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  2. Pricing strategies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pricing_strategies

    A business can use a variety of pricing strategies when selling a product or service. To determine the most effective pricing strategy for a company, senior executives need to first identify the company's pricing position, pricing segment, pricing capability and their competitive pricing reaction strategy. [ 1 ]

  3. Premium pricing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premium_pricing

    The use of premium pricing as either a marketing strategy or a competitive practice depends on certain factors that influence its profitability and sustainability. Such factors include: Information asymmetry (e.g., when buyers have no independent basis to test claims of "exceptional quality" for a particular product or service—assuming the ...

  4. Yield management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yield_management

    Yield management (YM) [4] has become part of mainstream business theory and practice over the last fifteen to twenty years. Whether an emerging discipline or a new management science (it has been called both), yield management is a set of yield maximization strategies and tactics to improve the profitability of certain businesses.

  5. Revenue management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revenue_management

    A company may decide to price against their competitors or even their own products, but the most value comes from pricing strategies that closely follow market conditions and demand, especially at a segment level. Once a pricing strategy dictates what a company wants to do, pricing tactics determine how a company actually captures the value.

  6. Good–better–best - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good–better–best

    A common pitfall of good–better–best is cannibalization, where customers who could afford the "better" option instead opt for the "good" option to save money.. Marketers discourage customers from downgrading by implementing "fence attributes," such as by making "good" hotel rates non-refundable, or by making the least expensive concert tickets general admission, with no assig

  7. Non-price competition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-price_competition

    Although any company can use a non-price competition strategy, it is most common among oligopolies and monopolistic competition, because firms can be extremely competitive. Firms will engage in non-price competition, in spite of the additional costs involved, because it is usually more profitable than selling for a lower price, and avoids the ...

  8. Target costing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Target_costing

    Traditional cost-plus pricing strategy has been impeding the productivity and profitability for a long time. [10] [11] As a new strategy, target costing is replacing traditional cost-plus pricing strategy by maximizing customer satisfaction by accepted level of quality and functionality while minimizing costs.

  9. Price optimization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_optimization

    Price optimization utilizes data analysis to predict the behavior of potential buyers to different prices of a product or service. Depending on the type of methodology being implemented, the analysis may leverage survey data (e.g. such as in a conjoint pricing analysis [7]) or raw data (e.g. such as in a behavioral analysis leveraging 'big data' [8] [9]).