Marketing 3310
Safety Needs
Freedom from harm, Financial Security
Crosstabs
look at relationships between two variables
Share of Wallet
percentage of a customer's category/industry spending that they spend with a company
Subordinate Goals
"How can I achieve that for which I strive" (Exercising, Dieting)
Focal Goals
"What is it for which I strive" (Self Confidence)
Superordinate Goals
"Why do I want to achieve that for which I strive" (Feel and Look good, Live longer)
How does the buying center overlap?
-A decider could also be a gatekeeper -Users and initiators can be the same -sole proprietorship will be doing all of these things -Can be different depending on the purchase
Microsoft Vista Case Study
-Microsoft made huge promises about how great Windows Vista would be before it rolled out. These PR stunts created customer expectations that were not met by the final product. -Customers felt like Windows Vista hostages. New PCs came with Windows Vista pre-installed. Customers like to feel as if they're in control and able to make the choices that meet their needs. Forcing products down customers' throats does create happy customers. -As the market leader who had previously rolled out one product after another that customers were, for the most part, satisfied with, Microsoft became pompous. Instead of putting customers first and making sure the new products it rolled out met customers' needs and expectations, Microsoft put its own agenda first and rolled out a product that met its own needs but not its customers' needs.
Criteria used in creating segments
-Simplicity and cost effectiveness of assignment -Potential for increased profit -Similarity of needs within a segment -Difference of needs of buyers -Potential of a marketing action to reach a segments
Five step approach to marketing research
1. Define the problem 2. Develop a plan 3. Collect Data 4. Analyze the data 5. Take Action
Stages of Goal Setting
1. Goal setting- what pertains to me and my life, determining what goals I should pursue 2.Goal Intention- what is it for which I strive 3.Action planning- how can I achieve my goal 4. Action and control- am I making progress?
Five Steps to Segmenting
1. Group potential buyers into segments 2.Group products to be sold into categories 3. Develop a market-product grid and estimate the size of markets 4. Select target market 5. Take marketing actions to reach target markets
Three frameworks to understand how consumers decision processes are influenced:
1. Purchase decision process 2. Purchase funnel metaphor 3. Goal Setting formation
How prevalent is the idea of segmentation
58% think they do segmentation well so it is pretty prevalent
The Purpose of Segmentation
A business group segments its marketing so it can respond more effectively to the wants of groups of potential buyers and thus increase its sales and profits
Purchase Decision
After evaluating different solution or products available now the buyer will be able to choose the product most appropriate for their need (who do you make the purchase from and when do you make the purchase?)
The funnel metaphor
Awareness --> Familiarity --> Preferences--> Purchase--> Loyalty (Consumer start with a set of potential brand and methodically reduce them to make a purchase)
What is the long tail enabled by?
Breaking free of the constraints of physical space, finding ways to talk to markets segments economically and new distribution systems
Does all marketing research focus on customer and or consumers
Can be unique actionable insights about customers, environments, trends....
Potential problems with segmenting
Cannibalization, Redling, Segment Bleed
Primary Data
Data that you collect and look at yourself (social media, questionnaire, focus groups, surveys, and interviews)
Alternative Evaluation
Evaluating the brand and their respective attributes to see if they can deliver the problem/need (How well does it do the job?)
