Social Marketing Mangement
Social Marketing Mangement
Social Marketing Mangement
Psychological pricing is the practice of setting prices slightly lower than a whole
number. This practice is based on the belief that customers do not round up these prices,
and so will treat them as lower prices than they really are.
Customers tend to process a price from the left-most digit to the right, and so will tend
to ignore the last few digits of a price. This effect appears to be accentuated when the
fractional portion of a price is printed in smaller font than the rest of a price.
An example of psychological pricing is setting the price of an automobile at $19,999,
rather than $20,000. This type of pricing is extremely common for consumer goods.
A variation on the concept is to set prices higher, in the belief that customers will attach
more importance to a product if the price is set at a premium level.
Customary pricing
Customary prices are the prices that consumers are used to paying for certain
products or services over a long period of time.
These prices are known to all customers, and they do not expect them to change.
With this knowledge, e-commerce businesses can carry out a detailed market study.
They can then choose to follow a customary pricing policy with the products or
services that lend themselves to it.
You can integrate these customary prices into your overall pricing strategy to
aim to achieve the highest possible profit. We explain the advantages and
disadvantages of this type of price and the most typical examples.
Prevailing Pricing
• Prevailing Price means the price per share equal to the average of the Daily Market Prices
of Common Stock during the period of forty (40) consecutive Business Days ending on the
date that is three (3) Business Days prior to and excluding the date of the relevant Later
Investment Notice, but not greater than the average of the Daily Market Prices of Common
Stock for any three (3) consecutive or non-consecutive Business Days (determined in
Purchaser’s sole discretion) within such period of forty (40) consecutive Business Days.
• Example : Provided that the Buyer obtains the prior approval of Seller, Buyer may Over lift
an agreed volume and Seller shall supply such agreed volume at the Prevailing Price set out
in the Existing Agreement or, if there is no Existing Agreement, on a price as agreed
between the Parties. In such circumstances, the price payable for the Under Lift will be
calculated using the greater of the agreed fixed price or maximum price for the Fixed Price
Basis Volume (as applicable depending on the type of Fixed Price Basis on which the Sales
Order is made) AND the Prevailing Price.
• Prestige pricing
• Definition: Prestige pricing is a marketing strategy that involves keeping a high
price for a product or service to communicate high quality or luxury. It is a technique
often employed for high-end products since low prices can be translated into low
quality by target consumers.
• Example : A regular flight ticket with All Start Airlines is priced at almost 200%
more than one from a regular airline. Nevertheless, executives recognize the airline
as a top quality one and they enjoy paying a higher tariff to benefit from the comfort
of flying with them. The company uses prestige pricing as one of the methods to
keep the service exclusive and the quality perception high enough to attract its target
audience effectively.
• Penetration pricing
• Penetration pricing is a marketing strategy used by businesses to attract customers to
a new product or service by offering a lower price during its initial offering.
• The lower price helps a new product or service penetrate the market and attract
customers away from competitors.
• Market penetration pricing relies on the strategy of using low prices initially to
make a wide number of customers aware of a new product.
• The goal of a price penetration strategy is to entice customers to try a new product
and build market share with the hope of keeping the new customers once prices rise
back to normal levels. Penetration pricing examples include an online news website
offering one month free for a subscription-based service or a bank offering a free
checking account for six months.
• Skimming Pricing
• Price skimming is a product pricing strategy by which a firm charges the highest initial
price that customers will pay and then lowers it over time. As the demand of the first
customers is satisfied and competition enters the market, the firm lowers the price to
attract another, more price-sensitive segment of the population. The skimming strategy
gets its name from "skimming" successive layers of cream, or customer segments, as
prices are lowered over time.
• Price skimming is a product pricing strategy by which a firm charges the highest initial
price that customers will pay and then lowers it over time.
• As the demand of the first customers is satisfied and competition enters the market, the
firm lowers the price to attract another, more price-sensitive segment of the population.
• This approach contrasts with the penetration pricing model, which focuses on releasing a
lower-priced product to grab as much market
• Price Lining
• Price lining (also product line pricing) is a marketing strategy where a business
prices its offerings according to the quality, features, or attributes to differentiate it
from other similar offerings.
• In simple terms, price lining is a process of grouping similar offerings under
different price brackets – each varying slightly by the quality features, or attributes
on offer. These brackets usually tend to start low and go higher in price.
• Take Coca-Cola, for example. The company sells different sizes of the same drink at
different prices. It even prices the gift packs differently during festivals.
• Price lining is a marketing strategy even though it has the term “price” in its name.
The main objective of this strategy is to make the offering appeal to a wider range of
customers and eventually boosting sales and audience numbers.
• Geographical Pricing
• Geographical pricing is the practice of adjusting an item's sale price based on the
location of the buyer. Sometimes the difference in the sale price is based on the cost
to ship the item to that location. But the difference may also be based on what
amount the people in that location are willing to pay. Companies will try to
maximize revenue in the markets in which they operate, and geographical pricing
contributes to that goal.
