MarketingChapter 14Determining The Price

Professor Myles Bassellpage 1

Question The first handheld calculators were priced at several hundred dollars so that its manufacturer could recoup research and development costs. Even though the first calculators only added, subtracted, multiplied, divided, and did square roots, they were so superior to other methods that customers were willing to pay the asked price. The manufacturer of the first handheld calculators used:
Answer / / skimming pricing.
penetration pricing.
price lining.
odd-even pricing.
demand-backward pricing.
Question While many people believe shoes are simply something that you wear on your feet to protect them from the environment, many other people believe the kind of shoes a person wears makes a statement about them and their lifestyle. These people are willing to pay $400 or more for a pair of shoes because to them the price indicates quality. The marketer of these shoes would use:
Answer / yield management pricing.
target pricing.
customary pricing.
/ prestige pricing.
price lining.
Question The prices for all fruit trees sold in Stark Bros. fruit trees and landscaping catalog end in $.99. Stark Bros. uses:
Answer / / odd-even pricing.
dynamic pricing.
price lining.
bundle pricing.
experience curve pricing.
Question If you are planning a trip to New York City and want a hotel room overlooking Central Park, you are likely to pay over $500 per night if you reserve the room through a hotel, but if you are flexible about the night you want, you can contact Travelocity and stay in that room for $100. To what kind of pricing policy is this practice most closely related?
Answer / / yield management pricing
target pricing
customary pricing
prestige pricing
price lining
Question The two variations of cost-plus pricing are:
Answer / / cost-plus percentage-of-cost pricing and cost-plus fixed-fee pricing.
cost-plus ROI pricing and cost-minus markdown pricing.
target return on sales pricing and target return on investment pricing.
cost-plus fixed-fee pricing and cost-plus variable-fee pricing.
dynamic pricing and one-price pricing.
Question Which of the following statements about cost-oriented approaches is true?
Answer / These methods focus on the demand side of the pricing problem and involve stimulating demand and decreasing revenue.
/ These methods focus on the supply side of the pricing problem and involve considerations of production and marketing expenses.
Target return on investment is an example of a cost-based method.
Experience curve pricing is simple to use because costs predictably decrease by 25 percent with each doubling of production.
Cost-oriented approaches are subcategories of competition-based methods so revenues are a critical factor.
Question Imagine that the owner of Lewis Edibles, Inc., the manufacturer of Tongue Tinglin' barbecue sauce has sold on average 1,000 jars for the last five years. The company's costs over the same period of time have averaged $4,000. If the company earns a 20 percent return on sales, what is the price of a jar of barbecue sauce?
Answer / $2.00
$2.50
$4.00
/ $5.00
$10.00
Question A manufacturer estimates that consumers will accept a price of $75 for a handbag. If the manufacturer expects to offer trade discounts of 35/15/5 to retailers, wholesalers, and agents, what price will the manufacturer receive for the handbag?
Answer / $26.25
$33.75
/ $39.37
$41.25
$63.25
Question When Ruth makes a purchase on she is responsible for paying all shipping costs for the purchased item. In fact, once the item is shipped, she owns it and should purchase insurance if it is likely to get broken while in transit. This shipping arrangement is most closely related to:
Answer / basing-point pricing.
/ FOB origin pricing.
functional pricing.
quantity pricing.
geographic pricing.
Question A company placing an order from the Lab Safety Supply catalog is instructed to add 6 percent of the total cost of the order to pay shipping. Which method of shipping does this catalog supplier use?
Answer / / single-zone pricing
flexible-price pricing
FOB origin pricing
uniform delivered pricing
basing-point pricing