UCLA Pricing
UCLA Pricing
UCLA Pricing
MANAGEMENT 262
PRICE POLICIES
SPRING 2003
Professor Randolph Bucklin
Gold B516, 825-7339
Office Hours: By email appointment
To familiarize you with the concepts, theory and latest thinking bearing on the key issues in
pricing, taking the perspective of the marketing manager. This will be done primarily
through lectures and assigned readings.
2.
To provide you with an opportunity, through extensive case analyses, to apply concepts and
theory to the solution of pricing problems in marketing settings.
3.
To provide you with an opportunity, through the course project, to make an independent
assessment of the pricing strategy or tactics used by a company or industry of your own
choosing.
4.
To provide you with a forum, both written and oral, in which you may further develop your
business communication skills and receive feedback from your peers and the instructor.
Course Materials
1.
Course Reader: Management 262 Cases and Readings. (Available through the Anderson
School's publishing service or the FEMBA office.)
2.
Required Text: Thomas T. Nagle and Reed K. Holden, The Strategy and Tactics of
Pricing, 3rd edition, 2002, Prentice-Hall.
COURSE ORGANIZATION
The sections below discuss the mechanics of the course.
Study Groups
Several group assignments are required for the course (more below) and students will need to
form study groups early in the quarter. Groups should be composed of three to five members.
The ideal group size is four students. No group may have more than five members; two-person
groups will be permitted only by special permission of the instructor.
Class Format
Class activity is divided among lectures and case discussions.
Lecture/Discussions. Approximately half of the class time will follow a lecture/discussion
format. These sessions are devoted to the presentation and discussion of theories, concepts,
analytical techniques, and empirical findings useful for pricing strategy and tactics.
The lecture/discussion sessions are often accompanied by assigned readings from the course
packet. Lectures are not designed to summarize the readings, although many important
concepts will be consolidated and extended. The readings are considered an integral part of
the course and students will be held responsible for their content during discussion and in their
case analyses.
Case Discussions. The assigned case studies have been selected to fit the objectives of the course
and to cover a cross section of interesting industries and businesses.
All students are expected to come to class ready to discuss each case, regardless of whether or
not a written assignment has been prepared. Students may be called upon at any time (a.k.a.
cold called) to provide specific recommendations and analysis. At a minimum, you should be
able to (i) state clearly what management should do and (ii) provide a specific, logically
consistent rationale for your recommendations, backed by your analysis. Even if you do not
contribute to a specific case discussion by speaking, make sure that you are comfortable with
what you would have done in the management situation described in the case and why.
Written Assignments
Both individual and group written assignments will be handed out during the course of the
quarter. A required individual written assignment will be due late in the quarter; it will cover
application of several of the tools developed during the quarter and be worth 20% of the course
grade. Several smaller, optional individual assignments will also be due, each of which will be
linked to an issue in a particular case study. Submitting these and, in particular, strong
performance on them can improve a students overall class participation grade. Two group
case assignments are also assigned; these will be somewhat broader in scope. Each will be worth
10%, for a total of 20% of the course grade. Individual assignments are to be done by each
student on his or her own. Group assignments are to be done with the other members of your
study team.
Page and/or word limits on the length of the assignments write-ups will be imposed. Text should
be double spaced, on one side of the page only, submitted without report covers, and stapled once
in the upper left hand corner. Please leave adequate top, bottom, and side margins to allow space
for comments.
Hard copy versions of all assignments are due at the beginning of class on the due date. To be fair
to all students, late papers will not be accepted unless there is a documented medical emergency.
Course Project
The project for this course is a "pricing audit." Each study group should select a firm, or, where
appropriate, a business unit within a firm, and intensively study either its pricing policy or a
specific pricing decision (either made in the recent past or under current consideration). Students
need not obtain inside access to a company, although that is highly encouraged where possible.
Use of publicly available information and your own research is acceptable.
As an alternative to the pricing audit, groups may elect to pursue an in-depth study of a specific
pricing practice (e.g., price promotion, quantity discounts, etc.) across firms or industries. This
report will necessarily be more academic in nature than the pricing audit project.
Groups will be required to submit a written report (not to exceed 3000 words) at the conclusion of
the quarter. A two-page progress report (stating your group members, describing the topic, and
providing a brief outline) is due in class the 7th week of the quarter. More details will be made
available in a separate hand-out distributed early in the quarter. The course project will be worth
30% of the course grade.
30%
Written Assignments
Individual (20%)
Group-2 (20%)
40%
30%
The overall grade is 50% individual performance (class participation and individual assignments)
and 50% group performance (two group case write-ups and the course project). There will be no
mid-term or final examination.
