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Principles
of Marketing MGT301
VU
Lesson
18
Lesson
overview and learning objectives:
In
last Lesson we studied the
segmentation to day we will continue
the same topic and
market
targeting,
and market positioning
MARKET
SEGMENTATION (CONTINUED)
A.
Segmenting Business Markets
Consumer
and business marketers use
many of the same variables
to segment their
markets.
Business
buyers can be segmented geographically or
by benefits sought, user status,
usage rate, or
loyalty
status. Additional variables
unique to this market would be
business customer demo-
graphics
(industry, company size), operating
characteristics, purchasing approaches,
situational
factors,
and personal characteristics. By going
after segments instead of
the whole market,
companies
have a much better chance to
deliver value to consumers and to receive
maximum
rewards
for close attention to customer
needs. Within a chosen
industry, a company can
further
segment
by customer size or geographic location.
Many marketers believe that
buying
behavior
and
benefits
provide
the best basis for
segmenting business
markets.
Segmenting
International Markets Companies
can segment international
markets using one or
more
of a combination of variables. The
chief factors that can be
used are: Geographic
location.
Economic
factors.
Political
and legal factors.
Cultural
factors. Many
companies use an
approach
called intermarket
segmentation. In
this approach, companies
form segments of
consumers
who
have similar needs and
buying behavior even though
they are located in
different countries.
For
example, the world's teens
have a lot in common.
B.
Requirements
for Effective Segmentation
There
are many ways to segment,
but not all segmentations
are effective. To be useful,
market
segments
must have certain characteristics.
Among the most
significant
of these are:
1)
Measurability
is the
degree to which the size,
purchasing power, and
profiles
of
a
market
segment can be
measured.
2)
Accessibility
refers to the degree to
which a market segment can be
reached and
served.
3)
Substantiality
refers
to the degree to which a market
segment is sufficiently large
or
profitable.
4)
Differentiation
refers
to the degree to which a market
segment can conceptually
be
distinguished
and has the ability to
respond differently to
different
marketing
mix
elements and
programs.
5)
Action
ability is the
degree to which effective
programs can be designed for
attracting
and
serving a given market segment.
C.
Market Targeting
Market
segmentation reveals the firm's market
segment opportunities. The
firm now has to
evaluate
the various segments and
decide how many and
which ones to target. We now
look at
how
companies evaluate and
select target
segments.
a)
Evaluating Market
Segments
In
evaluating different market segments, a
firm must look at three
factors: segment size
and
growth,
segment structural attractiveness,
and company objectives and
resources. The
company
must
first collect and analyze
data on current segment
sales, growth rates, and
expected
profitability
for various segments. It will be
interested in segments that
have the right size
and
growth
characteristics. But "right
size and growth" is a relative
matter. The largest,
fastest-growing
segments
are not always the
most attractive ones for
every company. Smaller companies
may lack
the
skills and resources needed to
serve the larger segments or
may find these segments
too
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Principles
of Marketing MGT301
VU
competitive.
Such companies may select
segments that are smaller
and less attractive, in an
absolute
sense, but that are
potentially more profitable
for them.
The
company also needs to
examine major structural factors
that affect long-run
segment
attractiveness.
For example, a segment is
less attractive if it already contains
many strong and
aggressive
competitors.
The
existence of many actual or
potential substitute
products may
limit prices
and
the profits that can be
earned in a segment. The relative
power
of buyers also
affects segment
attractiveness.
Buyers with strong
bargaining power relative to sellers
will try to force prices
down,
demand
more services, and set
competitors against one another--all at
the expense of seller
profitability.
Finally, a segment may be
less attractive if it contains powerful
suppliers who
can control
prices
or reduce the quality or
quantity of ordered goods
and services.
Even
if a segment has the right
size and growth and is
structurally attractive, the company
must
consider
its own objectives and resources in
relation to that segment.
Some attractive segments
could
be dismissed quickly because
they do not mesh with
the company's long-run objectives.
