Formulating Strategy to Fill Identified Needs Segmentation
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Transcript Formulating Strategy to Fill Identified Needs Segmentation
1. Formulating Strategy to Fill
Identified Needs
2. Segmentation and Positioning
MARK 430 WEEK 4
What we will cover this week...
Now we have all that information about customer
behaviour and customer needs....
what are we going to do with it?
1. Formulate a strategy to fill the needs that we have
identified
2. Determine which customers to target, and how to
position our product/service vis a vis the competition
Main strategy tool: SWOT
analysis
Goal is to pursue opportunities that use your
company’s strengths, while avoiding threats
and overcoming weaknesses (Urban p 45)
Strategy formulation
Identify and rank strengths and weaknesses in your
company / organization
Technique:
list key marketing success factors eg.
high product quality
customer loyalty
patent protection
rank your position relative to that of your competition against
these factors
much worse, worse, equal, better, much better
Objective is to recognize, then build on your
strengths and overcome your weaknesses
Strategy formulation
Identify and rate opportunities and threats in the
external marketing environment
Opportunities eg.
technological change
low entry costs
market growth
unmet customer need
weak competition
customer power.....
Threats eg.
technological change
regulatory changes
price war
new competition
social change
customer power.....
Customer power: both threat and
opportunity
More information, more options, simpler
transactions
More knowledge, more sophistication
Threat to traditional marketing tactics - push
based, one-way
marketers must “make” customers buy
Opportunity to attract the “new” customer
trust-based marketing
build mutually beneficial relationship
Which strategic approach to follow?
Which one to use:
what kind of customers do you have?
what kind of product/service are you providing?
Push-based strategy
commodities
price sensitive
deal seekers
Pull (trust-based) strategy
expensive / complex product
information seeking customers
customers that value long-term relationship
The web is fundamentally a pull medium rather than
a push medium
Agree?
Trust based marketing
The web is really good an enabling trust
building (a paradox?)
HPs Online Advisor
Acts as an online advisor, that helps people
acquire products and services for their home.
How does HP benefit?
Benefits of trust-based
marketing
Fits the nature of the web medium
Ebay - ratings of buyers and sellers without
interference from EBay
Amazon - customer ratings of products (does
Amazon censor?)
Collaborative filtering
Reviews, customer ratings sites, blogs
Less churn (cheaper to keep a customer than
acquire a new one)
Cheaper to serve.
What we will cover this week...
Now we have all that information about customer
behaviour and customer needs....
what are we going to do with it?
1. Formulate a strategy to fill the needs that we have
identified
2. Determine which customers to target, and how to
position our product/service vis a vis the competition
Which customers will you serve? Segmentation
and Targeting
Marketing segmentation
the process of aggregating individuals or
businesses with similar characteristics
that relate to the use, consumption, or benefits
of a product or service.
Targeting
the process of selecting the market segments that
are most attractive to the firm
Why segment?
Customers prefer “custom” products
The market of one?
Cost
How many segments should we deliver?
What characteristics do we use to group
people into market segments
How do we know we are reaching those
segments?
Traditional marketing complaint
I know I am wasting 50% of my advertising
budget, but I don’t know which 50%
Did the right segment see the ad?
Internet technologies can answer that
question much more effectively than
traditional advertising media
The Internet advantage
The Internet is the marketer’s dream
Ad server companies (eg. DoubleClick)
compile and serve much narrower consumer
segments than mass media
Cost to deliver an ad is much smaller
User registration info and cookies provide
specific user data
including what they did after they saw the ad
immediately
later
Segmentation Bases and Examples of Related Variables
Bases
Geographics
Demographics Psychographics Behavior
Identifying /
Profiling
Variable
Examples
City
County
State
Region
Country
Age
Income
Gender
Education
Ethnicity
Activities
Interests
Opinions
Personality
Values
Importances
Benefits
sought
Usage level
Brand
loyalty
User status
VALS
An example of a Marketing strategy tool
(VALS stands for values and lifestyle, but now
focuses on personality)
segments the market on the basis of
personality traits
traits assumed to drive consumer behaviour
uses a survey instrument
The VALS personality types
Primary and secondary types
After Segmentation > Positioning
Product positioning takes place within a
target market segment
Position is based on consumer perception
What we need to know:
What product dimensions/attributes do consumers
use to evaluate?
How important are these when decisions are
made?
How do we and our competitors sit relative to
these dimensions
One tool we can use is a Perceptual Map
Perceptual Map: Automobiles
Classy
Distinctive
Conservative
Sporty
Practical
Affordable
2 uses for a perceptual map
Identify areas without
competitors
Mercedes
Honda
Ford
Nissan
Porsche
BMW
Chrysler
VW
Hyundai
Toyota
Cadillac
Dodge
Jeep
Saturn
Kia
Lexus
Display consumer’s ideal
points
These points reflect
ideal combinations of
the two dimensions
as seen by a
consumer.
Use them to identify
potential market
segments
The Internet’s big promise is individualized
targeting giving individual consumers exactly what they
want at the right time and place.