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International
Marketing MKT630
VU
Lesson
# 36
INTERNATIONAL
MARKET SEGMENTATION
International
Market Targeting
International
market targeting:
International
marketers need to evaluate
available international segments
for their potential
and
actionability
to choose most viable market
segments for
targeting;
Evaluating
market segments
Market
segments can be evaluated on the
following criteria;
segment size
& growth
segment's
structural analysis
·
competition
within the segment
·
existing or
potential substitute products
·
relative power
of buyers / suppliers
company's
objectives & resources
·
environment,
social responsibility, if it is core
business, can employ skills
& resources
superior
to those of competition
Market
coverage strategy:
Factors
needed to be considered when choosing a
market coverage strategy
company
resources and
capabilities
degree
of product variability
product's
stage in the life-cycle
market
variability
competitors'
marketing strategies
Product
differentiating variables:
·
Product
features,
performance, conformance, durability,
reliability, reparability, style,
design
·
Services
ordering
ease, delivery, installation,
customer training, customer
consulting, maintenance and
repair
·
Personnel
competence,
courtesy, credibility, reliability,
responsiveness, communication
·
Channel
coverage,
expertise, performance
·
Image
symbol,
written and audiovisual media,
atmosphere, events
Service
differentiating variables:
·
People
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International
Marketing MKT630
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·
Physical
environment
·
Process
·
Image
|Defining
`Positioning':
A
product's position is how potential
buyers see the product. Positioning is
expressed relative to the
position
of competitors. The term was coined in
1969 by Al Ries and Jack
Trout in the paper
"Positioning"
is a game people play in
today's me-too market place" in the
publication Industrial
Marketing.
It was then expanded into
their ground-breaking first
book, "Positioning: The
Battle for
Your
Mind".
Positioning
is something (perception) that happens
in
the minds of the
target market. It is the
aggregate
perception
the market has of a particular
company, product or service in relation
to their perceptions of
the
competitors in the same category. It will
happen whether or not a company's
management is
proactive,
reactive or passive about the
on-going process of evolving a
position. But a company
can
positively
influence the perceptions through
enlightened strategic actions.
In
marketing, positioning
has
come to mean the process by
which marketers try to
create an image or
identity
in the minds of their target market
for its product, brand, or
organization. It is the 'relative
competitive
comparison' their product occupies in a
given market as perceived by the
target market.
Re-positioning
involves
changing the identity of a product,
relative to the identity of
competing
products,
in the collective minds of the target
market.
De-positioning
involves
attempting to change the identity of
competing products, relative to the
identity
of
your own product, in the
collective minds of the target
market.
Positioning
in international market segments
for competitive advantage:
can
be positioned based on
product
attributes
product
benefits
usage
occasions
classes
of users
can
also be positioned relative to
competition
against
a competition
away
from competitors
against
product classes
combination
of above strategies
International
positioning strategies:
·
Developing a
positioning theme involves the
quest for a unique selling
proposition (USP). In
this
regard
there are two choices:
target a universal segment
across countries or pursue different
segments
across
countries. Similarly MNC's may
select same positioning
world-wide or positioning
themes
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International
Marketing MKT630
VU
that
are tailored to individual
markets.
-
Universal Segment / Uniform
Positioning Theme
The
challenge is to come-up with a
selling proposition that
makes
consumers
tick
everywhere
and that transcends local
peculiarities.
-
Universal Segment / Different
Positioning Themes
-
Different Segments / Different
Positioning Themes
Choosing
and implementing a positioning
strategy:
Identify
possible competitive
advantages(offering
consumers greater
value)
product
differentiation
·
features, performance, style
& design, consistency, durability, reliability,
reparability
services
differentiation
·
delivery,
installation, repair, customer
training
personnel
differentiation
image
differentiation
Selecting
the right competitive
advantages
how many
differences to promote
which
differences to promote the
differences should be
important
·
distinctive
·
superior
·
communicable
·
pre-emptive
·
affordable
·
profitable
·
Should develop
a unique selling position
(USP) for a brand
avoid over /
under / confused positioning
P
Positioning
errors:
·
As companies
increase the number of claims for their
brand, they risk disbelief
and a loss of clear
positioning.
