首页
登录
职称英语
Lately, everybody from industrial designers to city planners claims to be lo
Lately, everybody from industrial designers to city planners claims to be lo
游客
2023-12-16
29
管理
问题
Lately, everybody from industrial designers to city planners claims to be looking after our aesthetic interests, and there is ample anecdotal evidence that, on the margin, people do put a higher premium on the look and feel of things than they once did. That is to be expected as society grows richer. But aesthetics is not the only value -- trade-offs must be made -- and aesthetic value is hard to measure. What is "it," after all? Aesthetics doesn’t come in neat units like microprocessor speed, calories, or tons of steel. Style is qualitative.
The value of qualitative improvements poses tricky problems for economists. It is a major challenge to tease out how much consumers value each individual attribute that comes bundled in a given good or service. If you pay $2.99 for a toothbrush, how much of that is for the cleaning ability? How much for the feel of the handle? How much for the durability? How much for the packaging? How much for the convenient distribution to your comer drugstore? How much for the color?
Economists use statistical techniques called "hedonic pricing" to try to separate the implicit prices of various characteristics. Essentially, they look at how prices go up or down as features are added or subtracted and try to figure out how consumers value the individual features. How much will consumers pay for an extra megahertz of computing speed, for instance?
Not every characteristic is as easily measured as megahertz. The trickier the measurement, the more difficult the problem. For aesthetics, economists generally don’t even try. It’s just too hard. How do you account for the restaurant d écor or subtle enhancements in the taste of the food? How do you measure the increased value of a typeset resume, memo or client newsletter -- the result of ubiquitous word processors -- over an old-fashioned typed document?
That sort of detail is simply lost in crude economic statistics. Many product characteristics -- from convenience to snob appeal to aesthetics -- are hard to quantify and so tend to be undercounted. The result is that the standard of living can change for the better without much notice.
That is especially likely if products improve without becoming more expensive. Consumers are happier, but if they aren’t spending more money, no revenue increase shows up in the productivity statistics. This isn’t unusual in competitive markets. Shopping malls redecorate, and newspapers adopt color printing just to keep up with the competition. They aren’t able to charge more. They are just able to stay in business.
When thinking about new products, producers face two challenges. First, they need to offer something whose value to the consumer is greater than its cost to produce and distribute. Increasing the surplus of value minus cost is where both higher living standards and higher profits come from. It is the measure of real economic improvement. The second challenge is, of course, to price the offering to maximize profit.
As a general matter, aesthetics sells. But "as a general matter" obscures all the specifics that make or break a product: What exact design will you use? How will you manufacture it? What will you charge? And, given those decisions, how will customers respond?
The answers can’t be found through a blackboard exercise. Price theory is a useful tool, but we can’t know in advance how much people will value the characteristics of a product they haven’t yet seen or compared with real alternatives. Even market research, while helpful, cannot duplicate real-life choices. Although we all have fun predicting and second-guessing business ideas, the only way to find out is through trial and error. Market competition is a discovery process that subjects business hypotheses to unsentimental testing.
Some managers are better than others at identifying promising new sources of value, and some companies are better than others at operations and pricing -- the skills that determine whether a product that consumers do value will in fact be profitable. Market competition tests these theories and skills. And, like all competitions, this one has its failures, some of them beautiful.
Not every attempt at improvement works out. Sometimes value does not exceed cost. Sometimes it does, but managers fall in love with their product, price it too high and drive away potential customers. Sometimes the coolest of the cool just can’t survive the heat. With 20/20 hindsight, it is easy to see that the pricey Cube was doomed. But nobody knew that a year ago. [br] The passage is mainly concerned with ______.
选项
A、adding aesthetics to products
B、increasing surplus of value minus cost
C、quantifying product characteristics
D、putting business ideas to market testing
答案
C
解析
本文主要讨论了如何对产品的抽象属性进行价格定位这一问题。例如,产品的一些属性,如方便性、高档产品的吸引力、美观等,是无法量化的;另外,产品价格的定位光靠价格理论是不行的,还要通过市场竞争来进行捡验。凶此选项C为正确答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3279494.html
相关试题推荐
Lately,everybodyfromindustrialdesignerstocityplannersclaimstobelo
In1995about700,000robotswereoperatingintheindustrializedworld.Over
In1995about700,000robotswereoperatingintheindustrializedworld.Over
ThepreindustrialperiodofthedevelopmentofcitiesintheUnitedStatesbe
ThepreindustrialperiodofthedevelopmentofcitiesintheUnitedStatesbe
ThepreindustrialperiodofthedevelopmentofcitiesintheUnitedStatesbe
ThepreindustrialperiodofthedevelopmentofcitiesintheUnitedStatesbe
TheIndustrialRevolutionstartedin______.A、theGreatBritainB、theUnitedSt
[originaltext]Interviewer(W)StevenSlater(M)W:Welcomeeverybody.Andtoday
[originaltext]Interviewer(W)StevenSlater(M)W:Welcomeeverybody.Andtoday
随机试题
关于优先审查,以下说法错误的是?()A.专利申请人或者复审请求人已经做好实施
下列不属于硬膜外麻醉禁忌证的是()A.严重休克 B.低血压或严重高血压
一转动惯量为J的圆盘绕一固定轴转动,起初角速度为ω0设它所受阻力矩与转动角速度成
一位拾荒老人拿着一大包捡来的物品乘坐公交车,被女司机责骂驱赶.其随身携带的物品被
A.肝 B.心 C.脾 D.肺 E.肾内风与其功能失常密切相关的脏腑是(
A."先知儒理,然后方知医理……。" B."我愿尽余之能力及判断力所及,遵守为
A.甲丙氨酯 B.苯巴比妥 C.苯妥英钠 D.氯丙嗪 E.安定属于氨基甲
丝线:刺绣A.中国:国家 B.瓷砖:镶嵌 C.山脉:山峦 D.书:
根据个人所得税法律制度的规定,下列情形中,纳税人应当依法办理纳税申报的有()。
下列化合物不属于糖异生的原料的是 A.甘油 B.氨基酸 C.丙酮酸
最新回复
(
0
)