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Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
Lesson
14
BASES
FOR SEGMENTATION:
SOCIOCULTURAL
SEGMENTATION
USE
RELATED SEGMENTATION
USAGE
SITUATION SEGMENTATION
1.
Sociocultural
Segmentation
Sociocultural
segmentation combines social
(related to groups) and cultural
variables (related to the shared
values,
beliefs,
attitudes of people) that provide
further basis for
segmentation
Groups
Group
may be defined as two or
more people who interact with
each other to accomplish either
individual or
mutual
goals e.g.
·
Intimate group pf two
neighbors
·
The local cricket
club
·
The doctors in a hospital
·
Colleagues in an office,
etc.
Variables
of Socioeconomic Segmentation
·
Family Lifecycle
·
Social Class
·
Core Cultural Values
·
Sub-cultural Memberships
·
Cross-cultural Affiliation
4.
Family Lifecycle
Many
families pass through
similar phases in their
formation, growth and final
dissolution. At each stage the
family
unit
needs different products and
services
Family
Lifecycle A composite
Variable
Family
Life Cycle is a composite
variable. It is explicitly based
upon marital and family
status and implicitly
reflects
relative
age, income and employment
status. For example young
single people need relatively basic
furniture. Their
parents
finally free of child
rearing often re-furnish
their homes with more
elaborate pieces. In Pakistan,
however,
the
family unit is still very
strong. The parent children
bond hardly weakens
throughout the life. Senior
parents
now
have their sons in laws
and daughters in laws to
take care of. There are
various rituals and norms of the
family
that
they have to fulfill with
regards to their daughters in
laws, sons in laws as well
as grand their grand
children.
Senior
parents after many years of
professional experience usually
have greater buying power as well.
They have to
do
a lot of shopping for the rituals and
norms.
Each
stage in the traditional family
life cycle represents an
important segment for the
marketers. Financial services
industry
frequently segments customers in
terms of family life cycle
stages as the required financial services
tend to
shift
as they pass through different
stages of life.
Stages
in the Family Lifecycle
Stages
in the Family Lifecycle include:
·
Bachelorhood (what do they buy...)
·
Newly Married Couples (what do they
buy...)
·
Parenthood and (what do they
buy...)
·
Post parenthood (what do they
buy...)
·
Dissolution
2.
Social Class
What
is social class? We frequently
hear direct or indirect references to
social class, like,
47
Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
This
place is not my class, this item is
not my class, In my family we
don't go for the jobs, we
have lands or we
have
business to take care of,
etc...
Social
Class is a hierarchy in which the
individuals in the same class
generally have the same
degree or status
whereas
the members of other classes
have a higher or lower
status.
Social
Class as Basis for
Segmentation
Social
Class can be used as a basis
for segmentation. Consumers on
different social classes vary in
terms of values,
product
preferences and buying
habits.
Marketers
may offer products to the consumers
that correspond to their wealth
status. Shopkeepers,
while
bargaining,
tend to hint upon a person's
relative social class to increase the
chances off purchase. They do so
while
saying
"Oo
Baji yeh khas kapra
aap ki class kay liyay hi
hay, yeh aap kp bauhat
suit karay ga, agar
nahin to chalain aap
yeh
lay
lein"
"
Sastay kapray ki dookanein
aap ko bauhat mil jaien
gi, yahan par to quality ka
maal milta hai aur is kay
liyay aap
ko
kuch ziyada daina paray ga"
Zara logon ko pata to chalay
key app ka kya andaaz
hai
Investment
companies appeal to upper classes by
offering them investment opportunities corresponding
to their
wealthy
status. In contrast a financial program
targeted to lower socio-economic
class might talk about
savings
account
or certificates of deposit.
Measurement
Social Class
Social
Class is measured a weighted index of
demographic variables such as Education,
Occupation and Income.
3.
Culture and Subcultural
Memberships
This
approach corresponds to dividing
consumers on the basis of cultural
heritage. Members of the same
culture
tend
to have same values, beliefs
and customs.
Culture
Culture
refers to relatively specialized lifestyle of a
group consisting of their
beliefs, values, artifacts,
ways of
behaving,
ways of communicating that is
passed on from one generation to the
next.
