Transcript Chapter 13

Chapter Thirteen
Branding and Market
Positioning
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Salience, Importance, and
Determinance

Need to understand how customers
perceive and differentiate in order to
develop an effective strategy
– Salience
 “Top
of mind”
– Determinance
 Attributes
that determine choice
– Importance
 Attributes
that are important after the initial choice
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Objective Positioning
 Creating
an image for a product that
reflects its physical and functional
characteristics
– Concrete: e.g., red
– Abstract: e.g., fast
 Important
in hospitality to create an
image in the mind that is different
from the competition
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Subjective Positioning
 Create
a tangible image of a product
based on intangible customer
perceptions of product attributes
 Marketer
hopes that the target
market will agree on a favorable
image
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Tangible Positioning
 Creating
an intangible, subjective
image based on a tangible attribute
 Important in hospitality as many
products reach commodity status
 “When it rains, it pours”
 “I’m lovin’ it”
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Intangible Positioning
 Creating
a tangible, objective image
based on intangible attributes
 Important
in hospitality because our
“product” is largely intangible
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Effective Positioning
Must create an image, differentiate itself,
and promise a benefit
 Positioning approaches:
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By attribute, feature, or customer benefit
By price/quality
With respect to use or application
According to users or class of users
With respect to a product class
Vis-à-vis the competition
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Positioning’s Vital Role
 Should
be a “single concept umbrella
from which everything else in the
organization flows”
 Example:
“KFC”
Kentucky Fried Chicken as
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Repositioning
 Changing
the image in the
marketplace
 May stem from an unsuccessful
position, failure to achieve your
position, overcrowded position, or
exploiting a new niche or segment
 Examples:
– Dunkin’ Donuts
– Nikko/Atlanta
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
The Art of Repositioning
 Procedures:
– Determine the present position
– Determine what position you wish to occupy
– Make sure the product is truly different for
the repositioning
– Initiate the repositioning campaign based on
the three criteria of effective positioning
– Measure to see if the position has
significantly changed in the desired direction
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Developing a Market Positioning
Strategy
 Market
analysis
 Definition and analysis of market
segments
 Selection of most appropriate target
markets to serve
 Articulation of desired market
position
 Marketing action plan
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Developing Positioning
Strategies
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Company:
What are strengths and weaknesses, resources, management
capabilities, present market position, values, objectives, and
policies?
Where are we now?
Where do we want to go?
Product/service:
What are facilities, location, attributes (salient, determinant,
important), physical condition, level of service?
What is it?
What does it do, in functional terms?
Why do/should people come?
Brand position:
What are awareness, loyalty, and image?
How does it compare to competition?
What are the market segments?
What are the perceived attributes and how are they distributed
among the segments?
Where are we positioned?
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Developing Positioning
Strategies (cont.)
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Customers:
– What are their segments and needs and wants?
– What benefits do they seek?
– What is the optimal position of attributes for each segment?
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Competition:
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Who is their customer and why do they go there?
What do they do or not do better?
How are we differentiated?
What positions do they occupy?
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Where is it? What are the segments?
What is the generic demand?
What is our market share?
How are the segments reached?
The Marketplace:
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Developing Positioning
Strategies (cont.)
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Opportunities:
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What needs are unmet?
Can we meet them?
Can we improve on them?
What innovations are needed?
Are they worth going after?
Are there new uses, new users, or greater
usage?
Decision:
– What is the best overall position?
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Competitive Positioning
Checklist for Evaluating Positioning Strategy
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Does it say who you are and what you stand for? Does it create
a mental picture?
Does it set you apart and show how you are different?
Does it preempt a benefit niche and capitalize on an advantage?
Does it turn any liability into an asset?
Does it have benefits for the target market you are trying to
reach?
Does it provide tangible evidence or clues?
Does it feature the one or two things that your target market
wants most?
Is it consistent with strategy—for instance, does it expand or
exchange usage patterns? Create new awareness? Project the
right image?
Does it have credibility?
Does it make a promise you can keep?
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Internal Positioning Analysis

Positioning the offer with regard to the
competition
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Branding and Positioning
 Brand
equity
 Brand can supply “instant recognition”
 Important in franchising
 Important with Internet distribution
 Must have consistency and integrity of
brand
 Hotel restaurant branding
 Multiple brand and product positioning
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.
Shoemaker, Lewis, and Yesawich: Marketing
Leadership in Hospitality and Tourism, 4th edition
© 2007 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle
River, NJ 07458. All Rights Reserved.