Understanding Enterprise Pricer

The chapter discusses:

Click to jump to parent topicPrice Determination

This diagram provides an overview of how list price and net price are determined for each transaction line during the transaction process.

Price determination process (1 of 2)

Price determination process (2 of 2)

During order entry, when the customer service representative (CSR) creates or modifies a sales order, quote, or contract (when using PeopleSoft Contracts), Enterprise Pricer is called.

First, Enterprise Pricer uses this process to determine the list price for the transaction line:

  1. Find all price rule conditions that match the transaction line.

  2. Check whether the transaction line is list price protected.

    For example, in a given sales order, if the order line product price is derived from the buying agreement and the buying agreement price is a list price and List Price Protected is set to Yes, then the list price determination step is skipped and the system moves on to determine the net price for the transaction line.

    , it is also list price protected.

    Note. If the transaction line is price protected

  3. If the transaction line is not list price protected, find a price list for the product on the transaction line.

    If the transaction line matches the condition of a price rule that is linked to the price list, the price list is considered for the transaction line.

    The best (lowest) price for price lists associated with price list fields is selected if Consider All Prices is defined for the application.

    The base product price is selected for the list price if the system finds no price defined for the product in the price lists. This is always the default.

    Note. The arbitration plan is not used to select or sort price lists.

Second, Enterprise Pricer determines the net price for the transaction line:

  1. Check to see whether the transaction line is price protected.

    If Price Protected is set to Yes then price formulas (adjustments) are not applied to the transaction line. The net price determination step is skipped and the system sets the list price and the net price to the same value on the transaction line.

  2. If Price Protected is set to No, then retrieve the stored conditions that match the transaction line and match those conditions to their associated price formulas from the price rules.

  3. Apply the arbitration plan to filter the list of formulas to only those that apply to the transaction line.

    The selected formulas are ones that either end in a decision node or end at the leaf level of the decision tree.

  4. After the list of price formulas is narrowed to only the formulas that apply to the transaction line, sort the formulas according to the hierarchy outlined by the arbitration plan.

Note. For PeopleSoft Order Management transactions (sales orders and quotes), when a buying agreement is in effect for the sold to customer or pricing customer group, the system skips the list price determination process because the list price is established by the buying agreement. If adjustments to the buying agreement are allowed, Price Protected is set to No and Enterprise Pricer determines net price with applicable adjustments using the appropriate arbitration plan. If adjustments to the buying agreement are not allowed, Price Protected is set to Yes and the list price and the net price returned to the transaction line are equal to the price specified on the buying agreement.

The Price and Availability component enables you to price a transaction without actually creating the sales order or quote. You can enter the same information as on the sales order or quote. You can select a base price from the PeopleSoft Inventory Business Unit base price or let the system automatically select a base (list) price from the price lists. The system then applies all price rule formula adjustments. As in sales order processing, Enterprise Pricer returns an audit list of the price rules and formulas that are applied at pricing time.

Batch pricing for the sales order or quote works the same way as the online pricing of the sales order or quote. Depending on how you set up online pricing installation options, pricing during order entry will occur in the background or when you save or click the price order button from the Order Entry page or the Shipment Schedules page.

Note. The entire sales order or quote, including previously entered lines, is priced every time a line or schedule is priced. This includes applying new adjustments or removing prior adjustments, unless they are price protected.

Click to jump to parent topicPeriod-To-Date Pricing

This section discusses:

Use period-to-date pricing to calculate price adjustments based on sales order totals across a predefined time frame, as opposed to within a single sales order. Price adjustments are applied only to the current sales order or sales order line, but the criteria used to determine a price formula match include order totals for multiple sales orders.

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicReprice or Change Orders

Only the current sales order is repriced. When a sales order is repriced, it takes into account only those period-to-date sales order totals that were entered prior to repricing. Any change to a sales order that affects period-to-date pricing is reflected in the current sales order and in any subsequent repricing or new sales orders.

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicPeriod-To-Date Caps

A warning message appears if a sales order is entered that goes over the last price formula for a period-to-date adjustment. You can split the sales order line into two lines to receive as much of an adjustment as possible. A price formula cap is the highest formula value of the last price formula associated with the price rule.

For example: a period-to-date price rule is created for customer USA01 and Product ID 10001. The price formula is for 1 EA to 100 EA. The existing sales orders for this customer and product total 95 EA. A new sales order for customer USA01 and product 10001 is entered with an order quantity of 10, which puts the cumulative orders over 100 EA. If there are no other price formulas on this price rule (over 100 EA), a warning is issued to the CSR. The CSR can create two order lines to maximize the adjustment for the customer:

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicPeriod-To-Date Adjustment Review

You can review the period-to-date price adjustments for a sales order from the Price Rule Audit page on the order line or schedule. The period-to-date adjustments appear with the other standard price adjustments and is flagged as a period-to-date adjustment.

