Exam 17: Price Setting in the Business World
Exam 1: Marketings Value to Consumers, Firms, and Society393 Questions
Exam 2: Marketing Strategy Planning322 Questions
Exam 3: Evaluating Opportunities in the Changing Market Environment360 Questions
Exam 4: Focusing Marketing Strategy With Segmentation and Positioning253 Questions
Exam 5: Final Consumers and Their Buying Behavior358 Questions
Exam 6: Business and Organizational Customers and Their Buying Behavior277 Questions
Exam 7: Improving Decisions With Marketing Information263 Questions
Exam 8: Elements of Product Planning for Goods and Services385 Questions
Exam 9: Product Management and New-Product Development258 Questions
Exam 10: Place and Development of Channel Systems293 Questions
Exam 11: Distribution Customer Service and Logistics214 Questions
Exam 12: Retailers, Wholesalers, and Their Strategy Planning392 Questions
Exam 13: Promotion-Introduction to Integrated Marketing Communications341 Questions
Exam 14: Personal Selling and Customer Service299 Questions
Exam 15: Advertising, Publicity, and Sales Promotion344 Questions
Exam 16: Pricing Objectives and Policies305 Questions
Exam 17: Price Setting in the Business World270 Questions
Exam 18: Ethical Marketing in a Consumer-Oriented World: Appraisal and Challe232 Questions
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If a retailer adds a 25-cent markup to a product which costs the retailer $1.00, then according to the text the retailer's markup is 25 percent.
(True/False)
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An item costs a retailer $140. If a 30 percent markup is desired, what should the retail selling price be?
(Multiple Choice)
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Most retailers and wholesalers set prices by using a different markup percent for each different product carried.
(True/False)
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Cost-oriented approaches are the most common price setting approach.
(True/False)
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Prestige pricing involves setting a rather high price because the product has a normal down-sloping demand curve.
(True/False)
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The price most consumers expect to pay for a product is called the leader price.
(True/False)
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Sam's Club purchases a 24-pack of bottled water from a wholesaler for $3.85 and wants a markup of 25 percent. What is the price that Sam's Club charges its customers?
(Multiple Choice)
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Some retailers feel that their potential customers find certain prices appealing, but between these prices the customers see prices as roughly the same-and thus price cuts within these ranges will not increase the quantity sold (i.e., the demand curve is vertical within these "same price" ranges). These retailers would probably use ______________ if they want to maximize profit.
(Multiple Choice)
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Fly-Right Travel Agency arranges vacation packages to Disney World in Florida. The price includes airfare, a rental car, deluxe accommodations, and tickets to Disney World and other attractions. Fly-Right is using:
(Multiple Choice)
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Wilson sells a basketball to a wholesaler for $16, and the wholesaler applies a 20 percent markup. A retailer then applies a 33.3 percent markup. The final selling price is:
(Multiple Choice)
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Demand-backward pricing is commonly used by producers of consumer products, especially shopping products such as women's clothing and appliances.
(True/False)
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Break-even analysis evaluates whether the firm will be able to cover all its costs with a particular price.
(True/False)
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Michael Soles-owner of Soles Shoe Store-recently discovered that shoe stores in his trading area have an average markup of 40 percent. Upon investigation, Michael found that his average markup is $15 on shoes that he sells for $45. This suggests that:
(Multiple Choice)
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With complementary product pricing, different price levels are set on different products because the products are targeted at different market segments.
(True/False)
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Setting a few price levels for a product line and then marking all items at these price levels is:
(Multiple Choice)
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In a down economy, a local florist surveys her customers to determine the amount they feel comfortable spending for a bouquet of flowers. Then she displays bouquets costing that exact amount in her refrigerated case. This is an example of:
(Multiple Choice)
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The basic problem with the average-cost approach is that it
(Multiple Choice)
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