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Marketing_Management_14th_Edition-min

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DEVELOPING PRICING STRATEGIES AND PROGRAMS | CHAPTER 14 407<br />

The likelihood is extremely high<br />

that every passenger shown in this<br />

airport lobby is paying a different<br />

price, even if they are all on the<br />

same flight.<br />

accommodate the new realities of dynamic pricing—where prices vary frequently by channels,<br />

products, customers, and time.<br />

Most consumers are probably not even aware of the degree to which they are the targets of discri<strong>min</strong>atory<br />

pricing. For instance, catalog retailers such as Victoria’s Secret routinely send out catalogs<br />

that sell identical goods at different prices. Consumers who live in a more free-spending zip<br />

code may see only the higher prices. Office product superstore Staples also sends out office supply<br />

catalogs with different prices.<br />

Although some forms of price discri<strong>min</strong>ation (in which sellers offer different price terms to different<br />

people within the same trade group) are illegal, price discri<strong>min</strong>ation is legal if the seller can<br />

prove its costs are different when selling different volumes or different qualities of the same product<br />

to different retailers. Predatory pricing—selling below cost with the intention of destroying<br />

competition—is unlawful, though. 79<br />

For price discri<strong>min</strong>ation to work, certain conditions must exist. First, the market must be segmentable<br />

and the segments must show different intensities of demand. Second, members in the<br />

lower-price segment must not be able to resell the product to the higher-price segment. Third,<br />

competitors must not be able to undersell the firm in the higher-price segment. Fourth, the cost of<br />

segmenting and policing the market must not exceed the extra revenue derived from price discri<strong>min</strong>ation.<br />

Fifth, the practice must not breed customer resentment and ill will. Sixth, of course, the<br />

particular form of price discri<strong>min</strong>ation must not be illegal. 80<br />

Initiating and Responding to Price<br />

Changes<br />

Companies often need to cut or raise prices.<br />

Initiating Price Cuts<br />

Several circumstances might lead a firm to cut prices. One is excess plant capacity: The firm needs<br />

additional business and cannot generate it through increased sales effort, product improvement, or<br />

other measures. Companies sometimes initiate price cuts in a drive to do<strong>min</strong>ate the market through<br />

lower costs. Either the company starts with lower costs than its competitors, or it initiates price cuts<br />

in the hope of gaining market share and lower costs.

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