Title: Pricing Strategy
1Session 4
Managerial Economics
Professor Changqi Wu
2Topics for Today
- Uniform pricing
- Price discrimination
- Durable good pricing
- Bundling
- Auction
1
31. Uniform pricing
- Profit maximizing pricing strategy
- Setting the incremental margin equal to the
inverse of absolute value of the price elasticity
of demand - A seller sets the same price for every unit of
his product. - Optimal pricing depends on both price elasticity
of demand and marginal cost
2
4Cost-Based Pricing
- Average cost plus a fixed profit margin
- Procedure
- To estimate the average cost
- To add a markup to the average cost
- Cost based pricing is widely practised. It has
pros and cons.
3
5Why Cost-Plus Pricing is Popular?
- Its simple!
- Cost-base pricing may be a profit-maximizing one
if average cost approximates marginal cost - P (1- 1/(ep1)) MC
- It costs money and time to calculate the right
price and to work out how price should respond to
changing market conditions, particularly for
small firms - It is costly to change prices.
6Why Cost-Plus Pricing Can Go Wrong?
- Demand side factor is not explicitly taken into
consideration. - It is difficult to estimate true average cost
because of the existence of indirect cost and
joint cost - Average cost pricing is influenced by accounting
rules - As a remedy, one can use variable markup rule
instead of fixed markup
72. Price Discrimination is ...
- Two or more similar goods are sold at different
net prices - Prices may differ due to quality and cost
differences. - Motives for price discrimination
- earning more from existing customers
- selling to new customers without sacrificing the
current profit margin
4
8Capturing Consumer Surplus
/Q
If price is raised above P, the firm will lose
sales and reduce profit.
Quantity
9Conditions of Price Discrimination
- A seller must have market power
- A seller is able to identify customers with
different demand elasticities - Resale is impossible
5
10Practicing Price Discrimination
- Complete price discrimination
- Direct segment discrimination
- Indirect segment discrimination
6
11Complete Price Discrimination
- A seller charges each and every buyer her
reservation price - It can be used for tailor-made products/services
- Using price negotiation to find the buyers
reservation price
12Incomplete Price Discrimination
/Q
Quantity
13Direct Segment Discrimination
- A seller charges different prices using directly
observable signals relating a consumer with her
price elasticity - Example Whats in the name?
7
14Indirect Segment Discrimination
- A seller use self-selection devices to
distinguish customers. - Two-part tariff
- Consumers pay a fee up front for the right to buy
a product and then, pay additional fee for each
unit of the product they wish to consume - Peak load pricing
8
15Methods to Prevent Resale
- Refuse to deal with resellers
- Bundling with services
- Issuing warranties
- Degrading the quality of product
9
163. Durable Goods Pricing
- Durable goods sold by a seller are their own
substitutes - Ways to solve the durable goods pricing problem
- Making goods less durable planned obsolescence
- Limiting the production in the future
- Buy-back provisions
11
174. Bundling
- Bundling Scenario Two different goods and many
consumers - Many consumers with different reservation price
combinations for two goods - Mixed Bundling
- Selling both as a bundle and separately
- Pure Bundling
- Selling only a package
18Mixed Versus Pure Bundling
r2
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
r1
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
19The Complete Dinner Versus a la CarteA
Restaurants Pricing Problem
- Pricing to match consumer preferences for various
selections - Mixed bundling allows the customer to get maximum
utility from a given expenditure by allowing a
greater number of choices.
205. Auctions
- Auction Formats
- Traditional English (oral)
- Dutch auction
- Sealed-bid
- First price
- Second price
21Auctions
Valuation and Information
- How to choose an auction format
- Private-value auction bidders uncertain about
the other bidders reservation price - Common-value auction bidders uncertain what the
value is
22Auctions
Private Value Auction
- Second-price sealed auction bid your reservation
price - English auction Bid in small increments until
you reach your reservation price - The winning bids in both auctions is the
reservation price of the second highest bidder
23Auctions
Private Value Auction
- Sealed-bid auction
- First-price auction lowers the bid
- Second-price auction bid just above the second
highest reservation price - Both yield the same revenue
24Auctions
Common Value Auction
- Winners Curse
- The winner is worse off than those who did not
win - Examples
- Bidding on a construction job
- Bidding on 3G mobile service licenses
- Question
- How can you avoid the winners curse?
25Key Takeaway Points
- Profit maximizing uniform pricing depends on
marginal cost as well as price elasticity of
demand - Depending on the information available, a seller
can adopt different price discrimination schemes. - There are many ways to set the prices to reduce
inefficiencies and raise the level of profit.