You can preview other price adjustments for period-to-date pricing on the Price and Availability page by entering a PeopleSoft Order Management business unit and sold to customer along with the product, quantity, and other order information.

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicPeriod-To-Date Pricing Dates

Period-to-date totals are derived from the ORD_SCH_ARCH table. If you are archiving sales orders, leave them in the ORD_SCH_ARCH and ORD_PPRC_SET tables until the current period for period-to-date pricing has expired. Canceled schedules are not included.

Also, do not archive the ORD_SCH_ARCH table if you use the new One-Time-Only or Maximum Quantity price rule features.

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicPeriod-To-Date Pricing Setup

To set up period-to-date pricing so that price adjustments are based on a customer's period-to-date sales order totals:

  1. Define the pricing period using the Sales Calendar page.

  2. Select the calendar to use on the Order Management Setup Business Unit page.

    If PeopleSoft Promotions Management is installed, you are prompted to use period-to-date pricing after saving the business unit. The system searches for the Calendar ID in PeopleSoft Promotions Management.

  3. Select the period-to-date option on the Price Rule - Formulas page.

    Note. If PeopleSoft Promotions Management is installed and you want to use period-to-date pricing, you can select the Period To Date Totals Only check box in the Promotion Limitations group box when defining merchandising activities for a customer promotion or in the Allowance Limitations group box when defining discounts for a national allowance.

Click to jump to parent topicCost-Plus Pricing

You can now price based on a price other than a list price, such as cost or alternate cost. Previously, all pricing calculations, such as discount or surcharge, were based on list price. The list price came either from the price list or the list price of the product. Now the system must first determine the base price for pricing calculations.

If the order line is associated with a buying agreement, the base is always the buying agreement price.

With cost-plus pricing, you can set up a price rule to indicate the pricing base based on certain conditions. If there is no such price rule matched to the transaction line, the list price is used as the base price. If there are matching price base price rules, the order's arbitration plan is used to filter and sort the matching rule to determine the base. If there is no match in the arbitration plan, the list price (the default) is used).

The arbitration plan should have a node with a price rule type of “pricing base,” ideally as the first top-level node in the tree. It can have only one of these decisions as its child:

After determining the base, the other matching price rules are processed and the selected base is used for all the pricing calculations. However, several additional flags on the price rule specify whether or not the rule applies to transaction lines with a specific pricing base:

For example, if the pricing base for a specific transaction line is cost, a matching price rule that is not applicable to cost as a base is ignored.

Click to jump to parent topicWeight and Volume Pricing

To encourage customers to order in full truck, pallet, or container, you can monitor and offer order discounts based on the weight or volume of the order when setting up price rules. You must also use estimated shipments if pricing by weight or volume.

You can enter the weight and volume option (arbitration plan) on the General Information - Sold to Options page. The weight and volume option is used as the default weight and volume arbitration plan on the sold to section of the Order Entry Form page during order entry. If there isn't a weight and volume option entered on the Order Entry Form page, a warning message appears, alerting the clerk that weight and volume pricing is used for the PeopleSoft Order Management business unit and to select a weight and volume option for the system to calculate the weight and volume pricing.

You can view the weight and volume pricing adjustments on the Estimated Shipments Page. Use the Shipment Price Adjustments Page to view the price rule information for weight and volume pricing.

Note. Weight and volume is calculated when the order is saved. If weight and volume was calculated manually, it is recalculated at save time.

See Also

Maintaining Order Header and Line Information

Click to jump to parent topicAdditional Pricing Options

This section discusses:

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicSingle-Tiered Pricing Rule

Tiered pricing enables different pricing on portions of a schedule. It is used with quantity or price formula breaks. The formula breaks should not overlap. Tiered rule pricing is only available for price rules with a Price Action Type of Discount/Surcharge and Price Override.

Consider this example: We have a price rule and schedule set up for selling sinks.

Price rule: Sinks Rule 1

Price action type: discount/surcharge

Rollup flag by: schedule

Tiered Pricing: yes

Condition: Product ID=10050–10060 (these items are all sinks)

Formulas:

Formula range ID

Minimum and maximum quantities

Discount

1

1 to 10

5 percent

2

11 to 20

10 percent

3

21 to 99

20 percent

The schedule line lists a quantity purchase of 25 sinks. The first 10 sinks get a 5 percent discount. The next 10 sinks get a 10 percent discount. The rest of the sinks get a 20 percent discount. Three pricing schedules are generated for the same order schedule.

