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Pricing: pricing strategies related to firm's objectives

Hello, 

As I read on Preplounge I understood that there are 3 distinct pricing strategies (competitive-based, value-based and cost-based).

I was wondering whether when considering a firm's objectives (eg. profit, market share, growth, brand positioning) there is a more typical suggestion.

For example a firm's objective is to increase its market share, is it then more typical to adopt a competitive-based strategy?

My question is thus whether there are traditional recommendations per type of goal and if so, which ones.

 

Best regards,

Thank you in advance,

Lisa 

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Mariana
Coach
edited on May 03, 2025
You CAN make it! | xMckinsey | 1.5h session | +200 sessions |Free 20-Minute Call

Hi Lisa,

I don’t think there is a one size fits all answer to that. In real life, usually a combination of the three factors is considered: (1) how competitors price similar/alternative products and how our product performs compared to those; (2) what is the value the product generates to our clients and do they care about this value; (3) what are the margins we aim / how much should we price to get X margin / can we price according to value / clients’ value perception and be profitable?

In case interview, the context is usually simpler and it typically gives hints to the candidate about what could make more sense considering the common pricing strategies.

I hope it helps!

Best,

Mari

Thabang
Coach
2 hrs ago
Ex-McKinsey Consultant | McKinsey Top Coach & Interviewer | Special Offer: Buy 1 Session Get 1 Free (Limited time!)

Hey Lisa, 

With the 3 pricing strategies, here's something to consider:

  • Cost-based pricing can give you the lower end of where you should price as pricing below this would mean you are entering loss making territory
  • Value-based pricing can you the upper end of where to price if this matched or linked with the customers maximum willingness to pay
  • Competitive-based pricing can be a strategic lever you use in between the two (but can also be upper end of pricing range if this matches customers maximum willingness to pay)

With reference to your specific example, when thinking about a firm's objectives to increase market share, there's a very careful nuance that you'd need to clarify here that could change which pricing strategy you'd want to use.... Let me show you...

  • If by market share you mean revenue, then you'd pick the pricing strategy that maximizes revenue and this would be heavily linked on the price elasticity of the customers and where we are pricing on that price elasticity curve
  • If by market share you mean number of customers, then pricing towards the lower end with cost-based pricing may be the best lever to use as this will invariable be most suitable to increase sales volumes

In a nutshell, there's aren't really traditional recommendations per type of goal, but general principles and nuances that apply to specific cases.

I'd be more than happy to chat through this in more detail with you if you'd like. DM me and we can go further with this

All the best Lisa

Daniel
Coach
6 min ago
Ex-McKinsey, Bain & Kearney | 5+ yrs consulting, coaching & interviewing | 95%+ candidate success

Hi Lisa,

Great question! While real-world pricing often blends strategies, here’s a simplified way to match typical pricing strategies to company objectives:

1. Market share growth → Competitive-based pricing

  • Undercut rivals or match their prices to win customers and expand presence

2. Profit maximization → Value-based pricing

  • Price based on customer willingness to pay for differentiated features or brand strength

3. Cost recovery or breakeven → Cost-based pricing

  • Ensure all costs are covered when launching a new product or in a high-volume, low-margin market (e.g., commodity market)

4. Premium brand positioning → Value-based (with a premium)

  • High price signals exclusivity and quality, often seen in luxury or high-tech markets

Let me know if you’d like examples or case-style applications.

Best of luck!

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