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Marketing of High-Technology Products and Innovations

Marketing of High-Technology Products and Innovations. Pricing Considerations in High-Tech Markets. Key Points. Customers evaluate transactions based on Cost/Benefit analysis Therefore products should be priced according to perceived values from customers. Main Concepts.

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Marketing of High-Technology Products and Innovations

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  1. Marketing of High-Technology Products and Innovations Pricing Considerations in High-Tech Markets

  2. Key Points Customers evaluate transactions based on Cost/Benefit analysis Therefore products should be priced according to perceived values from customers

  3. Main Concepts Main Concepts To Be Understood Moore’s Law Network Externality Unit-one Cost 3Cs of Pricing Monetary Cost/Nonmonetary Cost Total Cost of Ownership (Life Cycle Costing) Customer Oriented Pricing Customer Classification Matrix (in terms of price paid and cost to serve)

  4. Main Concepts Cont Main Concepts To Be Understood Technology Paradox Captive Product Pricing Cost Transparency Reverse Auction Pricing Lining Outright Sale Pay-Per-Use Licensing Micropayment

  5. Chapter Agenda • The High-Tech Pricing Environment • The “3 Cs” of Pricing • Customer-Oriented Publishing • The Technology Paradox • The Effect of the Internet on Pricing Decisions • Additional Pricing Considerations

  6. The High-Tech Pricing Environment • Need to re-coup R&D investments in light of: • Rapid pace of change • Short, volatile product life cycles • Price/performance pressures • Moore’s law • Network externalities • Unit-one costs • Customer perceptions of costs/benefits

  7. The High-Tech Pricing Environment • Customer perceptions of costs/benefits • Anxiety • “Balky” • Upgrade considerations • Competition • The Internet • Backward compatability, Derivatives

  8. The 3 Cs of Pricing

  9. Customer Perceptions of Benefits/Costs • Benefits: • Functional • Operational • Financial • Personal • Costs: • Monetary • Nonmonetary

  10. Additional Customer Considerations • Total Cost of Ownership • Ex: Lifetime cost of owning a corporate PC is $42,000 (in 1995) • Purchase price accounts for only 10% of total cost • Implication: • Show total cost of ownership lower than competitor’s, despite higher initial outlay

  11. Customer-Oriented Pricing • How will the customer use the product? • What are the benefits the customer will receive from using the product? • Calculate customer costs and understand customer’s trade-off between costs and benefits.

  12. View from IBM’s Technology Expert • One way to help customer manage risks is through financing and leasing • Assist with upgrades and replacement flexibility • Creates stepped payment streams allowing customer to match results to cash outflow • Way to capitalize or manage assets • Allows for scalability.

  13. View from IBM’s Technology Expert • Advantages: • Forms long-term relationship • Avoids commodity trap • Caveat: • Must understand customer risks and value components

  14. Implications of Customer-Oriented Pricing • Pricing decisions are part of product design decisions • Different segments value the product differently • Therefore, different customers yield differential profitability • And different segments may be priced differently • Ex: Microsoft Full Version/Education Version

  15. Analyzing customers for profitability

  16. Analyzing customers for profitability • Carriage Trade: Pay top dollar; require much service • i.e., customers with customized products and high service level; willing to pay • Cost-plus pricing may a simple solution for these customers

  17. Analyzing customers for profitability (Cont.) • Bargain Basement: price sensitive; don’t require many services • Aggressive: demand high services and low prices simultaneously • Might be large and important to firm; and powerful Aggressive and Bargain Basement customers should be screened through central office to ensure profitability

  18. Analyzing customers for profitability (Cont.) • Passive Customers: accept high prices, don’t require much service • Product might be crucial to operations • Customer might face high switching costs • Very profitable if price based on value

  19. Analyzing customers for profitability (Cont.) • Implications: • Must track costs on a per customer, or per segment basis via accounting • Might decide NOT to serve some customers.

  20. Technology Paradox • Rapid pace of price declines • At the extreme, technology is “free” and companies literally give products away. • How can businesses thrive when their prices are falling? • Requires exponential growth of market to be faster than the exponential decline of prices • Requires new skills: ingenuity, agility, and speed

  21. Possible Solutions to the Technology Paradox • Keep costs falling faster than prices • Innovate? • Make products easy to use, exciting, or both • Two extremes: • Market domination: own the standards and charge a premium for them • Intel and Microsoft • Sell a commodity and hope for volume • Middle-of-the-road: Learn new tricks

  22. “Middle of the Road” Solutions to the Technology Paradox • Try to avoid making commodity goods • Provide value beyond competition • Mass Customize • Agility and Speed • Focus on “best possible solution” (vs. best solution possible) • Find new uses for products • Collaborate with complementary providers • Expand to other segments

  23. “Middle of the Road” Solutions to the Technology Paradox • Develop long-term relationships with customers with low/free pricing • Goal is life-time value rather than margin • Establish a market-hold to grab “mind share” (eyeballs; personalized customer knowledge) • Behavior -> Brand Loyalty (Attitude) (ex., free ISP, mailbox) • Capitalize on that knowledge as a form of switching cost • Establish an installed customer base to sell ancillary products and services • “Captive product pricing” (Free PC w/on-line fee, Printer, Satellite TV) • Offer complete solution (“end-to-end;” whole product) • Rely on advertising and marketing revenue

  24. Drawbacks to Low-Price Strategies • Devalues brand equity/perceived value • Antitrust considerations: • Line between predatory pricing and effective pricing? • Infer “intent” and examine impact on prices • Large firms scrutinized more carefully because of their greater market power.

  25. Effect of Internet on Pricing • Cost Transparency • Solutions: • Pricing lining/versioning • Innovate

  26. Additional Pricing Considerationsfrom Embedded Nature of Know-How • Outright Sale of Knowledge vs. Licensing • With high levels of technological uncertainty, easier to valuate know-how in the short-term • Leads to more licensing rather than outright sale • One-time/single Use vs. Multiple Users • Depends on customer’s cost of sharing the product relative to the manufacturer’s cost • If easy for customer, then price (higher) for site licenses (multiple users) • If difficult, then price (lower) for individual use

  27. Additional Pricing Considerations • Pay-Per-Use vs. Subscription Pricing • Network externalities favor subscription pricing • Generate more users to increase the value of the network • Technological uncertainty favors subscription pricing • Risk averse customers prefer flat rates to avoid uncertainty

  28. More on Leasing to Finance Purchase of Technology Infrastructure • Can generate savings through tax benefits • Can minimize balance sheet impacts • Can maintain operating flexibility with respect to equipment • Can attract investors with residual value of leased assets

  29. Discussion Questions • Discussion Questions • How would characteristics of the high-tech industries influence the pricing decision on high-tech innovations/products? Please specify those characteristics and then discuss the corresponding pricing decisions. • When your competitors provide a low price and low quality product to your customers, what can you do?

  30. Discussion Questions Cont • Discussion Questions • For the same product, can the price be different for different market segments? If yes, what would be the major considerations to set up different prices? • What is “Technology Paradox”? Can you give an example of why and how a company can still make money when the commodity price is close to zero (or when the commodity is almost free)? • How can a company deal with cost transparency?

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