Market Segmentation and Targeting Strategies in Consumer and Business Markets
Millennials
75.4 million people born between 1980 and 1994 who are idealistic, pragmatic, and the most technology-proficient generation.
Volume of Purchase
A commonly used basis for business segmentation categorized as heavy, moderate, or light.
Positioning Statement
A declaration that outlines how a product is unique and why it is the best option for a target market.
Assumption of Undifferentiated Targeting
A firm that adopts an undifferentiated targeting strategy assumes that individual customers have similar needs that can be met with a common marketing mix.
Target Market
A group of people or organizations for which an organization designs, implements, and maintains a marketing mix intended to meet the needs of that group, resulting in mutually satisfying exchanges.
Undifferentiated Targeting Strategy
A marketing approach that views the market as one big market with no individual segments and thus uses a single marketing mix.
Perceptual Mapping
A means of displaying or graphing, in two or more dimensions, the location of products, brands, or groups of products in customers' minds.
Multiple-variable segmentation
A method that uses more variables to segment markets, providing more precision than single-variable segmentation.
Personality
A person's traits, attitudes, and habits.
Product Differentiation
A positioning strategy that some firms use to distinguish their products from those of competitors.
80/20 Principle
A principle holding that 20 percent of all customers generate 80 percent of the demand.
Substantiality
A segment must be large enough to warrant developing and maintaining a special marketing mix.
Family Life Cycle (FLC)
A series of stages determined by a combination of age, marital status, and the presence or absence of children.
Multisegment Targeting
A strategy that chooses two or more well-defined market segments and develops a distinct marketing mix for each.
Concentrated Targeting Strategy
A strategy used to select one segment of a market for targeting marketing efforts.
Market segment
A subgroup of people or organizations sharing one or more characteristics that cause them to have similar product needs.
Marketing Concept Alignment
Aligns with the marketing concept of satisfying customer wants and needs while meeting the organization's objectives.
Advantages of Concentrated Targeting
Allows a firm to concentrate on understanding the needs, motives, and satisfaction of that segment's members.
Secondary Target Market
An additional group of consumers that a product may also appeal to.
Market Profile
An analysis of segments that includes size, expected growth, purchase frequency, brand usage, loyalty, and profit potential.
Positioning Assumptions
Assumes that consumers compare products on the basis of important features.
Optimizers
Business customers who consider numerous suppliers (both familiar and unfamiliar), solicit bids, and study all proposals carefully before selecting one.
Satisficers
Business customers who place an order with the first familiar supplier to satisfy product and delivery requirements.
Geodemographics
Categories based on a combination of neighborhood, lifestyle, and other demographic variables.
Repositioning
Changing consumers' perceptions of a brand in relation to competing brands.
Segmentation Variables
Characteristics of individuals, groups, or organizations used for segmentation.
Climate in geographic segmentation
Commonly used for geographic segmentation due to its dramatic impact on residents' needs and purchasing behavior.
Buying Processes
Companies can segment some business markets by ranking key purchasing criteria, such as price, quality, technical support, and service.
Family Life-Cycle Segmentation
Consumption patterns among people of the same age and gender may differ because they are in different stages of the family life cycle.
Choice of Segmentation Bases
Crucial, because an inappropriate segmentation strategy may lead to lost sales and missed profit opportunities.
Identifiability and Measurability
Data about the population within geographic boundaries, the number of people in various age categories, and other social and demographic characteristics are often easy to get, providing fairly concrete measures of segment size.
Customer Personas
Detailed profiles of prototypical customers based on market segmentation.
Usage-Rate Segmentation
Dividing a market by the amount of product bought or consumed.
Motives
Emotions and desires that can drive purchasing decisions.
Reasons for Market Segmentation
Enables marketers to identify groups of customers with similar needs and to analyze the characteristics and buying behavior of these groups.
Company Characteristics
Examples include geographic location, type of company, company size, and product use.
Positioning Bases
Firms use a variety of bases for positioning, including product user, attribute, product class, price and quality, competitor, use or application, and emotion.
Segmentation Criteria
Four basic criteria that segments must meet: needs or wants, ability to buy, willingness to buy, and identifiable segments.
Defining Marketing Objectives
Helps decision makers more accurately define marketing objectives and better allocate resources.
Customer Needs and Wants
Helps marketers define customer needs and wants more precisely.
Key to Effective Segmentation
Identify bases that will produce substantial, measurable, and accessible segments that exhibit different response patterns to marketing mixes.
Disadvantages of Concentrated Targeting
If chosen segment is too small or if it shrinks or changes, the firm may suffer negative consequences.
Silent Generation
Individuals born before 1946 who tend to be cautious, hardworking, and disciplined.
