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Title: Essentials of Marketing Chapter 6 - Market Segmentation and Positioning
Description: Overview of Chapter 6 in Essentials of Marketing by Paul Baines, Chris Fill, Kelly Page For Marketing and Business Studies (Undergraduate Year 1)
Description: Overview of Chapter 6 in Essentials of Marketing by Paul Baines, Chris Fill, Kelly Page For Marketing and Business Studies (Undergraduate Year 1)
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Chapter 6: Market Segmentation and Positioning
STP Process = segmentation, targeting + positioning
o Identify attractive segments to target, new product opportunities, communication
strategies
o Key benefits:
enhancing competitive position
providing direction + focus for marketing strategies
examining + identifying market growth opportunities
effective + efficient matching of resources to target market segments
Market Segmentation
Division of a mass market into identifiable + distinct groups
Each group has got common characteristics + needs
Similar responses to marketing actions
Selected offerings for selected groups
Product differentiation – adapt different variations of offering to satisfy different segments
Marketers often seek to design offerings around consumer demand rather than their own
production needs
Segmentation process is often problematic
o Identification of the key differences between groups
o Customer variability
o Needs may change
Breakdown method
o Customers are essentially the same
o Task: identify groups that share particular differences
o Main method used
Build-up method
o Customers are all different
o Find similarities
o Customer orientated
Use of both methods together to be more accurate
Must use current data – needs may change – customer changes into different segment
Segmentation bases
o Profile criteria
Demographic methods (age, gender, race, family size, education, religion)
Geographic location (postal code system)
Socio-economics (social class, income level – able to afford the product?)
Life cycle – lifestage analysis (varying amounts of disposable income during
different stages in life – there are 12 lifestages groups)
Geodemographics (who lives where + what they are like – improve
understanding of customers, people living in similar areas have the same
needs + lifestyle)
o Psychological criteria
Attitudes + perceptions
Psychographics (customers activities, interests, opinions, understand
lifestyles + patterns of behaviour)
Benefits sought – provide customers with exactly what they want, based on
the benefits they derive from use
o Behavioural criteria
Usage (how often)
Social interaction – symbolic aspect of use + social meanings
Experimental consumption – emotional + sensory experiences
(satisfaction, fantasies, feelings, fun)
Functional utilization – functional usage in different situations
Transaction + Purchase
Growth in transactional data through electronic transactions
Who buys what, where, when, for how much
Monitor purchase patterns – make sales promotions according to
that
Media Usage
Frequency of readership, viewership
Effectiveness of media
o Data acquisition costs + ability of data to indicate predictable customer choice
behaviour has to be considered
Business-to-business segmentation
o Organizational Characteristics
Organizational size – buying requirements, delivery needs
Geographical location – sales territories, websites increase channels for
distribution + communication
Standard Industrial Classification Codes (SIC codes) – classify business
establishments by the type of economic activity (indication of the size of the
market)
o Customer Characteristics
Decision-Making Unit (DMU) – specific requirements, policies, purchasing
strategies, attitudes, delivery cycles, quality standards
Choice Criteria – specifications of proposition, might only target one single
segment
Purchase Situation – structure of purchasing procedures, buying situation
(new task or rebuy?), what stage in purchase decision process, exclusive
contracts
Target Market
All segments must be distinct (clearly differ), accessible, measurable, profitable (sufficiently
large)
Segment attractiveness factors: market growth, profitability, size, competitive intensity,
cyclical nature of the industry, stability, mission fit
Undifferentiated Targeting Approach
o One mass market – one marketing strategy
o Very expensive
o E
...
Olympics
Differentiated Targeting Approach
o Several market segments
o Marketing strategy for each segment
o E
...
HP
o Disadvantage: loss of economies of scale resulting from resources required to meet
the needs of many market segments
Concentrated Targeting Approach
o Only a few market segments
o Either for comp
...
g
...
g
...
must understand the market
Must make the customer clear how each brand is different + help understand the value that
each represents
Key is to identify the attributes that are important to the customers in the segment (might
be tangible or intangible)
Understand what customers consider as the ideal standard – where is the brand in relation
to that > adapt brands attributes + communication?! > become more competitive
Perceptual Mapping
o Geometric comparison of how competing products are perceived
o Shows position in the market
o The closer brands are clustered together, the greater the competition
o The further apart, the bigger the opportunity for new brands
o Insight on how the market operates
o Reveals strengths + weaknesses > assist strategic decisions about how to
differentiate + how to compete more efficiently
Perceptions can be adjusted through advertising
Functionally positioned brands emphasize the features + benefits
Expressive brands emphasize the ego, social + hedonic satisfaction it can bring
Repositioning
Four ways to approach repositioning
o Change tangible attributes + communicate new proposition to same market
o Change way of communication to the original market
o Change target market for the same product
o Change both – product + target market
Can be difficult to accomplish
o Entrenched perceptions + attitudes towards the brand by buyers
o Vast (media) resources required
Title: Essentials of Marketing Chapter 6 - Market Segmentation and Positioning
Description: Overview of Chapter 6 in Essentials of Marketing by Paul Baines, Chris Fill, Kelly Page For Marketing and Business Studies (Undergraduate Year 1)
Description: Overview of Chapter 6 in Essentials of Marketing by Paul Baines, Chris Fill, Kelly Page For Marketing and Business Studies (Undergraduate Year 1)