4.6 Article

Product price and performance level in one market or two separated markets under various cost structures and functions

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PRODUCTION ECONOMICS
Volume 131, Issue 2, Pages 505-518

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpe.2011.01.016

Keywords

Pricing; Product quality or performance level; Attribute-dependent demand; Cost structure; Market characteristic; Product or service development

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Market characteristics, including intrinsic demand and customer sensitivity on price and product performance level, are distinct at different markets. Comparisons of various product development strategies in one market or two geographically separated markets are conducted for three classes of products: development intensive products (DIPs) with constant unit cost, marginal cost-intensive products (MIPs) with constant fixed cost, and marginal and development intensive products (MDIPs) with non-constant unit cost and fixed cost. Results show that larger demand size, less customer sensitivity on price and/or more sensitivity on performance level lead to more profit, a higher sale price and a not-lower product performance. The customer reservation or the saturation performance level should be generally adopted though the optimal performance level does exist occasionally. Unit cost and/or fixed cost must increase in performance at an increasing rate for the existence of one optimal performance level. Due to the impact of demand size, one high-end (low-end) MDIP or DIP could be introduced into one low-end (high-end) market at a different price if the demand size is significantly large in the low-end market. For DIPs, offering one niche high-end product is not worse than offering the low-end product into two markets. For MIPs with negligible fixed cost, the product line strategy is not worse than the standard product development strategy. Additionally, the product cost reduction approach adopted in one product line has significant effects on the best product development strategy and sequence. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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