Baby Boomers
Individuals born between 1946 and 1964 who outspend the average consumer in nearly every product category.
Generation Xers
Individuals born between 1965 and 1979 who are often caught between supporting aging parents and young children.
Generation Z
Individuals born from 1995 to 2015 who want to work for their success and believe brands need to be real.
Disadvantages of multiple-variable segmentation
It is often harder to use, usable secondary data are less likely to be available, and as the number of segmentation bases increases, the size of individual segments decreases.
Understanding Customer Lifestyles
Leads to a deeper understanding of customer lifestyles, values, jobs to be done, need states, and buying occasions.
Segmentation Bases
Marketers use one or more segmentation bases, or variables, to divide a total market into segments.
Responsiveness
Markets can be segmented using any criteria that seem logical; unless one market segment responds to a marketing mix differently than other segments, that segment need not be treated separately.
Disadvantages of Multisegment Targeting
May involve higher costs for product design, production, promotion, inventory, marketing research, and management.
Benefits of Multisegment Targeting
May lead to greater sales volume, higher profits, larger market share, and economies of scale in manufacturing and marketing.
Observable Variables
Measurable characteristics that vary between market segments.
Niche
One segment of a market.
Market
People or organizations with needs or wants and the ability and willingness to buy.
Importance of Market Segmentation
Plays a key role in the marketing strategy of almost all successful organizations.
Advantages of Undifferentiated Targeting
Potential for saving on production and marketing because only one item is produced; marketing costs may be lower.
Disadvantages of Undifferentiated Targeting
Potentially sterile, unimaginative product offerings that have little appeal to anyone; makes the company more susceptible to competition.
Designing Marketing Mixes
Provides marketers with information to help them design marketing mixes specifically matched with the characteristics and desires of one or more segments.
Market density
Refers to the number of people within a unit of land, such as a census tract.
Age segmentation
Refers to the practice of marketers using various terms to categorize different age groups.
Positioning Requirements
Requires assessing the positions occupied by competing products, determining the important dimensions underlying these positions, and choosing a position that will have the greatest impact.
Demographic segmentation
Segmenting markets by age, gender, income, ethnic background, and family life cycle.
Geographic segmentation
Segmenting markets by region of a country or the world, market size, market density, or climate.
Psychographic Segmentation
Segmenting markets on the basis of personality, motives, lifestyles, and geodemographics.
Reasons for Repositioning
Sometimes products or companies are repositioned to sustain growth in slow markets or to correct positioning mistakes.
Segmentation Descriptors
Specific variables used to identify and define market segments.
Demographics
Statistical data relating to the population and particular groups within it, including age, income, gender, and education.
Marketing Mix
The combination of product, price, place, and promotion strategies used to market a product.
Competitive Frame
The context in which a product is compared to its competitors.
Price Sensitivity
The degree to which the price of a product affects consumers' purchasing behaviors.
Accessibility
The firm must be able to reach members of targeted segments with customized marketing mixes.
Usage Rate
The frequency with which consumers use a product.
Primary Target Market
The main group of consumers that a product is aimed at.
Geographic Area
The physical location where consumers reside, which can influence market segmentation.
Position
The place a product, brand, or group of products occupies in consumers' minds relative to competing offerings.
Internal Marketing
The practice of promoting a company's objectives, products, and services to its employees.
Income segmentation
The practice of segmenting markets based on income level, which influences consumers' wants and determines their buying power.
Gender segmentation
The practice of targeting consumers based on gender, where women drive 70 to 80 percent of purchases of consumer goods each year.
Dynamic Segmentation
The process of adjusting market segments based on changing consumer behaviors and needs.
Target Market Selection
The process of deciding which market segments to focus on for marketing efforts.
Market Segmentation
The process of dividing a market into distinct subsets of consumers with common needs or characteristics.
Benefit Segmentation
The process of grouping customers into market segments according to the benefits they seek from the product.
Segment Profile
The profile should include the segments' size, expected growth, purchase frequency, current brand usage, brand loyalty, and long-term sales and profit potential.
Benefits Sought
The specific advantages or value that customers look for in a product.
Positioning
The strategy of defining how a product is perceived in the minds of consumers relative to competing products.
Psychographics
The study of consumers based on their lifestyles, values, goals, interests, attitudes, and opinions.
Lifestyles
The way people spend their time, the importance of the things around them, their beliefs, and socioeconomic characteristics.
Ethnic Segmentation
To meet the needs and wants of expanding ethnic populations, some companies make products geared toward specific ethnic groups.
Psychographic Variables
Variables that include personality, motives, lifestyles, and geodemographics.