Even
if a segment fits the company's
objectives, the company must
consider whether it
possesses
the
skills and resources it needs to
succeed in that segment. If
the company lacks the
strengths
needed
to compete successfully in a segment and
cannot readily obtain them, it
should not enter
the
segment. Even if the company
possesses the required
strengths, it
needs to employ skills
and
resources
superior
to those of
the competition in order to
really win in a market segment.
The
company
should enter only segments
in which it can offer superior value
and gain advantages
over
competitors.
a)
Undifferentiated Marketing
Using
an undifferentiated marketing (or
mass-marketing) strategy, a firm might
decide to ignore
market
segment differences and go to the
whole market with one offer.
This mass-marketing
strategy
focuses on what is common
in the
needs of consumers rather
than on what is different.
The
company
designs a product and a marketing
program that will appeal to
the largest number of
buyers.
It relies on mass distribution
and mass advertising, and it
aims to give the product
a
superior
image in people's minds. As
noted earlier in the
chapter, most modern
marketers have
strong
doubts about this strategy.
Difficulties arise in developing a
product or brand that
will
satisfy
all consumers. Moreover, mass
marketers often have trouble
competing with more
focused
firms
that do a better job of satisfying
the needs of specific
segments and niches.
b)
Differentiated Marketing
Using
a differentiated marketing strategy, a firm
decides to target several market
segments or
niches
and designs separate offers
for each. General Motors
tries to produce a car for every
"purse,
purpose,
and personality." Nike
offers athletic shoes for a
dozen or more different sports,
from
running,
fencing, and aerobics to
bicycling and baseball. By
offering product and
marketing
variations,
these companies hope for
higher sales and a stronger
position within each
market
segment.
Developing a stronger position
within several segments
creates more total sales
than
undifferentiated
marketing across all
segments. Procter & Gamble gets
more total market
share
with
eight brands of laundry detergent than it
could with only one. But
differentiated marketing
also
increases the costs of doing
business. A firm usually
finds it more expensive to develop
and
produce,
say, 10 units of 10 different
products than 100 units of
one product. Developing
separate
marketing
plans for the separate
segments requires extra marketing
research, forecasting, sales
analysis,
promotion planning, and
channel management. Trying to
reach different market
segments
with
different advertising increases promotion
costs. Thus, the company
must weigh increased
sales
against increased costs when
deciding on a differentiated marketing
strategy.
c)
Concentrated Marketing
A
third market-coverage strategy, concentrated
marketing, is especially appealing when
company
resources
are limited. Instead of
going after a small share of a
large market, the firm goes
after a
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Principles
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large
share of one or a few segments or
niches. Today, the low
cost of setting up shop on the
Internet
makes it even more
profitable to serve seemingly
minuscule niches. Concentrated
marketing
provides an excellent way for small
new businesses to get a
foothold against larger,
more
resourceful
competitors. Through concentrated marketing,
firms achieve strong market
positions
in
the segments or niches they
serve because of their
greater knowledge of the segments'
needs and
the
special reputations they
acquire. They also enjoy
many operating economies because
of
specialization
in production, distribution, and
promotion. If the segment is
well chosen, firms
can
earn
a high rate of return on
their investments.
At
the same time, concentrated marketing
involves higher-than-normal risks.
The particular market
segment
can turn sour. Or larger
competitors may decide to
enter the same
segment.
d)
Choosing a Market-Coverage
Strategy
Many
factors need to be considered when
choosing a market-coverage strategy. Which
strategy is
best
depends on company
resources. When
the firm's resources are
limited, concentrated marketing
makes
the most sense. The
best strategy also depends
on the degree of product
variability.
Undifferentiated
marketing is more suited for
uniform products such as grapefruit or
steel.
Products
that can vary in design,
such as cameras and automobiles, are
more suited to
differentiation
or concentration. The product's
life-cycle stage also
must be considered.
When
a firm introduces a new
product, it is practical to launch only
one version and
undifferentiated
marketing or concentrated marketing makes
the most sense. In the
mature stage
of
the product life cycle,
however, differentiated marketing begins
to make more sense.
