Pricing
Across
- 2. This refers to the various ways a business can set a price for its goods and services. The price of a good or service is paid by customers.
- 4. A strategy that involves charging a low price, sometimes even below the cost, so as to damage the sales of rivals.
- 6. A pricing method that involves setting the price of a product at a level higher than the direct costs. Hence, the sale of each product earns the firm a positive contribution towards paying its indirect costs.
- 7. A strategy of following the price set by the dominant firm in the industry (the firm with the largest market share).
- 8. Pricing a product below its cost of production so as to attract customers to also buy other items (with a higher profit margin).
- 9. Adds a profit margin to the costs of production, thereby ensuring that each unit sold contributes towards the profits of the firm.
- 12. The process of rival businesses competing by continually reducing prices so as to threaten the competitiveness of rivals in the market.
Down
- 1. A pricing method that involves a firm setting low prices so as to gain entry into a new market. The firm will then raise the price once the product or brand has established itself in the industry.
- 3. This refers to charging customers different prices based on changing demand at different times of the day, week, month, or year.
- 4. A pricing method that involves a firm charging significantly higher prices than similar or competing products in the market. This is usually due to the prestige or quality associated with the product or brand.
- 5. This pricing method involves a business setting the price of its products at the same or similar level charged by competitors in the market.
- 7. measures the extent to which the demand for a good or service is responsive to changes in the price of that product.
- 10. The value of a good or service that is paid by the customer.
- 11. The difference between the price and the cost per unit.