• Most typically, geographical pricing is practiced by companies in order to reflect the
different shipping costs accrued when transporting goods to different markets. If a
market is closer to where the goods originate, the pricing may be lower than in a
faraway market, where the expense to transport the goods is higher. Prices may be
lower if the goods compete in a crowded market where consumers have a number of
other quality options.
Geographical pricing, in marketing, is the practice of modifying a basic list price
based on the geographical location of the buyer. It is intended to reflect the costs of
shipping to different locations.
There are several types of geographic pricing:
FOB origin (Free on Board origin) – The shipping cost from the factory or
warehouse is paid by the purchaser. Ownership of the goods is transferred to the
buyer as soon as it leaves the point of origin. It can be either the buyer or seller that
arranges for the transportation.
Uniform delivered pricing – (also called postage stamp pricing) – The same base
price is charged to all. Any perceived variance in price results from differences in
delivery costs.
Zone pricing – Prices increase as shipping distances increase. This is
sometimes done by drawing concentric circles on a map with the plant or
warehouse at the centre and each circle defining the boundary of a price zone.
Instead of using circles, irregularly shaped price boundaries can be drawn that
reflect geography, population density, transportation infrastructure, and
shipping cost. (The term "zone pricing" can also refer to the practice of
setting prices that reflect local competitive conditions, i.e., the market forces
of supply and demand, rather than actual cost of transportation).
Zone pricing, as practiced in the gasoline industry in the United States, is the
pricing of gasoline based on a complex and secret weighting of factors, such
as the number of competing stations, number of vehicles, average traffic flow,
population density, and geographic characteristics.
Basing point pricing – Certain cities are designated as basing
points. All goods shipped from a given basis point are charged the
same amount.
Freight-absorption pricing – The seller absorbs all or part of the
cost of transportation. This amounts to a price discount, and is used
as a promotional tactic.
• Dual Pricing
• Dual pricing is the practice of setting different prices in different markets for the same
product or service. This tactic may be used by a business for a variety of reasons, but it
is most often an aggressive move to take market share away from competitors.
• Dual pricing is similar to price discrimination
• Dual pricing is most often an aggressive tactic used by a manufacturer to take market
share away from a competitor.
• In some cases, dual pricing is necessary to offset the additional costs of doing business
in a foreign market.
• Dual pricing is illegal only when it can be proved that a manufacturer set prices
unrealistically low for the purpose of unfairly driving out competition.
Administered Pricing
An administered price is the price of a good or service as dictated by a government
or centralized authority, as opposed to buyers and sellers interacting according to
supply and demand.
An administered price is one that is decreed by some authority for a good or service,
rather than through a process of price discovery in a free market
Centrally planned governments tend to rely on administered pricing as they reject
capitalism and free markets.
Even in mostly capitalist market economies, some prices are set administratively
such as in the case of rent controls, certain wages, or price ceilings on food items
and basic goods.
• Monopoly pricing
• Monopoly pricing is a pricing strategy followed by a seller whereby the seller
prices a product to maximize his or her profits under the assumption that he or she
does not need to worry about competition. In other words, monopoly pricing
assumes the absence of competitors being able to garner a larger market share by
charging lower prices.
• Monopoly pricing requires not only that the seller have significant market power,
possibly a monopoly or near-monopoly or a cartel of oligopolists, but also that the
barriers to entry for selling that good are high enough to dissuade potential
competition from being attracted by the high pricing. In particular, monopoly pricing
is infeasible in contestable markets
Expected Price
Expected Price means the value fixed for the Bid Amount as recommended by the CGD.
Expected Price. ’ under Rule 4120(c)(8)(A)(i) means the Current Reference Price at the
time the Exchange receives notice that the security is ready to trade from an underwriter
or financial advisor.
Examples : Under the price validation test, the System compares the Expected Price
with the actual price calculated by the Cross.
The “Feasible Expected Price and Price Risk Frontier” implies that the retailer must
increase the value σ(Pr) in order to offer a pricing plan with a lower value of E(Pr)
The underwriter shall select an upper price band (i.e., an amount by which the actual
price may not exceed the Expected Price) and a lower price band (i.e., an amount by
which the actual price may not be lower than the Expected Price).
• Sealed Bid Pricing
In a price negotiation or other distributive (single-issue) negotiations, it can often seem as
though the buyer has limited options: accept the price or lose the deal. But sellers also face
the dilemma of losing the sale. In both cases, the obvious BATNA (best alternative to a
negotiated agreement) is to walk away from the deal.
However, there is almost always room for haggling. Your BATNA also helps you calculate
your reservation price—the highest price you’d be willing to pay in the current negotiation.
Interestingly, research suggests that in single-issue price negotiations, asking a counterpart
to compare your offer to the minimum they’ll accept can help you not only get a great deal
but ensure they’re satisfied with the end result. Offers look more appealing when we
compare them to the least we would accept than when we compare them to the most we
hoped to achieve.
It’s also important to be polite and cordial throughout the negotiation process, and
be willing to accept no for an answer.
Effective negotiation strategies in business are critical.
A negotiated market is a type of secondary market exchange in which the prices of
each security are bargained out between buyers and sellers.