Another
factor
is market
variability. If
most buyers have the same
tastes, buy the same
amounts, and react
the
same
way to marketing efforts, undifferentiated marketing
is appropriate. Finally, competitors'
marketing
strategies are
important. When competitors
use differentiated or concentrated
marketing,
undifferentiated
marketing can be suicidal. Conversely,
when competitors use
undifferentiated
marketing,
a firm can gain an advantage
by using differentiated or concentrated
marketing.
e)
Socially
Responsible Target
Marketing
Smart
targeting helps companies to be more
efficient and effective by
focusing on the
segments
that
they can satisfy best
and most profitably.
Targeting also benefits
consumers--companies
reach
specific groups of consumers with
offers carefully tailored to satisfy
their needs. However,
target
marketing sometimes generates controversy
and concern. Issues usually
involve the targeting
of
vulnerable or disadvantaged consumers
with controversial or potentially
harmful products. In
market
targeting, the issue is not
really who
is
targeted but rather
how
and
for what.
Controversies
arise
when marketers attempt to
profit at the expense of
targeted segments--when they
unfairly
target
vulnerable segments or target
them with questionable
products or tactics.
Socially
responsible
marketing calls for segmentation
and targeting that serve not
just the interests of
the
company
but also the interests of
those targeted.
f)
Positioning for Competitive
Advantage
Once
a company has decided which
segments of the market it will
enter, it must decide
what
positions
it wants to occupy in those segments. A
product's position is the way
the product is
defined
by consumers on
important attributes--the place
the product occupies in consumers'
minds
relative
to competing products. Positioning
involves implanting the
brand's unique benefits
and
differentiation
in customers' minds. Thus, Tide is
positioned as a powerful, all-purpose
family
detergent;
In the automobile market, Toyota
and Subaru are positioned on
economy, Mercedes
and
Cadillac on luxury Consumers
are overloaded with information
about products and
services.
They
cannot re evaluate products every
time they make a buying
decision. To simplify the
buying
process,
consumers organize products into
categories--they "position" products,
services, and
companies
in their minds. A product's
position is the complex set
of perceptions, impressions, and
feelings
that consumers have for the
product compared with
competing products.
Consumers
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Principles
of Marketing MGT301
VU
position
products with or without the
help of marketers. But
marketers do not want to
leave their
products'
positions to chance. They must
plan
positions
that will give their
products the greatest
advantage
in selected target markets,
and they must design
marketing mixes to create these
planned
positions.
b)
Choosing a Positioning
Strategy
Some
firms find it easy to choose
their positioning strategy. For
example, a firm well known
for
quality
in certain segments will go for
this position in a new
segment if there are enough
buyers
seeking
quality. But in many cases,
two or more firms will go
after the same position.
Then, each
will
have to find other ways to
set itself apart. Each firm
must differentiate its offer by
building a
unique
bundle of benefits those appeals to a substantial
group within the
segment.
The
positioning task consists of
three steps: identifying a
set of possible competitive
advantages
upon
which to build a position, choosing
the right competitive
advantages, and selecting an
overall
positioning
strategy. The company must
then effectively communicate
and deliver the
chosen
position
to the market.
c)
Identifying Possible Competitive
Advantages
The
key to winning and keeping
customers is to understand their needs
and buying processes
better
than competitors do and to
deliver more value. To the
extent that a company can
position
itself
as providing superior value to selected
target markets it gains
competitive advantage.
But
solid
positions cannot be built on empty
promises. If a company positions its
product as offering
the
best
quality and service, it must
then deliver
the
promised quality and service.
Thus, positioning
begins
with actually differentiating
the
company's marketing offer so that it
will give consumers
more
value
than competitors' offers
do.
To
find points of differentiation,
marketers must think through
the customer's entire
experience
with
the company's product or service. An
alert company can find ways
to differentiate itself at
every
point where it comes in contact
with customers. In what specific
ways can a company
differentiate
its offer from those of competitors? A
company or market offer can be
differentiated
along
the lines of product,
services, channels, people, or
image.
Companies
can gain a strong
competitive advantage through
people
differentiation--hiring
and
training
better people than their
competitors do. Thus, Disney
people are known to be
friendly and
upbeat.
