Different Pricing Strategies Your company is trying to determine the appropriate price for a product. You collect all the variable and fixed costs from manufacturing to selling and administrative expenses based on different production levels fi.e. 0 to 10.000 units, 10.001 to 20.000 units, 20,001 to 30,000 units and 30.001 to 40,000 units), In the visualization for this exercise, you can also find the detailed cost items by hovering over the figure. Based on this information, please answer the following questions. Click here to access a Tableau file, and here to access a Power Bi file. (The Tableau and Power Bi files contain the same dota; you can use either to answer the questions in this assignment. Your instructor may specify which program they prefer you to use!) How to Access Tableau: You can open the Tableau file in this problem statement with Tableau Desktop sottware. if you don'thave Tableau Desktop, you can download the most recent version of Tableau Reader, a free program that allows you to open Tableau visualizations. To get the most recent version, search for "Tableau Reader" in your internet browser. or click here. How to Access Power BI: You can open the Power BI file in this problem statement with Power BI Desktop. If you don'thave it already: search for "Power BI download" in your internet browser. or click here for a free download. Irvel in Units PIII If the company sets the markup as 25% of total cost per unit, how does the price change when the company produces and sells 40,000 units compared to 20.000 units? Based on the visualization, someone argues that since the fixed manufacturing cost per unit decreases with the number of units, it does not make sense to include it when setting the price as the price will go down as production level increases. is this statement. true