Pricing And Frequent Promotions

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A major consideration in business from both the manufacture’s and customer viewpoints is and has always been the price.

The issue discussed here is” should the retailer practice “everyday fair pricing” or engage in “frequent price promotions”? Is it better for a brand to raise its regular price and offer price promotions or is the brand better off offering lower regular price with limited price promotions?

In my paper I will support and argue for setting the right price, which in other words make shoppers feel they are getting a fair shake from the businesses they regularly patronize.

Importance of setting the Right Fair Price

Pricing strategies are important criteria which affects the overall success of the company. The price set is simply not a financial issue but a marketing issue that determines how the product is positioned and how the market (customers) perceives the product.

Pricing is a challenge with different implications at any stage of the business cycle, whether you are setting the prices for the first time, raising or lowering existing prices, or determining how to react to an unsteady economic climate. Overprice and you will risk losing your business to your competitors. Under price and you may inadvertently devalue your offerings.

Tom McNeil, President of Executive Career Resource Group, Wellesley, MA describes the implication of price:

1. “Your price is too high, and you knock yourself out of the game.

2. Your price is much less than the client was prepared to pay, and you lose money.

3. Your price is much less than that of your competitors, and you are perceived as offering less value.

4. The client accepts your price but then decides that your services aren't worth it, because you haven't...

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...se the average ticket value of a purchase or even purchase frequency, but thy will not be generally profitable or engage customers. To do that retailers must design loyalty programs to facilitate an emotional connection with their customers that benefits both the retailer and the customer – a state called symbiotic loyalty.”

Retailers should analyze their product mix and customer knowledge needs before positioning the price. Price has a significant influence on consumers' purchase behavior and consequently on firm sales and profits.

Frequent Price promotions in fact, condition the consumers to expect deals and get desensitized to small ones. Retailers have to think about the customer behavior they want to encourage --or conversely discourage.

The greatest influence on the context of a purchasing decision is whether the consumer believes the price is fair.

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