Singapore Airlines enjoys an excellent
reputation largely because of the
grace of its flight
attendants.
d)
Choosing the Right Competitive
Advantages
Suppose
a company is fortunate enough to
discover several potential
competitive advantages. It
now
must choose the ones on
which it will build its
positioning strategy. It must decide
how
many
differences
to promote and which
ones.
I.
How Many Differences to
Promote?
Many
marketers think that
companies should aggressively
promote only one benefit to
the target
market.
Each brand should pick an attribute
and tout itself as "number
one" on that
attribute.
Thus,
Crest toothpaste consistently promotes
its anti cavity protection. A
company that hammers
away
at one of these positions and
consistently delivers on it probably
will become best known
and
remembered
for it.
Other
marketers think that
companies should position
themselves on more than
one
differentiating
factor. This may be
necessary if two or more
firms are claiming to be the
best on
the
same attribute. Today, in a
time when the mass market is
fragmenting into many
small
segments,
companies are trying to
broaden their positioning
strategies to appeal to more
segments.
In
general, a company needs to avoid three
major positioning errors. The
first is under
positioning--
failing
to ever really position the
company at all. Some
companies discover that buyers have
only a
vague
idea of the company or that
they do not really know
anything special about it.
The second
error
is over
positioning--giving
buyers too narrow a picture of
the company.
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II.
Which Differences to Promote?
Not
all brand differences are
meaningful or worthwhile; not every
difference makes a good
differentiator.
Each difference has the potential to
create company costs as well
as customer
benefits.
Therefore, the company must
carefully select the ways in
which it will distinguish
itself
from
competitors. A difference is worth
establishing to the extent
that it satisfies the
following
criteria:
·
Important:
The
difference delivers a highly valued
benefit to target buyers.
·
Distinctive:
Competitors
do not offer the difference, or
the company can offer it in
a
more
distinctive way.
·
Superior:
The
difference is superior to other ways that
customers might obtain the
same
benefit.
·
Communicable:
The
difference is communicable and visible to
buyers.
·
Preemptive:
Competitors
cannot easily copy the
difference.
·
Affordable:
Buyers
can afford to pay for
the difference.
·
Profitable:
The
company can introduce the
difference profitably.
Many
companies have introduced
differentiations that failed one or more
of these tests.
e)
Selecting an Overall Positioning
Strategy
Consumers
typically choose products
and services that give
them the greatest value.
Thus,
marketers
want to position their
brands on the key benefits
that they offer relative to
competing
brands.
The full positioning of a
brand is called the brand's value
proposition--the full mix
of
benefits
upon which the brand is
positioned. It is the answer to the
customer's question "Why
should
I buy your brand?" Volvo's value
proposition hinges on safety
but also includes
reliability,
roominess,
and styling, all for a
price that is higher than
average but seems fair
for this mix of
benefits.
f)
Communicating
and Delivering the Chosen
Position
Once
it has chosen a position,
the company must take
strong steps to deliver and
communicate the
desired
position to target consumers. All
the company's marketing mix efforts
must support the
positioning
strategy. Positioning the company
calls for concrete action, not
just talk. If the
company
decides to build a position on
better quality and service,
it must first deliver
that
position.
Designing
the marketing mix--product, price,
place, and promotion--essentially
involves working
out
the tactical details of the
positioning strategy. Thus, a firm
that seizes on a "for more"
position
knows
that it must produce high-quality
products, charge a high
price, distribute through
high-
quality
dealers, and advertise in
high-quality media. It must
hire and train more
service people, find
retailers
who have a good reputation
for service, and develop
sales and advertising messages
that
broadcast
its superior service. This is the
only way to build a consistent and
believable "more for
more"
position. Companies often
find it easier to come up
with a good positioning
strategy than to
implement
it. Establishing a position or changing one
usually takes a long time.
In contrast,
positions
that have taken years to
build can quickly be lost.
Once a company has built
the desired
position,
it must take care to
maintain the position
through consistent performance and
communication.
It must closely monitor and
adapt the position over
time to match changes
in
consumer
needs and competitors'
strategies. However, the
company should avoid abrupt
changes
that
might confuse consumers. Instead, a
product's position should
evolve gradually as it adapts to
the
ever-changing marketing environment.
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