Marketing Ch 9: Segmentation, Targeting, and Positioning
Undifferentiated Targeting Strategy
"Mass Marketing" marketing approach that views the market as one big market with no individual segments and thus requires a single marketing mix Advantages: potential savings on production and marketing costs Disadvantages: unimaginative, product, offerings, company, more susceptible to competition Ex: Coca Cola, M and Ms
Demographic Segmentation
- Age (ESPN 2 for teens) - Gender (Pantene, Dad Gear) - Income (dollar general, high end cars) - Ethnicity (whiskey, Asian hair products) - Family Life Cycle
Effective Positioning
1.) assess the positions occupied by competing products. 2.) determine the dimensions underlying these positions. 3.) choose a market position, where marketing affects will have the greatest impact - value proposition
Perceptual Mapping
A means of displaying or graphing, and two or more dimensions, the location of products, brands, or groups of products in customers minds Ex: 2 variable on x and y axis, marked with circles
Concentrated Targeting Strategy
A strategy used to select one segment of a market (a niche) for targeting marketing efforts Advantages: concentration of resources, meets narrowly defined segment, small firms and compete, strong positioning Disadvantages: segments too small or changing, large competitors may market to niche segment (Oldsmobile) Ex: Starbucks, HK ARMY
Family Life Cycle
Age, Marital Status, Children Ex: AXE for teens, lending free for married with children, subdivision for single moms, retirement communities
Usage Rate Segmentation
Based on QUANTITY purchased or consumed Ex: babybels are small amounts of cheese, Heineken for moderate drinkers, Schafer for heavy drinkers
Occasion Segmentation
Based on WHEN a product is purchased or consumed Ex: groom's suits, prom dresses
Repositioning
Changing consumers perceptions of a brand in relation to competing brands Ex: Marlboro from women to macho men, Sprite started for adults then to teens
Product Differentiation
Creating the Value Proposition A positioning strategy that some firms used to distinguish their products from those of competitors Distinctions can be real or perceived Ex: Bayer for heart, excedrin for migraines
Market Positioning
Defining the marketing mix variables to influence potential customers overall perception of a product in comparison with competing products
Behavioral
Divide customers into groups based on how they use the product
Micromarketing/One-to-One Marketing
Extreme form of segmentation that tailors a product to suit an individual customers wants and needs Ex: computers with colors, storage, etc.
Methods for Segmentation
Geographic Demographic Psychographic Benefit Behavioral Geodemographic Companies usually use more than one
Self Values
Goals for life Ex: mom education, online school
Geodemographic
Group and consumers on a combination of geographic, demographic, and lifestyle characteristics Ex: claritas to look up zip codes
Geographic Segmentation
Grouping consumers on the basis of where they live - Region of the country/world: Campbell's gumbo in Louisiana, spicier nacho cheese in Texas - market size, density (combo washer and dryer) - climate (snowblowers)
Positioning Methods for Differntiated
How companies differentiate themselves, create their value proposition Salient attributes - heart health (bayer) Price and Quality- lululemon vs Walmart Use or Application - baking soda Product User - choosy moms choose Jif Symbols - Nike logo Competitor - T-Mobile coverage maps Emotion - Disney
Profitable
Market growth, competitiveness, access
Psychographic
Market segmentation on the basis of personality, lifestyles, motives, and attitudes Personality - Porsche buyers Motives - luxury car makers, status related motives Lifestyles - how time is spent? Beliefs, importance of things around them, socioeconomic characteristics Self Values, Concept
Reachable
Members of targeted segments must be reachable with marketing mix
Differentiated Targeting Strategy
Multisegment A strategy that chooses two or more well define market segments and develops a distinct marketing mix for each Advantages: greater financial success, economies of scale Ex: Marriot International
Costs of Differentiated Targeting
Product design, production, promotion, inventory, marketing, research, management, cannibalization
Substantial
Segment must be large enough to warrant a special marketing mix
Identifiable
Segments must be identifiable and their size measurable
Self Concept
Self Image Ex: Dove wrinkles and beauty spots
Cannibalization
Situation that occurs when sales of a new product cut into sales of a firm's existing products Ex: Pepsi throwback mountain dew
Loyalty Segmentation
Strategy to RETAIN the most profitable customers Ex: airlines
Position
The place a product, Brian, or group of products, occupies, and consumers minds relative to competing offerings
Benefit
The process of grouping customers into market segments, according to the benefits they seek from the product Ex: snack food market table (Tostitos = parties, snickers = good tasting, satisfies hunger)
Responsive
Unless segment responds to a marketing mix differently, no separate treatment is needed
Targets different segments
What does each brand do?
Segment Attractiveness Evaluation
identifiable, substantial, reachable, responsive, profitable
