What’s Happening?
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Transcript of What’s Happening?
What’s Happening?
http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/8cNyFv/www.dailydawdle.com/2010/09/10-best-lifes-too-short-for-wrong-job.html
CHAPTER 8
Market Segmentation and Positioning
Market Segmentation
Dividing the total heterogeneous market for a good or product into smaller groups which are more homogeneous.
1.Break marke
t down
2.Group into
segments
TARGET MARKET
3.Choos
etarget marke
t
Steps in Segmentation & Targeting
Segmentation works because,….
Not all buyers are alikeSubgroups may be identifiedSubgroups are smaller and more
homogeneousEasier to satisfy smaller groupswww.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
1. Undifferentiated Marketing: When everyone is a customer. Firm decides to ignore
market segment differences and go after the whole market with one offer.
2. Concentrated Marketing: Zeroing in on a single target. A firm goes after a large
share of one market.3. Differentiated Marketing:
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
4. Custom/Individual Marketing: 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-picker-
upper?” The “uncola?” “Great taste, less
filling?”
Positioning Map
Positioning map for large luxury SUVs.
Positioning Maps for Tea(Exhibit 8-12, PAGE 215)