Physiological Needs
Food, Water, Shelter, Oxygen
Social Needs
Friendship, Belonging, Love
Variables of Segmentation
Geographic, Demographic, Psychographic, Behavioral, Behavioral 2
External Data
Government Stats, Trade Associations, Commercial Services, National and International Institutions
Marketing Forecasts are based on:
Historic Data
Segmentation
Involves aggregating prospective buyers into groups that have common needs and will respond similarly to a marketing action. It links market needs to an organizations marketing program. The purpose of segmentation is that is leads to tangible marketing actions that can increase sales and profitability. Two things are stressed. 1.) Meaningful groups 2.) Customized marketing mix
Consumer Purchasing
Irrational (making a decision on economic decisions)
Psychographic
Lifestyle, personality, needs (people of similar lifestyles tend to leave bar one another, have similar interests, and buy similar offerings)
Cross Tab
Looks at two different variables and the relationships between them (understanding how two different items on a survey interrelate)
Consideration Set
Made up of the brands that are taken seriously
Marketing the funnel metaphor
Marketing takes place throughout the funnel metaphor as companies try to direct their spending a messaging at the maximum point of influence
Three types of buying situations
New buy, Straight re-buy, Modified re-buy
Long Tail
Nice Products (a good or service with features that appeal to a particular market subgroup)
Decision Process for Organizational Buying
No different that the consumer section process
Influencers
Ones that have influence on the buying center; can be someone inside or outside of the organization
Deciders
Ones that make the purchase (can be gatekeepers)
Difference organizational purchasing and consumer
Organizational purchase typically are larger, more formalized, involves more people and emphasizes service more than consumer purchases
Which variable of segmentation is the best predictor of future behavior
Past behavior and geographic behavior
Type of data that is more time consuming
Primary
Purchase Decision Process Stages:
Problem Recognition Information Search Alternative Evaluation Purchase Decision Post-Purchase
Behavioral
Product features (groups us by what we want)
Which is the hardest variable of segmentation to collect?
Psychographics because its in peoples head you actually have to ask them about it
Problem Recognition
Purchase transaction cannot be completed unless a need for an item is first desired (develops a need that people didn't know they had)
Organizational Purchasing
Rational (whether B2B or B2C)
Internal Data
Sales data, Financial data, Transport Data, Storage Data
Type of data companies use first?
Secondary
Type of data that is cheaper?
Secondary
Type of data that is typically timelier?
Secondary
Type of data which provides more accurate data?
Secondary
Levels of Maslow's Hierarchy
Self actualization Personal Needs Social Needs Safety Needs Physiological Needs
Self-actualization Needs
Self-fulfillment
Information Search
Stage where the buyer searches for the best answer to the need. So gathering as much information as possible about the problem or need (Internal info- information that is already present in the consumer memory) (External info-information received and obtained by friends, family, reviews and other sources)
Personal Need
Status, Respect, Prestige
What does the long tail concept mean for marketing? where does the majority of potential revenue fall, in the head or tail?
The long tail concept for marketing argues that products that are in low demand or have low sales volume can collectively make up a marketing share that rivals or exceeds the relatively few current bestsellers or blockbusters, but only if the store or distribution channel is large enough. Long tail marketing involves more inventory management than product promotion, by providing a greater variety of inventory (extending the long tail), businesses hope to reach more customers and generate more total sales. The distribution and inventory cost of businesses successfully applying this strategy all them to realize significant profit out of selling small volumes of hard to find times to many customers instead of only selling large volumes of reduced number of popular items
What is the problem with demographic variables?
The problem is that the descriptions can apply to a lot of different people, it tends to make groups that are not homogenous, a lot of variability inside your segment
People in the buying center
Users, Gatekeepers, Initiators, Deciders, Influencers
A Market Product Grid
a framework to relate the market segments of potential buyers to products offered or potential marketing actions by an organization
Why the funnel metaphor characterized as a funnel?
because buyers are funneling out the companies that they don't want (each stage decreases as it goes down)
Which variable of segmentation do companies typical utilize the least?
behavioral and psychographics
Panel Data
behaviors of entities are observed across time (balanced, and unbalanced panel
Potential for increased profit
best segment approach is the one that maximizes the opportunity for future profit and return on investment
Self-concept
composite of ideals, attitudes, feelings, that a person has about their own identity, worth, capabilities, and limitations
Secondary Data
data that already exists and you go observe it (balance sheet, sales figures, inventory records)
Why are psychographic variable dangerous?
deal with an individual's lifestyle and personality. This can be dangerous because in order for this to work you must be under the assumption that people with similar lifestyles tend to live near one another and have similar interests
Peripheral Route Involvement
decision making criteria that can be very fast but not necessarily always true; low involvement, quick way to making decisions
Mystery Shopping is what type of research
descriptive research
Exploratory Research
don't have a very well defined plan so you need to go out and assess, sometimes the answer you get can be misleading, it can give you direction on where to go
Post-Purchase
evaluate the quality of original needs and decide if the right choice was made (How satisfied are you with the purchase?)