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicMultiple-Tiered Pricing Rules

There are instances where multiple-tiered rules are applied to the same schedule. Because different price rules use different quantity breaks, the quantities are merged by net price. With a cascading adjustment method, subsequent adjustments are applied to the existing price schedules. Additional pricing schedules are created as needed.

For example, assume we have already created the price rule described in the previous section. Now we add an additional price rule:

Price rule: Sinks Rule 2

Price action type: discount/surcharge

Rollup flag by: schedule

Tiered Pricing: yes

Condition: Product ID=10050–10060 (these items are all sinks)

Formulas:

Formula range ID

Minimum and maximum quantities

Discount

1

1 to 15

1 percent

2

16 to 30

2 percent

Based on this tiered rule, the first 15 sinks receive a one percent discount. The rest of the 10 sinks get a two percent discount. The quantities and the related adjustments from both price rules are calculated first then merged by net price.

These are the quantities and related adjustments from the price rule “Sinks Rule 1.”

Quantity group

Quantity

Discount

Formula

A

10

5 percent

1

B

5

10 percent

2

C

5

10 percent

2

D

5

20 percent

3

These are the quantities and related adjustments from the price rule “Sinks Rule 2.”

Quantity group

Quantity

Discount

Formula

E

10

1 percent

1

F

5

1 percent

1

G

5

2 percent

2

H

5

2 percent

2

Comparing the results from both price rules we know that the first 10 sinks get a five percent discount from the Sinks Rule 1 and a one percent discount from the Sinks Rule 2 for a total of six percent discount and end up with the same net price. Similarly, the next five sinks, get a 10 percent discount from the Sinks Rule 1 and a one percent discount from the Sinks Rule 2 for a total of 11 percent discount and end up with the same net price. Grouping the quantity by same net price will give us the final pricing schedules:

Pricing schedule

Quantity

Discount

Formulas

Quantity group

1

10

–6 percent

–5 percent Sinks Rule 1, Formula ID 1, and –1 percent Sinks Rule 2, Formula ID 1

A and E

2

5

–11 percent

–10 percent Sinks Rule 1, Formula ID 2, and –1 percent Sinks Rule 2, Formula ID 1

B and F

3

5

–12 percent

–10 percent Sinks Rule 1, Formula ID 2 and –2 percent Sinks Rule 2, Formula ID 2

C and G

4

5

–22 percent

–20 percent Sinks Rule 1, Formula ID 3, and –2 percent Sinks Rule 2, Formula ID 2

D and H

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicDiscounted Giveaways and “Buy One, Get One Free” Rules

Promotional pricing efforts are attempts to attract new customers, to get customers to try new products, or to liquidate excess inventory. A common promotion is to offer a free or discounted product if the customer purchases a particular product, often called a Buy-One-Get-One or BOGO. Enterprise Pricer enables you create BOGO price rules and also to create price rules that allow the customer to buy one product and get a different product at a discounted rate.

Enterprise Pricer enables you to define complex BOGO and BOGO-like promotions. You can specify the quantity of the giveaway and indicate the discount, surcharge, or price. Some sample types of promotional discounts that are possible include:

See Also

Creating Price Rules

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicDifferent Product Pricing and Ordering Units

Numerous industries have a different ordering unit of measure and pricing unit of measure. For example, in the paper industry typically orders are made in rolls. However, the product is priced per hundred-weight (CWT). Enterprise Pricer enables you to order in one unit of measure but define a different pricing unit of measure for the price rule. This enables the pricing engine to calculate the item price using a different unit of measure from the order unit of measure. When the order line is processed, the price based on the order UOM appears on the sales order page. Pricing results based on the pricing UOM appear on the Pricing Detail page.

Click to jump to top of pageClick to jump to parent topicAdvanced Pricing Calculation in a Price Rule

Achieving pricing goals specific to the needs of an organization is a crucial element to success in selling products. Sometimes this requires the ability to define organization-specific formulas that use a series of different operands. Enterprise Pricer enables you to create mathematical expressions in the price rule that is used to calculate the net price for a given product. This allows you to define complex promotional discounts where you specify the adjustment, override price, giveaway quantity using a custom mathematical expression. For example: a 5 percent discount plus a 5 USD discount to all orders of product 10050 during the ordering period February 1, 2005 to December 31, 2005.

