How to price : a guide to pricing techniques and yield management Shy Oz
Publication details: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2008.Description: xiv, 433 p PaperISBN:- 9780521715645
- 338.521
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Main Library ON SHELF | ECONOMICS (CUP 7/SH 1) | 338.521/ Shy/ 30330 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 11130330 |
Browsing Main Library shelves, Shelving location: ON SHELF, Collection: ECONOMICS (CUP 7/SH 1) Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
338.5/ Man/ 30080 PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS | 338.5/ Man/ 30082 PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS | 338.5/ Rin/Rub/ 37111 Microeconomics | 338.521/ Shy/ 30330 How to price : | 338.542/ Che/ 30338 Business environment : | 338.542/ Che/ 32718 Business environment: | 338.542/ Sal/ 31730 Business environment. |
Counter
1. Introduction to pricing techniques; 2. Demand and cost; 3. Basic pricing techniques; 4. Bundling and tying; 5. Multipart tariff; 6. Peak-load pricing; 7. Advance booking; 8. Refund strategies; 9. Overbooking; 10. Quality, loyalty, auctions, and advertising; 11. Tariff-choice biases and warranties; 12. Instructor and solution manual.
Over the past four decades, business and academic economists, operations researchers, marketing scientists, and consulting firms have increased their interest and research on pricing and revenue management. This book attempts to introduce the reader to a wide variety of their research results on pricing techniques in a unified, systematic way and at varying levels of difficulty. The book contains a large number of exercises and solutions and therefore can serve as a main or supplementary course textbook, as well as a reference guidebook for pricing consultants, managers, industrial engineers, and writers of pricing software applications. Despite a moderate technical orientation, the book is accessible to readers with a limited knowledge in these fields as well as to readers who have had more training in economics. Most pricing models are first demonstrated by numerical and calculus-free examples and then extended for more technically-oriented readers.
There are no comments on this title.