BUS4098 Week 3
Marketing Decisions - Pricing
In Week 2, you learned about price signaling. You noted that many customers use price signals as a
substitute for detailed information about a product. More than any other element in your marketing
strategy, the price indicates the segment of the market in which you would like to position yourself. It does
not necessarily indicate anything more. Your �rm's styling and quality decisions, for example, do not have to be in perfect alignment. You can set a premium price with an average quality shoe, provided you are able to
sustain an image of quality or imbue your shoes with other traits that will make customers ignore the less-
than-average quality. Understanding the traits of this powerful variable—price—is a key to its effective use.
On one hand, think about the signal you get from the marketplace about a �rm, which moves its prices up and
down all the time. You see this in a few industries, such as airlines, but for the most part, �rms try to hold
price steady to send a clear signal to the market about their products' position and to keep customers from deferring purchases until items go on sale. On the other hand, the ease of price changes provides �rms with
the ability to keep supply and demand in alignment at the �rm level.
In Week 1 and Week 2 lectures, we looked at the in�exible nature of manufacturing plans and celebrity
contracts. Firms that feel the need to sustain volume, so that these less �exible and expensive assets are best
utilized, �nd the contrasting �exibility of price quite tempting. Clearly, this is what the airlines do in order to
utilize their planes optimally. However, it is not something that �rms prefer to do.
Additional Materials
Marketing Decisions-Pricing
(media/week3/SUO_BUS4098%20Supplemental%20PDF%20for%20W3%20L2%20Marketing%20Decisions-
Pricing.pdf?_&d2lSessionVal=4ziczn9qEskPZ3ZWUncGyhO8u&ou=91506)