Market Segmentation and Position
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Transcript Market Segmentation and Position
What’s Happening?
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Market Segmentation and Positioning
CHAPTER 8
Market Segmentation
Dividing the total heterogeneous market for a
good or product into smaller groups which are
more homogeneous.
Steps in Segmentation & Targeting
1.
Break
market
down
2.
Group
into
segments
3.
Choose
target
market
TARGET MARKET
Segmentation works because,….
Not all buyers are alike
Subgroups may be identified
Subgroups are smaller and more
homogeneous
Easier to satisfy smaller groups
www.fordvehicles.com
Effective Segmentation
To be useful, market segments must be:
Measurable: size, purchasing power, and profile
Accessible: can be reached and served/responsive
Substantial: large enough to profitably serve
Differentiable: respond differently to a marketing mix
Actionable: effective programs can be designed
Segments should be evaluated for:
Size
Growth characteristics
Structural attractiveness
Compatibility with company objectives and resources
Discussion Questions
Put yourselves into small groups and answer the
following assigned questions on page 218:
Question 2 and all parts of 4
Market Segmentation Variables
Geographic: dividing a
market into different
geographical units, such
as nations, states,
regions, counties, cities,
or neighbourhoods
Demographic: dividing
the market into groups
based on demographic
variables such as age,
sex, family size, family
life cycle, religion, race,
and nationality
Socioeconomic: identifying
differences in income,
education, occupation and
social class
Psychographic: dividing a
market into different groups
based on activities, interests,
lifestyle, opinions, values or
personality characteristics
Behavioural: dividing a market
into groups based on consumer
loyalty (to brand or store),
usage, benefits sought/
expected, response to a product
and price
Identifying Market Differences
Best to use multiple approaches in order to
identify smaller, better-defined target groups.
Start with a single base and then expand to other
bases.
Four strategies for target marketing
Undifferentiated Marketing:
1.
When everyone is a customer. Firm decides to ignore market
segment differences and go after the whole market with one
offer.
Concentrated Marketing:
2.
Zeroing in on a single target. A firm goes after a large share of
one market.
Differentiated Marketing:
3.
Different Buyers, Different Strategies. A firm decides to target
several market segments and designs separate offers for each.
http://www.tide.com/en_CA/index.jsp
Custom/Individual Marketing:
4.
Tailoring marketing offers to the needs and preferences of
individual customers
Choosing a Market Coverage Strategy
Depends on:
Company resources
Degree of product variability
Product life cycle stage
Market viability
Competitors’ marketing strategies
Market Positioning
Market positioning:
Arranging for a product to
occupy a clear, distinctive,
and desirable place relative
to competing products in
the minds of target
consumers.
Product position: the way
the product is defined by
consumers on important
attributes, relative to
competing products
The “quicker-pickerupper?”
The “uncola?”
“Great taste, less filling?”
Positioning Map
Positioning map for large luxury SUVs.
Positioning Maps for Tea
(Exhibit 8-12, PAGE 215)