profits. For example, a markup set to yield a good profit on each item might result in a price so high
that few items are sold. The total profits made from that item might then be quite disappointing.
Alternatively, a markup set to yield a good profit on each item could result in a price that is
substantially lower than customers would be willing to pay. The result of this could be a level of
total profits far lower than could otherwise have been made.
This is the main disadvantage of cost-based pricing โ it is not particularly useful in efforts to
maximize total profits.
8. Given that there is a serious disadvantage to cost-based pricing, how would you account for
its widespread use in retailing and other businesses?
One reason for the widespread use of cost-based pricing is its simplicity. Such simplicity is
particularly important in situations where there are large numbers of prices to determine on a
continuing basis. This is often the case among resellers, which at least partially explains why costbased pricing is particularly widespread in wholesaling and retailing.
A second reason for the widespread use of cost-based pricing has to do with the common practice
of using standard markup or margin levels in an industry or for a particular type of product.
Because per-item costs are often similar among competitors, applying a standard markup or
margin reduces the need to carry out research on competitorsโ prices. Use of such cost-based
standards can serve as an economical means of keeping oneโs prices from being substantially out
of line with those of competitors.
9. What is parity pricing? How does it differ from other forms of competition-based pricing?
Parity pricing is a pricing method in which a sellerโs intent is to match the levels of competitorsโ
prices. Other forms of competition-based pricing may start with the prices charged by competitors,
and then choose to set prices lower or higher than these competitive prices.
10. Describe some ways that a seller using competition-based pricing could deal with the
presence in the marketplace of a variety of prices for an item.
A competition-based method of setting a productโs initial price could deal with this complexity by
focusing on only the highest marketplace prices, on only the lowest, or on only prices in the middle
of the competitive price range. Alternatively, attention could be focused on the prices of one
particular competitor, perhaps the one that is largest, the one showing the fastest growth, the one
that is most prestigious, or the one considered most similar to the company that is setting an initial
price.
11. What might make it difficult to determine the prices of oneโs competitors? When such
difficulties occur, what could be done to surmount them?
In business markets, a further difficulty of competition-based pricing involves determining
competitorsโ actual prices. In many business markets, prices are not publicly posted, either
because they are determined by a bidding process or because they are determined by private
negotiations between the buyer and seller. Sometimes, the publicly available posted prices are not
the prices at which products are actually sold, because of subsequent private discounts or
negotiations.
In such situations, a seller may be able to draw on reports from salespeople concerning what
customers have told them about the prices of their competitors. In most cases, useful estimates of
competitorsโ prices would require supplementing such information from customers with information
about competitorsโ likely costs, strategies, profit levels, and other elements of โcompetitive
intelligence.โ
12. Describe one advantage and one disadvantage that competition-based pricing has in common
with cost-based pricing.
Competition-based pricing shares with cost-based pricing the advantages of being intuitive and
relatively easy to carry out. However, it also shares with cost-based pricing the disadvantage of
producing prices that may not be helpful to efforts toward maximizing total profits.
13. How is customer-based pricing related to the role of price in the commercial exchange versus
the role of the other three elements of the marketing mix?
Starting the initial price-setting process by considering the customerโs needs makes possible a
rational basis for price setting. The role of price in the commercial exchange is to capture the value
created by the other three elements of the marketing mix. Because this value consists of the
satisfactions of customer wants and needs that are provided by the product, careful consideration
of each of the ways a product satisfies, fails to satisfy, or could be made to satisfy these customer
wants and needs provides essential pricing guidance.
14. Describe the concept of a productโs value to the customer. Why is the monetary estimation of
this value important for price setting?
A productโs value to the customer (VTC) is the value created by the product, distribution, and
promotion elements of the marketing mix. A key technique of customer-based pricing is to be able
to arrive at a numerical estimate of this value. Such consideration places at the starting point of the
initial price-setting process a measure of the value that the productโs price could potentially
capture.
15. Describe the concept of a productโs reference value. How would you calculate the reference
value for a consumer product whose package size is different than the package sizes of all of
its competing products?
A productโs reference value is the price of the product that the customer perceives as the next
closest substitute for the product. If a consumer product whose package size comes in a 10-ounce
box and the next closest substitute comes in a 20-ounce box, then the productโs reference value
would be equal to half of the price of a box of the substitute product.
16. Consider a familiar product, such as Appleโs iPhone. What would you consider to be its next
closest substitute? Describe two factors that would differentiate the iPhone from its next
closest substitute.
