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MT 219 Marketing Unit Four Segmentation and Introduction to Product Note: This seminar will be recorded by the instructor. Review of Unit 3 • How did Unit 3 go? Questions or concerns? • Instructor suggestions for Unit 4- Pay particular attention to segmentation for the Unit 6 Research Project • Questions? Readings – Unit 4 • Chapter 6 – Customer Driven Marketing Strategy: Creating Value for Target Customers • Chapter 7 - Products, Services and Brands: Building Customer Value Discussion Question – Unit 4 • Choose a brand from the Nestle Website • Identify a product of the brand you chose from the Nestle Website. • List the possible major segmentation variables that this brand could adopt • Explain your choices using specific examples where appropriate • Identify a target market for the brand. • Specify a positioning strategy. Assignment – Unit 4 Umpqua National Bank • Click on the Guidelines tab • Follow directions • A template is provided – click on the Template tab and scroll all the way down Customer Driven Marketing Strategy • Four stage process that segments, targets, differentiates and positions a product • Segmentation- Basic Process: Heterogeneous Market Segmentation Homogeneous Sub-Markets • Targeting- Selecting the best segments to focus on • Differentiating- Create unique benefits for target segments • Positioning- Placing product into customer’s minds compared to competition. Target Market Segmentation 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Identify appropriate strategy Determine segmentation variables Develop segment variables Evaluate segments Select specific segments Geographic Variable • • • • • • • Climate Terrain City size Urban/rural values Market Density Geo-demographic Segmentation Micromarketing Demographic Variables – closely related to needs and measurable • • • • • • Age Gender Race Ethnicity Income Education • • • • • • Occupation Family size Family life cycle Religion Social class Sexual orientation Psychographic Variables • Social class • Lifestyle - Achievers - Strivers - Survivors • Personality - Compulsive - Romantic - Authoritarian - Enthusiastic Behavioral Segmentation Variables • • • • • Most Powerful Variables Underlies all other segmentation variables These relate most directly to consumer desires How the product benefits the consumer directly Examples- Occasions - Loyalty - Usage rates Which Segment Variables to Use? • Marketers are not likely to use just one segment variable • Market segments often combine multiple variables together to create a desirable target segment • Which variables might be combined to create a segment for- Harley Davidson Motorcycles/ - Prada Shoes? Criteria for Effective Segmentation 1. Measurable- Must be quantifiable 2. Accessible- You must be able to reach them 3. Substantial- Must be large enough so company benefits 4. Differentiable- Segment must respond differently 5. Actionable- Company must be capable of marketing to identified segments Major Segmentation Strategies • Undifferentiated – Single product and single strategy for entire market – requires homogeneous market. • Differentiated- Two or more segments each with its own marketing mix • Concentrated – Single segment , one strategy • Micromarketing- products tailored to individuals or smaller local areas Positioning • Where the product lives in the mind of the consumer as it relates to the competition • Identify and select appropriate competitive advantages for the product • Combine competitive advantages to develop an overall positioning strategy - More for More - More for the same - More for less - The same for less - Less for much less What is a Product? Anything that is offered to a market to fulfill a need or want good service idea place person Classifying Consumer Products • Convenience – relatively inexpensive, frequently purchased items with many substitutes. Don’t confuse with a convenience store. • Shopping – items for which buyers are willing to spend considerable effort to compare and purchase. Don’t confuse with what you buy when just shopping • Specialty - products with unique characteristics for which consumers are willing to expend effort • Unsought – items people do not know of or do not think about buying. Many times due to emergency needs. Also, many impulse items. Services Intangible products involving a deed, performance, or effort that cannot be physically possessed -Haircuts -Concerts -Tax preparation -Annual doctors’ physicals Nature of Services • • • • Intangibility Inseparability Variability Perishability Let’s look at these individually Issues related to service intangibility • • • • • Difficult for customers to evaluate No physical possession Difficult to advertise and display Pricing is problematical and subjective Service process not always protected by patents Issues related to service inseparability • • • • Does not allow for mass production Customer participation required Other customers can affect process Difficult to distribute Issues related to variability • • • • • • • Quality difficult to control Standardization is a problem Services vary from provider to provider Services can vary from the same provider Reputation is crucial Franchises try to emphasize service homogeneity Reason for grading rubrics Issues related to service perishability • • • • Services cannot be stored or inventoried Unused capacity is lost forever Demand may be time sensitive Balancing supply and demand is difficult Branding- Brand Equity The marketing and financial value associated with a brand’s strength in a market brand name awareness brand loyalty perceived brand quality brand associations Selecting a Brand Name • • • • • Easy to pronounce, spell and remember Trademarkable Distinctive Conveys brand benefits Travels globally- Big concern today Types of Brands • National (Manufacturer’s) brands • Store (Private) brands • Licensing Brand Development Line extensions- new forms, sizes, fragrances, etc are created in existing product line Brand extensions – use of existing brand on a new category, such as extending from a rock singer into acting Multibrands- use of different brand names by one company. Nestle or Proctor and Gamble New Brands- Creating entirely new brands Any Questions? Thank you for attending! See you next week!