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Transcript
Market segmentation,
targeting and positioning
Chapter 4
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-1
Market segmentation
Definition:
• This is the process of dividing the total market
for a good or service into several smaller,
internally similar (or homogeneous) groups.
• All members in a group have similar
factors that influence their demand for
the particular product.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-2
Bases for segmentation
•
•
•
•
Geographic — The city size, urban/ suburban/ rural
population distribution and climate.
Demographic — The distribution of a
population’s age, sex, income, stage in
family cycle and ethnic background.
Psychographic — Personalities, lifestyles, social class
including activities, interests and opinions (AIO).
Behaviour towards products.
–
Benefits desired or sought.
– Product usage rate.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-3
Benefits of segmentation
Segmentation enables marketers to:
• Identify and satisfy specific benefits sought
by particular groups.
• Divide the market into segments by
separating marketing programs.
• Select target market.
• Action the market segmentation plan.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-4
Limitations of segmentation
Segmentation limits:
• Mass production, which offers economies
of scale.
• Standardisation of service, which increases
delivery speed and efficiency.
Segmentation increases:
• Expense through production and marketing of
products to only specific groups of the market.
• Promotion, administrative and inventory costs.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-5
Market segmentation process
The process involves:
• Identifying the needs and wants of customers.
• Identifying the different characteristics between
market segments.
• Estimating the market potential.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-6
Identify the needs and wants
of customers
The objective is to identify needs not currently
satisfied. For example:
• Airlines might consider offering business
travel although research shows that preferred
departure and arrival times vary from those
being offered.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-7
Identify different market segments
Identify characteristics that distinguish
particular segments from others. For example:
• Business persons needing varying flights,
may opt to fly first or business class
instead of economy class.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-8
Estimate the market potential
• Marketers need to know if a market is viable
before segmentation occurs.
• Forecasting of market demand will determine:
– Market demand.
– Market potential.
– Sales potential.
– Market share.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-9
Conditions for effective segmentation
A segmentation process must meet 3 conditions:
1. The characteristics used to categorise customers
must be measurable and the data obtainable.
2. The segment itself must be accessible through
existing marketing institutions with a minimum
of cost and waste.
3. A segment must be large enough to be profitable.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-10
Bases for segmentation
• Ultimate consumers — buy goods and services
for personal or household use.
• Business users — buy goods and services to
generate a profit by reselling or using products
as part of the manufacturing process.
• The segment determines the marketing mix.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-11
Bases for segmenting
business markets
Segmentation is based on consumer categories plus:
•
•
•
Customer location.
Geographic concentration.
Type of customer.



•
Size, industry.
Organisational structure.
Purchasing style and criteria.
Type of buying situation.



New buy.
Straight rebuy.
Modified rebuy.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-12
Segmenting services markets
The 2 key differences in services markets are:
• Customisation of the firms offerings to
individuals or groups.
• Tailoring to avoid clashes between
incompatible segments.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-13
Target market strategies
• The target market should be compatible with
an organisation’s goals and image.
• The marketing opportunity presented by the
segment must match the company’s resources.
• The business must generate a profit if it is
to continue its existence.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-14
Market coverage strategies
A. Undifferentiated marketing (Aggregation)
Company
marketing
mix
Market
B. Differentiated marketing (Single segment)
Company mix 1
Segment 1
Company mix 2
Segment 2
Company mix 3
Segment 3
C. Concentrated marketing (Multiple segments)
Company
marketing
mix
Segment 1
Segment 2
Segment 3
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-15
Positioning
Definition:
• Customers’ image or perception of a
particular brand or company, relative to their
perceptions of others in the same category.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-16
Positioning strategies
Positioning is assessed:
•
•
•
In relation to a competitor.
According to a product class or attribute.
By price and quality.
Positioning can be in various forms, although it
always incorporates a statement that identifies,
(based on the marketing mix) how a business
wants its products or services to be perceived
by the consumer.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-17
Selecting a position
Factors to consider:
• Competition — look for a gap or niche.
• Customers — seek product attributes.
• Company image — what is the current image?
• Target market — have the needs of the target
market changed? Do we need repositioning?
• The marketing mix — does it support the
selected position?
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
PPTs t/a Marketing: A Practical Approach 5/e by Peter Rix
Slides Prepared by:Joe Rosagrata
4-18