Included
in the culture will be all that
members of a culture have produced and
developed, their language,
modes
of
thinking, art, laws and
religion.
For
example the Pakistani Marriage includes
elaborate set of rituals and
norms, norms on the boy's
family side,
norms
on the girls' family side. A marriage
may be broken down into
following constituents
Match
making: Vast
Industry of match makers
consisting of many different
types. Now internet and
other
electronic
media play a significant role in
match making)
Engagement:
Industry of the engagement planners,
private players, hotels,
marriage halls
Marriage:
Barri on the boys' side
(Specialized Barri Packages),
Dowry on the girls side
(Specialized Dowry
Packages),
Marriage
functions: Mehndi, Barrat,
Walima
Subcultural
Memberships
Within
the larger culture distinct sub-groups
(subcultures) often are
united by certain experiences,
values or beliefs
that
make a significant market segment.
These groupings may be based
upon specific demographic
characteristics
(race,
religion, ethnicity, or age) or lifestyle
characteristics (teachers,
joggers)
Now
as the world has grown
smaller and smaller a true global
marketplace has developed,
which calls for the
need
of
Cross-cultural and Global
Market Segmentation.
48
Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
For
example, a young man while preparing
for his exam at home
may be:
·
Drinking a CSD that
originated from America
·
Wearing a trouser of an
international brand that comes
from Dominican Republic
·
Wearing a watch that
came from Japan
·
Wearing shoes that
came from China
·
Some global market segments
such as teenagers appear to want the
same types of products regardless
of
which
nation they call home
Similarly,
an international brand of sneakers used
the same global advertising campaign in
140 countries to
launch
a
line of sneakers
2.
Use- Related
Segmentation
Categorizing
consumers in terms of product,
service, or brand usage characteristics
is included into Use
Related
Segmentation.
The variables usually
include:
Levels
of usage
Level
of awareness
Brand
loyalty
Rate
of Usage Segmentation
Rate
of Usage Segmentation means
differentiating according to the rate of
usage. The variables may
include:
·
Heavy Users
·
Medium Users
·
Light Users
·
Nonusers
Organizing
Customers into Action
Oriented Frameworks
A
segmentation strategy is especially
suitable for marketers
seeking to organize their
database into an action-
oriented
framework. The framework proposes a way
to identify a firm's best customers by
dividing them into
following
categories:
Segment
Name
Segment
Characteristic
Company
Action
Lo
Lows
Low
current share, low consumption
patterns
Starve
Hi
Lows
High
current share, low consumption
customers
Tickle
Low
Highs
Low
current share, high consumption
customers
Chase
Hi
Highs
High
current share, high consumption
customers
Stroke
Targeting
Heavy Users
Research
has consistently indicated that 25-35% of
the consumers account for 70-80% of
all consumption. For the
very
reason most marketers target
their advertising campaigns to heavy
users than spend considerably
more money
to
attract the light
users
Targeting
Low Users
Marketers
take note of the gaps in the
market coverage for light
and medium users and
target them profitably
49
Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
Segmentation
@Awareness Status
Consumers
may be segmented on the basis of
awareness level. Aspects of awareness
are:
·
Consumer awareness of the
product
·
Interest level in the
product
·
Readiness to buy the
product
Brand
Loyalty as a Basis for
Segmentation
Marketers
often try to identify the
characteristics of their brand loyal
customers so that they can direct
their
promotional
efforts to people with similar
characteristics. Other marketers
target consumers who show no
brand
loyalty
in the belief that such people
represent greater market
potential than consumers who
are loyal to competing
brands.
Marketers stimulate and reward brand
loyalty by offering special benefits to
consistent and
frequent
consumers
3.
Usage-Situation Segmentation
Occasion
or situation often determines what
consumers will purchase or
consume. They sometimes focus on
the
usage
situation as a segmentation variable.
For example:
·
Whenever
our son Ali gets a
promotion or raise we always
take him out to
dinner
·
When
I am away on business for a
week or more, I try to stay
at a suites hotel
·
Every
Sunday when we go to the market
for grocery we have our
lunch at the Baryani House
Products
for Special Usage
Occasions
The
greeting card industry, e.g.
stresses special cards for a
variety of occasions, e.g. Grandparents
day, Secretaries
Day,
etc...
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