The next closest substitute of Appleโs iPhone could be the Motorola Droid. The first factor that
would differentiate the iPhone from the Droid is that the iPhone has more user-friendly interface
than the Droid. A second factor would be that Apple has a better brand reputation than Motorola.
17. What is the difference between a positive differentiating factor and a negative one? Is it
possible for an item to simultaneously have both positive and negative differentiating
factors?
If the product is superior to the next closest substitute on a factor, then the value of this difference
to the customer is a positive differentiation value. If the product is inferior to the next closest
substitute on a factor, then the value of this difference to the customer is a negative differentiation
value. It is possible for an item to simultaneously have both positive and negative differentiating
factors.
18. Which would be more prudent: pricing an item above its VTC, exactly at its VTC, or below
its VTC? Explain your reasoning.
It is a good idea to set a productโs price at a level below its VTC. Assuming that the productโs VTC
is assessed accurately, then customers would not buy it at a price higher than that amount. At a
price equal to the productโs VTC, the customer would be in a situation where there is no net benefit
for purchasing the product. The costs and benefits would be totally balanced. To avoid having a
large number of potential customers pass up the product, it is generally wise to tip that balance by
setting the price below the productโs VTC.
19. If a salesperson tells a manufacturer that the machine the salesperson is selling is better than
competing machines because it will last longer, what approach should be used to estimate the
value of this differentiating factor?
To estimate the value of the differentiating factor of a machine lasting longer, it is likely that it would
be practical to identify the monetary savings that would result from this greater durability. A benefit
of using this approach is that it would probably be easier than marketing research to estimate how
customers weigh money against their preferences for greater durability.
20. If an item is particularly valuable to a customer, using customer-based pricing might suggest
a price that is higher than the one that would be indicated by use of a standard markup.
Describe a situation where the use of customer-based pricing would suggest a price that is
lower than the one that would be indicated by use of a standard markup.
A retailer might use a standard markup of 100 percent on the brands of clock radios that he carries.
Although the brands are generally comparable, customers find that one of these brands has
controls that are substantially less convenient. This creates a lower VTC for that brand. If the
retailerโs costs for that brand are similar to his costs for the other brands, then the lower retail price
necessitated by the lower VTC for that brand would be a price lower than the one indicated by the
use of the product categoryโs standard markup.
21. Explain how an openness to customer-based pricing helped contribute to the outstanding
success of the Ford Mustang.
The consideration of customer needs told Ford that customers in the large middle-income market
did not value all of the aspects of a sports car enough for them to pay what it would cost Ford to
provide these aspects. By considering these price-related customer needs early in the product
development process, the Ford designers were able to look for, and include, the aspects that
customers most wanted (e.g., styling) and to cut costs on the other aspects (e.g., engine,
transmission). Starting the pricing process with the consideration of customer needs rather than
product costs helped lead the company to start the pricing process before any cost commitments
were made. This made it possible to substantially reduce those costs and achieve a highly
profitable product.
22. Describe a situation where different market segments would have different VTCs for the
same product.
If the estimated VTC of Stationโs tune-up for those town residents who commuted to the city by
train was $110, what would be the VTC for those residents who did not take the train to work? For
those residents, there would be no station-location differentiating factor, so their estimated VTC
would become $90 (plus $15 for the added reliability and minus $5 for the wait). Further, within
those town residents who do not take the train, there may be groups such as parents with young
children or seniors who find the prospect of breaking down in their car particularly aversive and
thus place greater value on the increased reliability of Station Auto Serviceโs repair work. For these
groups, the VTC of Stationโs tune-up might be somewhere between $90 and $110.
23. If a company uses customer-based pricing, does that mean that costs and the prices of
competing products are not taken into account?
No. When setting a price for a product that does not already have a price, all three types of
information โ costs, competition, and customer needs โ must be taken into account. The distinction
made in this chapter concerns the type of information that the price setter should attend to first.
24. What is the most likely reason that customer-based pricing is not more often used? What do
you think of this reason?
A major reason that customer-based pricing is not more often used is that it requires research on
customer needs rather than only an estimate of oneโs incurred costs or the prices of competing
products.
Although such investigation could involve expensive market research studies, it is also possible to
gain some preliminary ideas of how oneโs product creates value, or could create value,
inexpensively, say, by informal conversations with consumers and/or observations of the
marketplace. Indeed, as advances in information technology decrease the costs of collecting
information about customer behavior, the use of customer needs as the starting point in the pricing
process becomes an increasingly practical approach.
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