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Product and Pricing Strategies
Pricing Objectives
Business Textbooks Boundless Business Product and Pricing Strategies Pricing Objectives
Business Textbooks Boundless Business Product and Pricing Strategies
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Concept Version 8
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Demanding a Premium

Firms can engage in premium pricing by keeping the price of their good artificially higher than the benchmark price.

Learning Objective

  • Explain why business owners sometimes price at a premium


Key Points

    • Premium pricing is used to maximize profit in areas where customers are happy to pay more, where there are no substitutes for the product, where there are barriers to entering the market, or when the seller cannot save on costs by producing at a high volume.
    • More expensive items are perceived to be of better quality or have a better reputation by virtue of their price.
    • Luxury has a psychological association with price premium pricing.

Terms

  • prestige

    The quality of how good the reputation of something or someone is.

  • Price premium

    The percentage by which a product's selling price exceeds a benchmark price.


Example

    • Brands like Pepsi or Coke can price their goods at a premium, charging more than a generic soda brand due to its brand name.

Full Text

Pricing strategies for products or services encompass three main ways to improve profits. The business owner can cut costs or sell more, or find more profit with a better pricing strategy. When costs are already at their lowest and sales are hard to find, adopting a better pricing strategy is a key option to stay viable.

Premium Pricing

Premium pricing is the practice of keeping the price of a product or service artificially high in order to encourage favorable perceptions among buyers, based solely on the price. The practice is intended to exploit the (not necessarily justifiable) tendency for buyers to assume that expensive items enjoy an exceptional reputation or represent exceptional quality and distinction . A premium pricing strategy involves setting the price of a product higher than similar products . This strategy is sometimes also called skim pricing because it is an attempt to "skim the cream" off the top of the market. It is used to maximize profit in areas where customers are happy to pay more, where there are no substitutes for the product, where there are barriers to entering the market, or when the seller cannot save on costs by producing at a high volume. It is also called image pricing or prestige pricing.

Premium-Priced Good

Gold mined from different sources demand different premiums.

Mercedes Benz SLR McLaren

Mercedes Benz executes a premium pricing strategy.

Luxury has a psychological association with price premium pricing. The implication for marketing is that consumers are willing to pay more for certain goods and not for others. To the marketer, it means creating a brand equity or value for which the consumer is willing to pay extra. Marketers view luxury as the main factor differentiating a brand in a product category.

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