In a negotiated market, there are no market-makers or order matching. Instead,
buyers and sellers actively negotiate on the price at which a transaction is finalized
either directly or through the use of brokers.
These markets are considered very inefficient as the time, effort, and lack
of transparency in pricing are large issues that can't be resolved for this type of
trading.
Cost Plus Pricing
Cost-plus pricing is a pricing strategy in which the selling price, of goods and
services, is determined by adding a specific fixed mark up percentage to a singular
product's unit cost. Essentially, the mark up percentage is the company's way to
generate a profit margin that reaches their target rate of return and maximises their
overall profits. The mark up percentage can be derived by using the firm's target rate
of return. An alternative pricing method is value-based pricing.
Cost-plus pricing is often used on government contracts (cost-plus contracts), and
was criticized for reducing pressure on suppliers to control direct costs, indirect
costs and fixed costs whether related to the production and sale of the product or
service or not.
Companies must ensure cost breakdowns are deliberately maintained to ensure they
have a comprehensive understanding of their overall costs.[2] This information is
necessary to generate accurate cost estimates.
Cost-plus pricing is especially common for utilities and single-buyer products that
are manufacture to the buyer's specification such as military procurement.
• Step 1: Calculating total cost
Total cost = fixed costs + variable costs
Fixed costs do not generally depend on the number of units, while variable costs
do.
• Step 2: Calculating unit cost
Unit cost = (total cost/number of units)
• Step 3a: Calculating mark up price
Mark up price = (unit cost * mark up percentage)
The mark up is a percentage that is expected to provide an acceptable rate of return
to the manufacturer.
• Step 3b: Calculating Selling Price (SP)
Selling Price = unit cost + mark up price
EXPLAIN PROMOTIONAL STRATEGIES
IN SOCIAL MARKETING
The promotional strategy will need to take into consideration some or all of the
following:
The purpose and nature of the event.
Targeting relevant industry groups.
Number of participants attending.
Date, time and location of the event.
Providing adequate notice and coverage.
Cross Promotions
To allocate market resources in the most efficient manner, you must identify
and incorporate marketing partners into your campaign. These organizations
may actually contribute marketing dollars or may provide in-kind services,
such as providing celebrities, tagging their ads with your event date and time,
or contributing other valuable components to your campaign.
When seeking marketing partners to develop a cross-promotional strategy,
study the advertising and marketing activities of compatible businesses in
your area. Determine which of these activities will benefit your event. Next,
develop a proposal that clearly describes the resources that you can bring to
the event. Finally, present the proposal to your prospective marketing partners
and answer any questions they may pose.
Street Promotions
This marketing activity requires that you literally take your message to the street. Street
promotions may include the handing out of flyers by a clown in a high-traffic area, the
appearance of a celebrity at a local mall, contests, or other promotional activities
designed to draw high visibility to your event. Before leafleting (handing out flyers),
make certain that this is allowed by local code. You certainly don’t want to generate
negative publicity by having the clown arrested for causing a disturbance.
A celebrity appearance can help generate significant publicity if it is handled properly.
Schedule the celebrity to include radio and television interviews, appearances at a local
children’s hospital or other public facility, and ceremonial events with local, state,
provincial, or federal leaders. At each appearance make certain that the celebrity is well
informed about the event and articulates your event message in a consistent manner.
Contests and other promotional events also require analysis to ensure that they are within
the bounds of the local code and that they are appropriate for your event. For instance,
selling raffle tickets at a nonprofit event may require that you file legal forms.
DESCRIBE VARIOUS KINDS OF PROMOTIONAL
STRATEGIES ADOPTED IN SOCIAL MARKETING.
• Promotional strategies are the plans and tactics implemented by brands that want to
promote themselves in the market and increase their sales, drive more revenue,
build brand equity, and build recall for their products and company.
• The applications of promotion strategies are manifold and they can be used in
various methods to achieve different objectives.
• The best part about promotions is that they are versatile. If you are creative, the sky
is the limit.
Types of Promotional Strategies
Social Media.
There are various platforms online where you can promote your products and
can reach a huge number of audiences. There is hardly any person who is not
using either Facebook or Instagram. By using this platform, you can make
people aware of your product. You can talk about its uses and how it is
essential for them. In addition to this, you can show people how your product
is better than other similar product. Unlike other promotional strategies which
are blindly pushing their product on everyone. You can make sure that your
product has reachability to your potential customers who have high chances to
get converted. if you don’t believe me. Just go and open your Facebook app.
You will understand what I am trying to say. There are 90% chances that you
will find the advertisement for “Zomato” offering you a 50% discount on your
first order. If you are either feeling hungry or it is 12 pm (lunchtime).
Mail Order Marketing
Just think that your company is still breathing just because of your customers.
once customers have used your product and liked it, there are chances that they
are going to be connected with you for a long time. Therefore, don’t make a
mistake to overlook these customers. you can ask them to share their personal
details in exchange for free gifts or services. You can use that information to
promote your product in a new market where people are totally unaware of the
existence of your product.
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