Make the Export Sale: Export Pricing StrategyPricing Considerations
Pricing U.S. Products for Overseas Markets
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Pricing Overview
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As in the domestic market, the price at which a product or service is sold directly determines your company’s revenues. Your firm’s market research should include an evaluation of all variables that may affect the price range for your product or service. If your company’s price is too high, the product or service will not sell. If the price is too low, export activities may not be sufficiently profitable or may actually create a net loss.
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Traditional components for determining proper pricing are costs, market demand, and competition. Each component must be compared with your company’s objective in entering the foreign market. An analysis of each component from an export perspective may result in export prices that are different from domestic prices.
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There are additional costs that are typically borne by the importer. These include tariffs, customs fees, currency fluctuation, transaction costs (including shipping), and value-added taxes (VATs). These costs can add substantially to the final price paid by the importer, sometimes resulting in a total that is more than double the price charged in the United States. U.S. products often compete better on quality, reputation, and service than they do on price—but buyers consider the whole package.Pricing your product properly, giving complete and accurate quotations, choosing the terms of the sale, and selecting the payment method are four critical elements in selling a product or service overseas. Of the four, pricing can be the most challenging, even for an experienced export
Pricing ConsiderationsAs you develop your export pricing strategy, these considerations will help determine the best price for your product overseas:
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Key Elements of Pricing Analysis
Foreign Market Objectives
An important aspect of your company’s pricing analysis is the determination of market objectives. For example, is your company attempting to penetrate a new market, seeking long-term market growth, or looking for an outlet for surplus production or outmoded products? Marketing and pricing objectives may be generalized or tailored to particular foreign markets. For example, marketing objectives for sales to a developing nation, where per capita income may be one-tenth of that in the United States, necessarily differ from marketing objectives for sales to Europe or Japan.
Costs
The actual cost of producing a product and bringing it to market is key to determining if exporting is financially viable.
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Cost-plus method is when the exporter starts with the domestic manufacturing cost and adds administration, research and development, overhead, freight forwarding, distributor margins, customs charges, and profit. However, the effect of this pricing approach may be that the export price escalates into an uncompetitive range once exporting costs have been included.
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Marginal cost pricing is a more competitive method of pricing a product for market entry. This method considers the direct out-of-pocket expenses of producing and selling products for export as a floor beneath which prices cannot be set without incurring a loss. For example, additional costs may occur because of product modification for the export market. Costs may decrease, however, if the export products are stripped-down versions or made without increasing the fixed costs of domestic production.
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Other costs should be assessed for domestic and export products according to how much benefit each product receives from such expenditures, and may include:
- Fees for market research and credit checks
- Business travel expenses
- International postage and telephone rates
- Translation costs
- Commissions, training charges, and other costs associated with foreign representatives
- Consultant and freight forwarder fees
- Product modification and special packaging costs
After the actual cost of the export product has been calculated, you should formulate an approximate consumer price for the foreign market.
Market Demand
For most consumer goods, per capita income is a good gauge of a market’s ability to pay. Some products (example, popular U.S. fashion labels) create such a strong demand that even low per capita income will not affect their selling price. Simplifying the product to reduce its selling price may be an answer for your company in markets with low per capita income. Your company must also keep in mind that currency fluctuations may alter the affordability of its goods.
Competition
In the domestic market, U.S. companies carefully evaluate their competitors’ pricing policies. You will also need to evaluate competitor’s prices in each potential export market. If there are many competitors within the foreign market, you may have to match the market price or even underprice the product or service for the sake of establishing a market share. If the product or service is new to a particular foreign market, however, it may actually be possible to set a higher price than is feasible in the domestic market.
Pricing SummaryIt’s important to remember several key points when determining your product’s price:
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Get Help
Export.gov, the U.S. federal government’s export assistance portal, offers many resources, including the following:
- Country Commercial Guides provide the latest market intelligence on more than 140 countries from U.S. embassies worldwide.
- Learn more about Incoterms in determining your pricing and quotations strategy.
- Locate a trade expert and learn about the export services of the U.S. Commercial Service’s global office network.
- A Basic Guide to Exporting is an excellent resource. See Chapter 13: Pricing, Quotations, and Terms