Introduction The problem of establishing a price for a new product is typically related to one of a number of possible company pricing objectives. McCarthy and Shapiro, for example, divide possible pricing objectives into the categories “profit oriented”, “sales oriented” and “status quo”, and then further subdivide them according to the diagram in Figure 1. The status quo objective of “meeting competition” translates itself directly into a new product price, while that of “nonprice competition” implies that price is to be de‐emphasised—one is, nevertheless, left with a pricing decision. All the other pricing objectives require either an explicit or implicit knowledge of the relationship between the price of the product and the quantity of goods sold—i.e. the demand curve.
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1 April 1979
Review Article|
April 01 1979
Pricing New Products:the Application of a Multi‐attribute Model Available to Purchase
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6070
Print ISSN: 0025-1747
© MCB UP Limited
1979
Management Decision (1979) 17 (4): 304–316.
Citation
Lawler‐Wilson C (1979), "Pricing New Products:the Application of a Multi‐attribute Model". Management Decision, Vol. 17 No. 4 pp. 304–316, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb001194
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