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28 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
Cash discounts
Discounts offered to buyers as an incentive for paying the invoice amount within a specified number of days.
Competition
A rivalry between businesses to attract scarce consumer dollars.
Cost of merchandise sold
The amount paid by a business for products purchased for resale or for use in the production of other goods.
Cost-oriented pricing
Implemented by carefully examining all of the costs associated with carrying a product and selling it to consumers then adding the desired profit to arrive at a selling price.
Cost-plus pricing
A pricing strategy that examines costs for individual products or services and adds a standard markup.
Cumulative quantity discounts
Based on a buyer’s total purchases during a specified period of time.
Demand
The number of products consumers are willing to buy at a given time and a given price.
Demand oriented pricing
Most effective when selling products with inelastic demand, this pricing strategy requires price planners to estimate the value customers place on products and set prices accordingly.
Direct competition
Competition between businesses that have similar formats and sell similar products.
Elastic demand
Demand that is sensitive to a change in price of the product.
Fixed costs
Costs that remain constant over a period of time regardless of sales volume.
Fixed pricing
(One-Price Policy) A policy under which an organization charges the same prices to all customers regardless of the quantity of the purchase
Indirect competition
Competition between businesses that have dissimilar formats and sell dissimilar products.
Inelastic demand
Demand that is not sensitive to a change in price of the product.
Loss leaders
A product that is sold below costs in an effort to increase customer traffic.
Markdowns
Reductions in selling price used to stimulate sales, dispose of slow moving/discontinued merchandise, meet competitors’ prices, and/or increase customer traffic.
Market price
The price that prevails in the market for a particular good at a specific time.
Markup pricing
Pricing strategy that adds a predetermined percentage to the cost of products.
Non-price Competition
Competition based on factors other than price as a means to attract customers.
Non-cumulative quantity discounts
Reductions given to buyers for a one-time purchase or shipment.
Odd/even cent pricing
Psychological pricing technique based on the principle that prices ending in odd numbers ($5.99) communicate a bargain and prices ending in even numbers ($6.00) communicate quality.
Opportunity cost
The opportunity cost is the option that is given up when a consumer chooses one product/service over another.
Penetration pricing
Setting a low price when introducing a product into a competitive market to motivate customers to purchase.
Prestige pricing
Pricing technique that sets a higher-than-average price for products in order to communicate quality and status.
Price
The amount charged to customers in exchange for goods and services
Price Competition
Competition that uses price as the primary means to attract customers.
Price lining
Establishing price points between products in a product line to communicate differences in quality and/or service to consumers
Profit
Revenue remaining after the expenses of running the business have been deducted from income.