Multiple Choice
Use this information for questions that refer to the Sporting Products,Inc.(SPI) case. Randy Todd,marketing manager for Sporting Products,Inc.(SPI) ,is thinking about how changes taking place among retailers in his channel might impact his strategy.
SPI sells the products it produces through wholesalers and retailers.For example,SPI sells basketballs to Wholesale Supply for $8.00.Wholesale Supply uses a 20 percent markup,and most of its "sport shop" retailer customers,like Robinson's Sporting Goods,use a 33 percent markup to arrive at the price they charge final consumers.However,one fast-growing retail chain,Sports Depot,uses only a 20 percent markup for basketballs,even though it pays Wholesale Supply the same price as other retailers.Furthermore,Sports Depot occasionally lowers the price of basketballs and sells them at cost,to draw customers into its stores and stimulate sales of its pricey basketball shoes.
Sports Depot is also using other pricing approaches that are different from the sports shops that usually handle SPI products.For example,Sports Depot prices all its baseball gloves at $20,$40,or $60-with no prices in between.There are three big bins,one for each price point.
Randy is also curious about how Sports Depot's new strategy to increase sales of tennis balls will work out.The basic idea is to sell tennis balls in large quantities to nonprofit groups,who resell the balls to raise money.For example,a service organization at a local college bought 2,000 tennis balls printed with the college logo.Sports Depot charged $.50 each for the tennis balls,plus a $500 one-time charge for the stamp to print the logo.The service group plans to resell the tennis balls for $2.50 each and contribute the profits to a shelter for the homeless.
Randy is not certain if Sports Depot's ideas will affect SPI's plans.For example,SPI is considering adding tennis racquets to the lines it produces.This would require a $500,000 addition to its factory,as well as the purchase of new equipment that costs $1,000,000.The variable cost to produce a tennis racquet would be $20,but Todd thinks that SPI could sell the racquet at a wholesale price of $40 each.That would allow most retailers to add their normal markup and make a profit.However,Sports Depot may sells the racquet at a lower than normal price.
The pricing approach Sports Depot uses to price its baseball gloves is called
A) odd-even pricing.
B) value in use pricing.
C) prestige pricing.
D) bait pricing.
E) price lining.
Correct Answer:

Verified
Correct Answer:
Verified
Q25: When Nintendo sets a relatively low price
Q66: Walgreens Drugstores advertises that its Tylenol prices
Q71: A computer store regularly advertises a very
Q72: It costs a producer $400 to manufacture
Q74: Break-even analysis can be useful for<br>A)estimating future
Q75: Retailers of which of the following products
Q77: A retail store advertises an SLR digital
Q78: A good marketing manager for a producer
Q80: A cutlery manufacturer producer produces 200 units
Q250: A CVS drugstore that is trying to