Perreault−McCarthy: Basic
Marketing: A
Global−Managerial
Approach, 14/e
- Price Setting in the
Business World
Text © The McGraw−Hill
Companies, 2002
Price Setting in the Business World 523
average cost! Further, the quantity the firm actually sells (times price) determines
total revenue (and total profit or loss). A decision made in one area affects each of
the others, directly or indirectly. Average-cost pricing does not consider these effects.^4
A manager who forgets this can make serious pricing mistakes.
Some aggressive firms use a variation of average-cost pricing called experience
curve pricing. Experience curve pricingis average-cost pricing using an estimate of
futureaverage costs. This approach is based on the observation that over time—as
an industry gains experience in certain kinds of production—managers learn new
ways to reduce costs. In some industries, costs decrease about 15 to 20 percent each
time cumulative production volume (experience) doubles. So a firm might set
average-cost prices based on where it expects costs to be when products are sold in
the future—not where costs actually are when the strategy is set. This approach is
Price per unit
Total revenue Price x Quantity
$30,000 $3.00 x 10,000
$40,000 $2.00 x 20,000
$57,000 $1.90 x 30,000
$66,000 $1.65 x 40,000
$75,000 $1.50 x 50,000
$72,000 $1.20 x 60,000
Quantity (000)
0 10 20 30405060 70
1.20
1.50
1.65
1.90
2.00
$3.00
Exhibit 18-6
Evaluation of Various Prices
along a Firm’s Demand
Curve
Experience curve
pricing is even riskier
Cost-oriented selling
price per unit
Quantity demanded
at selling price
?
Average total
cost per unit
Profit per
unit
Average fixed
cost per unit
Variable cost
per unit
Estimated quantity
to be sold
Exhibit 18-7
Summary of Relationships
among Quantity, Cost, and
Price Using Cost-Oriented
Pricing