In general a company must avoid four
major positioning errors:
Underpositioning
·
buyers
have only a vague idea of
the brand
Overpositioning
·
buyers
may have too narrow an image
of the brand
Confused
positioning
·
buyers
may have a confused image of the
brand resulting from the company's
making too
many
claims or changing the brand's
positioning too
frequently
Doubtful
positioning
·
buyers
may find it hard to believe
the brand claims in view of the product's
features, price, or
manufacturer
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International
Marketing MKT630
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Global
segmentation and positioning:
·
A common theme in
many findings on global
marketing is the growing convergence of
consumer
needs.
·
This phenomenon of
increasing globalization is especially
visible for many upscale
consumer goods
and
a variety of business to business
goods and services that
are bought by multinational
customers.
·
At the same
time, new technological
advances in interactive marketing open up
many untapped
opportunities
for increasingly refined
segmentation.
·
This paradox,
the increasing homogenization of customer
needs versus the possibilities
offered by
micro-marketing,
offers a challenge to global
marketers entering the twenty
first century.
Global
segmentation process:
·
Five procedural
steps may be followed to
gain information and insights
into the segmentation criteria
for
classifying world
markets.
1.
Developing
a market taxonomy for classifying
world markets.
2.
Segment all countries
into homogenous groups
having common
characteristics.
3.
Determine theoretically the most
efficient method of serving each
group.
4.
Choose the group in which the
marketer's own perspective
(its
product / service
and
strengths)
is in line with the requirements of the
group.
5.
Adjust this ideal
classification to the constraints of the
real world (existing
commitments, legal
and
political restrictions, practicality,
and so forth)
Basis
for country segmentation:
The
first step in doing
international market segmentation is
deciding which criteria to
use in the task.
Literally
hundreds of country characteristics could
be used as inputs. However,
for the segmentations to
be
meaningful, there should be a linkage
between the market segments and the
response variable (s)
the
company
is interested in.
Demographics:
Demographic
variables age structure, population
size, degree of urbanization,
ethnic composition
and
death
/ birth rates are among the
most popular segmentation criteria.
They are easy to
assess.
Moreover,
information on population variables is
mostly reasonably accurate and readily
available.
The
manner in which countries are to be
grouped will depend, to a large
extent, on the nature of
company's
product or product lines. Companies
marketing capital goods may
find economic
variables
more relevant for segmentation. On the
other hand, companies in the
consumer durable-
goods
field may find that
grouping countries by personal consumption
expenditures is a more
meaningful
way to study world-wide
activities.
Socio-economic
variables
Per
capita income
The
usual caveats in using per capita income
as an economic development indicator
apply also
when
this measure is used for
country segmentation.
-
Monetization of transactions within a
country - per capita GNP may
not be a good basis
of
comparing
countries due to purchasing power parity
(PPP)
-
Grey and Black sectors of
the economy - Many
countries have a sizable
gray sector
consisting
of
largely untaxed or under taxed
exchanges.
-
Income Disparities - Per-capita
GNP may be misleading due to
wide income disparities.
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International
Marketing MKT630
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Issues
in international market
segmentation:
Technical
Issues:
-
Poor data
quality
-
"Noisy"
Variables because of reporting
errors sampling
mistakes
-
Presence of
Outliers
Managerial
Issues:
-
Stability of
segments overtime
-
Managerial
usefulness - country
segmentation based on macro-economic aggregates seldom
bear
any
resemblance to sales-pattern-based
groupings.
Effective
international market
segmentation:
-
Market Segment
is a "craft" rather than a
"science".
-
Guidelines for
effective segmentation are:
1.
Keep things simple
-
There
is no need to exhaust each possible
permutation & combination of
variables. Ultimately,
the
goal is to come up with a
viable set of target
markets
that
will allow the company to
peruse
its
goals effectively.
2.
Consider several levels of
aggregation, not just one.
-
As
more disaggregate levels of aggregations
are considered, a wide range
of
possible
segmentation
schemes open up.
3.
Two ways to fine tune an
existing segmentation
scheme
-
Realize
that there are always
two ways to augment precision; either
sub-divide an
existing
variable (e.g. low/high income becomes
low/medium/high income) or
introduce
a
new
segmentation variable.
Communicating
and delivering the chosen
positioning:
It
is easier to come up with a
good positioning strategy than to
implement it
establishing
a position or changing one is difficult
& takes a long time but
can quickly be lost
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