Highly Competitive Markets The most valuable brand in the world? (2007) 1.Coca Cola = Value of $45 Billion 2. Microsoft 3. IBM 4. General Electric 5. Nokia.

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Presentation transcript:

Highly Competitive Markets The most valuable brand in the world? (2007) 1.Coca Cola = Value of $45 Billion 2. Microsoft 3. IBM 4. General Electric 5. Nokia 6. Toyota 7. Intel 8. McDonalds=$25 Billion 9. Disney 10. Mercedes

Highly Competitive Markets 6.1 Intro: Highly competitive markets provide consumers with a wide range of products that are priced lower. Supply/Demand determine what products are produced and available. Two types of highly competitive markets: Perfect competition Monopolistic competition

Perfect Competition 6.1 Perfect Competition—is an ideal market structure in which buyers and sellers each compete directly and fully under the laws of supply and demand. Nothing prevents competition No one buyer/seller controls demand, supply, or prices.

Perfect Competition 6.1 Perfect Competition exists when: 1.Many buyers and sellers act independently. 2.Sellers offer identical products. 3.Buyers are well informed about products. 4.Sellers can enter or exit the market easily.

Perfect Competition Many Buyers and Sellers—No one buyer or seller has enough power to control the market.  Buyers/Sellers act independently  Promotes competition

Perfect Competition Identical Products—Buyers make purchasing decisions by comparing “apples to apples.” Buyers choose a product based on price, not on unique characteristics. Note: If one seller controlled all production of a good then it would be a monopoly.

Perfect Competition Informed Buyers—Buyers must be knowledgeable about products. Without accurate and readily available info buyers cannot compare products effectively. 4. Easy Market Entry and Exit—The freedom to switch from market to market helps insure no one can dominate market.

Monopolistic Competition 6.1 Monopolistic Competition—Differs from perfect competition in one key aspect—sellers offer different rather than identical products. Each firm seeks this in order to sell unique product. This is more common than perfect competition.

Monopolistic Competition 6.1 Similarities between Perfect and Monopolistic competition: Both compete under same laws of supply and demand. Both systems feature many buyers/sellers acting independently.

Monopolistic Competition 6.1 Product Differentiation—Sellers point out differences between their products and those of their competition. Non-Price Competition—Sellers compete on a basis other than price. Ex. Name jeans $100 and no name $20. Why? Advertising— Prada, Coach, purses

Monopolistic Competition 6.1 Profits—The main goal of sellers; By setting its product apart from the competition and convincing buyers to base their decisions on non-price factors. Therefore: A seller can raise its price and make more profit. Sellers look for “Brand Loyalty”