Which is the easiest variable of segmentation to collect?
geographic (zip codes, are very easy to get)
The Tail
has become more economically feasible to reach, There's more potential sales that you can reach than there is in the head
Demographic
household size, gender, race, age, life stage (ex. Campbell packages meals with one or two servings since more than half the household in the U.S are made up of only one or two people)
Actual self-concept
how a person really is
Ideal self-concept
how a person would like to be
Simplicity and cost effectiveness of assignment
identifying the characteristics of potential buyers in market and then cost-effectively assigning them to a segment
Difference of needs of buyers
if the needs of the various segments are't very different, combine them into fewer segments
Descriptive Research
involves trying to find the frequency that something occurs or the extent of a relationship between two factors (provide an accurate description for something that is occurring)
Attitude
learned predisposition to respond to an object or class of objects in a consistently favorable or unfavorable way
Central Route Involvement
logically think about the product, think of weaknesses and strengths, spend a lot of time of decisions
Segment Bleed
marketing communications we make for one segment that actually get viewed by another one
Initiators
ones that start the process; start the need, sometimes inside or outside the organization
Users
ones that will actually y use the product in some way, shape or form (MIGHT NOT BE BUYERS)
Gatekeepers
ones who allow information in and out for that purchase (people who control flow of info through business, secretaries, office managers
Similarity of needs within a segment
potential buyers within a segment should be similar in terms of common needs that in turn lead to a common marketing action
New buy
purchases to serve a need that has no been served before in any way; long decision time
Potential of a marketing action to reach a segment
reaching a segment requires a simple but effective marketing action. If no such action exist, don't segment
Geographic
region, city size, statistical area, density (ex. Campbell Soup company produced different flavors for different parts of the country)
What happens with the long tail?
sales are made for goods not commonly sold. These goods can return a profit through reduced marketing and distribution cost . It is a term used in online business.
Critical Incident
something outside the norm that is very bad or very good, when we take account of critical incident our thoughts become malleable again ONLY WAY WE CAN CHANGE ATTITUDE
What is the problem with demographic variables?
the descriptions can apply to a lot of different people, a lot of variability inside of your segments
Involvement
the personal, social, and economical significance of a purchase to a consumer. Consumers tend to have involvement when purchases are expensive, have personal consequence and reflect ones social image (level of involvement reflects how personally interested in the product you are and how much info you need to make a decision about the product)
Redlining
the practice of denying, or chaining more for, service uch as banking, insurance, access to health care, or even supermarkets to resident in particular,often racially determine areas
Forecasting
the use of historic data to determine the direction of future trends
What is the goal of most marketing research?
uncover unique and actionable insight
Behavioral 2
usage rate; the quantity consumed or patronage-store visit- during specific period (how many times we use something)
Hard to change attitudes
we aren't open to change attitude all the time
Pareto Principle
when 80% of your results come from 20% of your inputs and 80% of revenue comes from 20% of your customers
Modified re-buy
when a slight need has changed, causes you to go out into the market and buy a different product; moderate decision time
Cannibalization
when new products steal customers and sales from existing ones. Can be planned or unplanned
Straight re-buy
when you are purchasing something and you run out and you are just going to re-buy it; short decision time
Casual Research
why they are buying the product and seeing how actions will affect a business in the future Causation: one action causes another Correlation: relationship seemingly