aem 4160: strategic pricing prof.: jura liaukonyte virgin cell case: excercises 1

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AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

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Page 1: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICINGPROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE

VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES

1

Page 2: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

Pricing Structure from the Carrier Perspective

Contracts: Annual churn rate WITH contracts =2% * 12 months = 24%

(p.8) Annual churn rate WITHOUT contracts =6% * 12 months =

72% (p.8) The difference: 72% - 24% = 48%

Take AT&T example: customer base = 20.5 millionIf AT&T abandons the contract based plan how many new customers

would it need to acquire to offset customers from an increased churn rate?

Additional customers lost to churn: 48% * 20.5 mln = 9.84 mln Acquisition cost per customer: $370 (case p.2) Total cost of offsetting higher churn rate: $370 * 9.84 mln =$3.64 bil.

Not surprising that major players still continue to hold the contracts.

Page 3: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

“Menu” pricing: Actual Usage

Page 4: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

Bucket/”Menu” pricing

In reality most consumers are paying more than their optimal rate = if they new exactly how much they will consume

“industry makes money from consumer confusion”

Pricing menus allow carriers to advertise low per minute rates

But most consumers end up choosing the wrong menu.

Page 5: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

Hidden Fees

Able to promote low per minute prices, but still collect additional revenues

Page 6: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

Acquisition costs

Advertising per gross add: from $75 to $100 (p.5)

Sales commission paid per subscriber: $100 (p.5)

Handset subsidy provided to the subscriber: $100 to $200 (p.9)

Total: from $275 to $405 (let’s assume somewhere in the middle = $370)

Page 7: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

Break Even point

Monthly ARPU (average revenue per unit): $52 (p.3)

Monthly Cost-to-Serve: $30 (p.3) Monthly Margin: $22 Time required to break even on the acquisition

cost

= $370/ $22= 17 months In the cellular industry the monthly margin is

relatively fixed across periods, therefore the traditional LTV can be simplified (assuming infinite horizon):

M = margin the customer generates in a yearr = annual retention rate = (1-12*monthly churn rate)i = interest rate (assume 5%)AC = acquisition cost

LTV = M

- AC1-r+i

Page 8: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

LTV with contracts

The annual retention rate in the industry

= 1-12*0.02=0.76

LTV = 22 * 12

- 370 = $5401- .76

+ .05

Page 9: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

LTV without contracts

Eliminate contracts -> churn rate increases to 6%

Calculate the LTV:

LTV = 22 * 12

- 370 = -27.141- .28 + .05

Page 10: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

Eliminate Hidden Costs

$ 29 cellular bill becomes $35 due to hidden costs

Increase of 21% If these costs were eliminated, the $22

margin would be reduced to $18.18= $22/1.21

Break even would become 20 months = 370/18.18

Page 11: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

What happens to LTV?

Without hidden costs, but with contracts

Without hidden costs and without contracts

Elimination of contracts drives LTV below zero

Hidden costs boost the bottom line

LTV = 18.18 * 12

- 370 = 3821- .76 + .05

LTV = 18.18 * 12

- 370 = -86.681- .28 + .05

Page 12: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

Option 3: different pricing approach Target audience: Youth

Loathe contracts Fail credit checks Ideal plan: no contracts, no menus, no

hidden fees…

How to differentiate itself, and have a positive LTV

Look at the factors that affect LTV

Page 13: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

Options for Lowering Acquisition Costs Advertising costs per customer

Industry=from $75 to $100 Virgin planned ad costs = 60 mil/1min= $60 (p.5)

Handset subsidies: Current industry handset cost: $150 to $300 (assume

$225) (p.5) Current industry handset subsidy: $100 to $200

(assume $150) (p.9) Current industry handset subsidy as a %: 67%

Virgin’s handset cost: $60 to $100 (assume $80) Assume Virgin’s subsidy around 30% = $30

Page 14: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

Acquisition costs

Then Virgin’s AC would be just $120 vs. industry average $370 Sales commission: $30 Advertising per gross add: $60 Handset Subsidy $30 Total: $120

Page 15: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

Consumer friendly plan: how to achieve profitability

Break Even analysis: at what per minute price would Virgin break even: Virgin’s monthly ARPU: (200 minutes)*(p), where

p=price per minute Monthly cost to serve: .45 * 200 * p Monthly margin: 200p - 90p = 110p

p > 0.07

LTV = 12*110p

- 120 > 01- .28 + .05

Page 16: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

Other price points

What if Virgin charged per minute price comparable to other industry prices, somewhere in between 10 and 25 cents: At 10 cents:

At 25 cents:

LTV = 12*110*.1

- 120 = $511- .28 + .05

LTV = 12*110*.25

- 120 = $3091- .28 + .05

Page 17: AEM 4160: STRATEGIC PRICING PROF.: JURA LIAUKONYTE VIRGIN CELL CASE: EXCERCISES 1

Virgin’s Pricing Plan: What happened A prepaid plan No contracts No hidden charges No peak off peak hours Very low handset subsidies No credit checks No Monthly bills Price: 25 cents per minute for the first 10

minutes; 10 cents/minute for the rest of the day

No exact numbers, but churn rate lower than 6%