Transcript segmented
Chapter Six
Segmentation, Targeting,
and Positioning:
Building the Right Relationships
with the Right Customers
Steps in Target Marketing
Market segmentation
– Dividing a market into smaller groups of buyers
with distinct needs, characteristics, or behaviors
requiring separate products or marketing mixes.
Target marketing
– Evaluating each segment’s attractiveness and
selecting one or more to enter.
Market positioning
– Setting the competitive positioning for the
product and creating a detailed marketing mix.
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Market Segmentation
Segmenting Consumer Markets
(Table 6.1, page 166)
Key variables:
– Geographic
– Demographic
– Psychographic
– Behavioral
No single way to segment a market.
May combine more than one variable to
better define segments.
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Market Segmentation
Geographic:
– World region or country
– Region of country
– City or metro size
– Density or climate
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Market Segmentation
Demographic:
– Age, gender, family size, family life cycle,
income, occupation, education, race,
religion, etc.
– The most popular bases for segmenting
customer groups.
– Easier to measure than most other types
of variables.
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Market Segmentation
Psychographic:
– Social class
– Lifestyle
– Personality
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Market Segmentation
Behavioral:
– Occasion segmentation
• Special promotions and labels for
holidays.
• Special products for special occasions.
– (e.g., Kodak disposable cameras)
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Market Segmentation
Behavioral:
– Benefits Sought
• Different segments desire different
benefits from products.
– (e.g., P&G’s multiple brands of laundry
detergents to satisfy different needs in the
product category)
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Market Segmentation
Behavioral:
– User Status
• Nonusers, ex-users, potential users,
first-time users, regular users
– Usage Rate
• Light, medium, heavy
– Loyalty Status
• Brands, stores, companies
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Market Segmentation
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.
– Geodemographic segmentation is
becoming more common.
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Market Segmentation
Segmenting Business Markets
Consumer and business markets use
many of the same variables for
segmentation.
Business marketers can also use:
– Operating Characteristics
– Purchasing Approaches
– Situational Factors
– Personal Characteristics
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Market Segmentation
Segmenting International Markets
Factors used:
–
–
–
–
Geographic location
Economic factors
Political and legal factors
Cultural factors
Intermarket segmentation:
– Segments of consumers who have similar needs
and buying behavior even though they are located
in different countries.
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Requirements for Effective
Segmentation
Measurable
Accessible
Substantial
Differentiable
Actionable
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Target Marketing
1. Evaluating Market Segments:
Segment Size and Growth
–
Segment Structural Attractiveness
–
Analyze current segment sales, growth rates, and
expected profitability.
Consider competition, existence of substitute products,
and the power of buyers and suppliers.
Company Objectives and Resources
–
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Examine company skills & resources needed to succeed
in that segment.
Offer superior value and gain advantages over
competitors.
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Target Marketing
2. Selecting Target Market Segments:
Undifferentiated (mass) marketing
– Ignores segmentation opportunities
Differentiated (segmented) marketing
– Targets several segments and designs separate
offers for each
Concentrated (niche) marketing
– Targets one or a couple small segments
Micromarketing (local or individual marketing)
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Micromarketing
Tailoring products and marketing
programs to suit the tastes of specific
individuals and locations.
– Local Marketing: Tailoring brands and
promotions to the needs and wants of
local customer groups—cities,
neighborhoods, specific stores.
– Individual Marketing: Tailoring products
and marketing programs to the needs and
preferences of individual customers.
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Target Marketing
3. Choosing a Market Coverage Strategy
Factors to consider:
– Company resources
– Product variability
– Product’s life-cycle stage
– Market variability
– Competitors’ marketing strategies
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Socially Responsible Targeting
Smart targeting helps both companies and
consumers.
Target marketing sometimes generates
controversy and concern.
– Vulnerable and disadvantaged can be targeted.
– Cereal, cigarette, and fast-food marketers have
received criticism.
– Internet has raised fresh concerns about
potential targeting abuses.
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Positioning for Competitive
Advantage
Product’s position is the way the
product is defined by consumers on
important attributes, or as the place the
product occupies in consumers’ minds
relative to competing products.
– Perceptual position maps can help define
a brand’s position relative to competitors.
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