There are many ways in which the price of a product can be determined, the following are the foremost strategies that business like to use.
Competitive Pricing is based on three types of competitive product:
1) Products have lasting distinctiveness from competitor's product. here we can assume a) The product has low price elasticity. b) The product has low cross elasticity. c) The demand of the product will rise.
2) Products have parishable distinctiveness from competitor's product, assuming the product features are medium distinctiveness.
3) Products have little distinctiveness from competitor's product. assuming that: a) The product has high price elasticity. b) The product has some cross elasticity. c) No expectation that demand of the product will rise.
The pricing is done based on these three factors.
Price = Cost of Production + Margin of Profit.
A product which is sold at a loss to attract customers to buy other full priced products sold by the business.
Setting an initial low price at the stage of deployment of the product to attract initial customers. The price is likely to rise later as the product gains a market share.
Setting a different price for the same product in different segments to the market. For example, this can be for different ages or for different opening times, such as cinema tickets.
Aggressive pricing designed or intended to drive out competitors from a market.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Pricing strategies".
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