With Enterprise Pricer, you can:

Using Indexes in Pricing Calculations

In PeopleSoft Contracts, IndexStartValue, IndexEndValue, and IndexStartAmount are pricing variables that are used in the mathematical expression attached to price formula. They are used for price index calculations. IndexStartValue and IndexEndValue are price index values effective on IndexStartDate and IndexEndDate that are automatically retrieved by the Enterprise Pricer during the pricing process from RT_RATE_TBL.

Note. IndexStartValue, IndexEndValue, and IndexStartAmount are used together. If one is used, you cannot use any other pricing variables.

The RT_RATE_TBL table is used to maintain the price index data:

Field Name

Description

Used By Enterprise Pricer

RT_RATE_INDEX

Market Rate Index

Identify the index. Its category must be “Economic Indicator,” as defined in table RT_INDEX_TBL.

TERM

Term

N/A

FROM_CUR

From Currency Code

Both currency codes, FROM and TO must be the same. They match the transaction’s currency.

TO_CUR

To Currency Code

Both currency codes, FROM and TO must be the same. They match transaction’s currency.

RT_TYPE

Rate Type

N/A

EFFDT

Effective Date

Used to select effective index value.

RATE_MULT

Rate Multiplier

Index value.

RATE_DIV

Rate Divisor

N/A

SYNCID

Synchronization ID

N/A

LASTUPDDTTM

Last Update Date/Time

N/A

As an example, suppose these market rates exist:

Market Index

Effective Date

Rate (Index Value)

CPI

January 1, 2000

1200

CPI

July 1, 2000

1280

CPI

January 1, 2001

1300

CPI

July 1, 2001

1320

GOV

January 13, 2000

100.20

GOV

June 20, 2000

100.40

GOV

December 11, 2000

100.80

GOV

March 1, 2001

101.10

Then a rate renewal takes place:

Current Offering Amount

Start Date

End Date

Renewal Basis

Price Index

Additional Percent

Price Cap Basis

Cap Percent

10,000

February 1, 2000

January 31, 2001

Index+additnl percent

CPI

2

Percent

5

10,000

February 1, 2000

January 31, 2001

Additnl percent

GOV

1.5

Index + Addtnl percent

1

You can set up price rule formulas to address the rate change:

Formula ID

Adjustment Flag

Numeric Value

Text Value (Math Expression)

Market Rate Index

Select Small/Larger

1

Percentage and Math Expression

5

IndexStartAmount * (1 + (IndexEndValue – IndexStartValue)/IndexStartValue + 2 / 100)

CPI

Smaller

2

Percentage and Math Expression

1.5

IndexStartAmount * (1 + (IndexEndValue – IndexStartValue)/IndexStartValue + 1 / 100)

GOV

Smaller

3

Percentage and Math Expression

2

IndexStartAmount * (IndexEndValue / IndexStartValue)

GOV

Larger

The starting values are:

The first formula is processed in this manner:

For the CPI market rate index, the Market Rate Table is used to find the index values for the start and end date, 1200 and 1300. The mathematical expression is evaluated as:

IndexStartAmount * (1 + (IndexEndValue – IndexStartValue)/IndexStartValue + 2 / 100) = 10000 * (1 + (1300 – 1200) / 1200 + 2 / 100) = 10000 * (1 + 0.0833 + 0.02) = 11033

The percentage calculation is, 10000 * (1 + 5 / 100) = 10500

Because the formula indicates to take the smaller of the two values (11033 and 10500), 10500 is the result of the formula.

The second formula is processed in this manner:

For the GOV market rate index, the Market Rate Table is used to find the index values for the start and end date, 100.20 and 100.80. The mathematical expression is evaluated as:

IndexStartAmount * (1 + (IndexEndValue – IndexStartValue)/IndexStartValue + 1 / 100) = 10000 * (1 + (100.80 – 100.20) / 100.20 + 1 / 100) = 10000 * (1 + 0.0060 + 0.01) = 10160

The percentage calculation is 10000 * (1 + 1.5 / 100) = 10150

Because the formula indicates to take the smaller of the two values (10160 and 10150), 10150 is the result of the formula.

The third formula's processing uses index values to perform different types of calculations:

For the GOV market rate index, the Market Rate Table is used to find the index values for the start and end date, 100.20 and 100.80. The mathematical expression is evaluated as:

IndexStartAmount * (IndexEndValue / IndexStartValue) = 10000 * (100.80 / 100.20) = 10000 * 1.0060 = 10060

The percentage calculation is 10000 * (1 + 2 / 100) = 10200

Because the formula indicates to take the larger of the two values (10060 and 10200), 10200 is the result of the formula.

See Also

Creating Price Rules