PROBLEM A’6 The Economists’ Approach to Pricing; Absorption Costing Approach to Cost-Plus
Pricing [LO1, LO2]
Software Solutions, Inc., was started by two young software engineers to market SpamBlocker, a
software application they had written that screens incoming e-mail messages and eliminates unsolicited
mass mailings. Sales of the software have been good at 50,000 units a month, but the company
has been losing money as shown below:
Sales (50,000 units $25 per unit) . . . . . . . . . $1,250,000
Variable cost (50,000 units $6 per unit) . . . . 300,000
Contribution margin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 950,000
Fixed expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 960,000
Net operating income (loss) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ (10,000)
The company’s only variable cost is the $6 fee it pays to another company to reproduce the
software on fl oppy diskettes, print manuals, and package the result in an attractive box for sale to
consumers. Monthly fi xed selling and administrative expenses are $960,000.
The company’s marketing manager has been arguing for some time that the software is priced
too high. She estimates that every 5% decrease in price will yield an 8% increase in unit sales. The
marketing manager would like your help in preparing a presentation to the company’s owners concerning
the pricing issue.
Required:
1. To help the marketing manager prepare for her presentation, she has asked you to fi ll in the
blanks in the following table. The selling prices in the table were computed by successively
decreasing the selling price by 5%. The estimated unit sales were computed by successively
increasing the unit sales by 8%. For example, $23.75 is 5% less than $25.00 and 54,000 units
is 8% more than 50,000 units.
774 Appendix A
Selling
Price
Estimated
Unit Sales Sales
Variable
Cost
Fixed
Expenses
Net
Operating
Income
$25.00 50,000 $1,250,000 $300,000 $960,000 $(10,000)
$23.75 54,000 $1,282,500 $324,000 $960,000 $ (1,500)
$22.56 58,320 ? ? ? ?
$21.43 62,986 ? ? ? ?
$20.36 68,025 ? ? ? ?
$19.34 73,467 ? ? ? ?
$18.37 79,344 ? ? ? ?
$17.45 85,692 ? ? ? ?
$16.58 92,547 ? ? ? ?
$15.75 99,951 ? ? ? ?
2. Using the data from the table, construct a chart that shows the net operating income as a function
of the selling price. Put the selling price on the X-axis and the net operating income on the
Y-axis. Using the chart, determine the approximate selling price at which net operating income
is maximized.
3. Compute the price elasticity of demand for the SpamBlocker software. Based on this calculation,
what is the profi t-maximizing price?
4. The owners have invested $2,000,000 in the company and feel that they should be earning at
least 2% per month on these funds. If the absorption costing approach to pricing were used,
what would be the target selling price based on the current sales of 50,000 units? What do you
think would happen to the net operating income of the company if this price were charged?
5. If the owners of the company are dissatisfi ed with the net operating income and return on investment
at the selling price you computed in (3) above, should they increase the selling
price? Explain.
PROBLEM A’7 Missing Data; Markup Computations