Grading In-Class Participation. Grading class participation is necessarily subjective. Some of
my criteria for evaluating effective class participation include:
1.
2.
Is the participant a good listener? Are the points made relevant to the discussion? Are they
linked to the comments of others? Is the participant willing to interact with other class
members?
3.
Your grade for class participation is not a direct function of the amount of air time you take up.
In general, I will evaluate you on how well you respond to my questions and on how effectively
you take into account the comments and analyses of your classmates. In situations where
multiple students have raised their hands to speak, I will try to call on the student with the least
cumulative air time to that date. This procedure, carried out over the course of the quarter, should
help to ensure that everyone who is well prepared and wants to contribute will have the
opportunity to do so. Students are encouraged to seek feedback from the instructor on their class
participation performance at any time during the quarter (e-mail is excellent for this).
Regular attendance in class is a course requirement. My policy is that absences exceeding 10
percent of class sessions (e.g., more than one week of this course) are unacceptable and can
seriously jeopardize a student's participation grade. Absences from class may result in a failing
grade for class participation and the course as a whole. Students should e-mail the instructor if
they will be missing a class session and provide an explanation. Please note: Students failing to
achieve a passing grade for class participation may be failed for the course as a whole,
regardless of their performance on written work.
Date Topic
Case
Assignment
OA1
GA1
OA2
GA2
Tweeter etc.
Proj Desc
Becton Dickinson
Priceline.com
IA
Management 262
Price Policies
Professor Bucklin
COMPLETE CLASS SCHEDULE AND ASSIGNMENTS
SPRING 2003
SESSION 1A (Thursday, April 3)
TOPIC: Course Introduction
LECTURE: An introductory lecture and discussion will provide and coverage of administrative
matters and an introduction to the critical issues in pricing strategy.
TO BE DISTRIBUTED IN CLASS: Handouts covering the format for group case write-ups and
the course project will be made available.
READING:
1. Dolan, How Do You Know When the Price is Right. A terrific overview and primer.
SESSION 1B (Thursday, April 3)
TOPIC: Cost Analysis and Key Principles of Demand
LECTURE: We begin our discussion of pricing strategy with cost analysis. We shall start with
the cost-plus pricing model and discuss its advantages and disadvantages. We then turn to the
determination of variable costs and the concept of avoidable costs. Following this discussion, we
review break-even analysis (also known as iso-profit analysis) as applied to pricing decisions and
evaluate the extent to which cost information can be used to formulate effective pricing policy.
The applied use of break-even analysis leads naturally to the need to evaluate the changes in
volume that can be expected to occur due to a change in price. We then consider simple models
of demand. We review the properties of the linear demand curve, the classical monopoly pricing
model and introduce the elasticity-markup relation.
READING:
1. Nagle and Holden, chapters 1-3.
4. What steps would you recommend to Kodak management? Would you launch Funtime as
proposed, change the price of Gold Plus, or pursue other possible alternatives?
ASSIGNMENT: Optional Assignment #1 (OA1) is due at the beginning of class.
2.
3.
4.
Leszinski and Marn, Setting Value, Not Price, McKinsey Quarterly, 1997.
2.
3.
Evaluate hospitals likely willingness to pay. Contrast this with the value-in-use analysis.
4.
What price would you recommend the company charge for Angiomax at launch?
5.
How can the company improve its chances of getting target hospitals to try and to adopt the
drug?
ASSIGNMENT: Group Assignment #1 (GA1), an analysis of the case, is due at the beginning of
class.
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Evaluate the questionnaire in case Exhibit 3 and the approach used for assessing price
sensitivity. What are the advantages and disadvantages of this method?
2.
Use the data in the case (available as an Excel spreadsheet file on the network) to estimate
the percentage of customers who will purchase the junk mail reduction service at various
price points (e.g., from $10 up to $50). What assumptions did you have to make?
3.
Based on your analysis above and any other relevant factors, recommend the price that Adios
Junk Mail should charge.
4.
How else might Collins determine the price sensitivity of target customers?
11
What is the price elasticity for cigarettes? What would be a reasonable estimate of the price
elasticity of Marlboro? Of discount brands? What are the implications of these estimates for
price policy in cigarettes?
2.
Describe the competitive landscape surrounding Marlboro. Who are its major competitors
and how do their price points compare with Marlboros?
3.
4.
How would you segment the market for cigarettes? What are the implications of this
segmentation for Marlboros pricing policy?
5.
Do you think that Wall Street reacted appropriately to the announcement on April 2?
6.
What is your overall assessment of Philip Morris decision to drop prices 20%? If you
disagree, what would you have recommended?
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