Strategic Marketing 1. Imperatives for Market-Driven Strategy 2. Markets and Competitive Space 3. Strategic Market Segmentation 4. Strategic Customer Relationship Management 5. Capabilities for Learning about Customers and Markets 6. Market Targeting and Strategic Positioning 7. Strategic Relationships 8. Innovation and New Product Strategy 9. Strategic Brand Management 10. Value Chain Strategy 11. Pricing Strategy 12. Promotion, Advertising and Sales Promotion Strategies 13. Sales Force, Internet, and Direct Marketing Strategies 14. Designing Market-Driven Organizations 15. Marketing Strategy Implementation And Control CHAPTER 6 Market Targeting and Strategic Positioning Market Targeting Strategy Targeting in Different Market Environments Positioning Strategy Developing the Positioning Strategy Determining Positioning Effectiveness McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. MARKET TARGETING STRATEGY The Marketing Targeting Decision Identities the People or Organizations in a Product-Market Toward Which a Firm Directs Its Positioning Strategy Guided by an understanding of: •The product-market •Its buyers •Firm’s capabilities resources •Competition 6-3 Market Targeting and Strategic Positioning * Core dimensions of market-driven strategy: deciding which buyer’s to target and how to position the firm’s products * Effective targeting and positioning strategies are essential in gaining and sustaining superior performance 6-4 SEGMENTS VALUE OPPORTUNITES CAPABILITIES/ SEGMENT MATCH TARGET(S) POSTIONING FOR EACH TARGET 6-5 Identify segments within the product-market TARGETING AND POSTIONING Decide and implement a positioning strategy for each targeted segment Decide which segment(s) to target 6-6 Market Targeting Alternatives Segments Clearly Defined Selective Targeting Target Selected Niche(s) Product Specialization Target Multiple Segments Product Variety Extensive Targeting Differentiated But Segments Not Clearly Defined 6-7 Factors Influencing Targeting Decisions * Stage of product – market maturity * Extent of diversity in preferences * Industry structure * Capabilities and resources * Opportunities to gain competitive advantage 6-8 TARGETING IN DIFFERENT MARKET ENVIRONMENTS Emerging Growing Mature Declining Global 6-9 Emerging Market Buyer Diversity * Segmentation limited due to similarity of buyers’ preferences Industry Structure * Typically small new organizations * Limited access to resources Capabilities and Resources * Unique benefit (differentiation) strategy rather than low-cost * First-mover advantage Targeting Strategy * Single target or a few broad segments 6-10 Growth Market Buyer Diversity * Segments should exist Industry Structure * Numerous competitors Capabilities and Resources * Survival requires aggressive actions by firms that seek large market positions * Otherwise select one or a few market segments Targeting Strategy * Three possible strategies 1. Extensive market coverage by firms with established businesses in related markets 2. Selective targeting by firms with diversified product portfolios 3. Very focused targeting strategies by small organizations serving one or a few market segments. 6-11 Mature Markets Buyer Diversity * Segmentation essential for competitive advantage Industry Structure * Intense competition for market share * Emphasis on cost and service, and pressures on profits Capabilities and Resources Management’s objectives: cost reduction, selective targeting, product differentiation Targeting Strategy Deciding which segment to serve Firms pursuing extensive targeting strategies may decide to exit from certain segments 6-12 Global Markets Global Reach and Standardization * Identify market segments that span global markets and serve these needs with global positioning strategies Local Adaptation * Consider requirements of domestic buyers * Buyers’ needs and preferences affected by social, political, cultural, economic, and language differences Industry Structure * Restructuring, acquisitions, mergers, and strategic alliances altering industries and competition Targeting Strategy * Targeting a single country, regional (multinational) targeting, or global targeting 6-13 GLOBAL FEATURE Successful British Retailer Tesco Enters the U.S. Market Tesco announced plans to open a chain of convenience stores on the U.S. West Coast in 2007, spending an estimated $453 M. The very successful retailer has four types of stores, including the convenience chain, Tesco Express. This initiative is being launched even though the U.S. retail grocery market is experiencing intense competition, and some chains are cutting back or selling out. Tesco’s decision to enter the U.S. convenience market is bold and risky. Some authorities consider the action questionable. However, Tesco has a very impressive success record in Britain. With its Tesco Express, Tesco Metro, Superstore, and Extra hypermarkets, the giant retailer has dulled Wal-Mart’s drive to dominate the retail scene. Tesco has no brand awareness in the U.S. so building brand identity will be challenging. Yet the retailer has global buying power, powerful information technology, and strong supply chain capabilities. The stores will offer groceries, produce, and private-label ready-to-eat meals. Some observers think Tesco is planning to compete with Wal-Mart in its home market. Source: Kerry Capell, “Tesco: California Dreaming?” BusinessWeek, February 27, 2006, 38. 6-14 POSITIONING STRATEGY Deciding the desired perception/ association of an organization/ brand by market target buyers…and designing the marketing program to meet (and exceed) buyers’ value requirements. 6-15 STRATEGIC POSITIONING INITIATIVES POSITIONING CONCEPT The desired positioning of the product (brand) by targeted buyers MARKET TARGET POSITIONING EFFECTIVENESS How well management’s positioning objectives are achieved for the market target POSITIONING STRATEGY The combination of marketing actions used to communicate the positioning concept to targeted buyers 6-16 How Positioning Works * Objective * Match the organization’s distinctive capabilities with the customer value requirements for the market target (How do we want to be perceived by targeted buyers?) * Desired result * Gain a relevant, distinct, and enduring position by the targeted buyers that they consider important. * Actions by the organization * Design and implement the positioning strategy (marketing program) for the market target. 6-17 INNOVATION FEATURE Spotting Shifts in Demand in designing Hennes & Mauritz (H&M) Apparel It’s 1:30 p.m. on a Monday in the bustling H&M store on Manhattan’s fifth Avenue, and Alma Saldana, a 28-year-old makeup artist from Houston, is stuffing three tiny vests into her black Y&M shopping bag. That’s on top of blouses, jackets, and pants. Saldana is in a buying frenzy. This is her first visit to H&M, the Stockholmbased fashion retailer, and it’s everything she had hoped for. “Somebody told me you find great fashion at a very cheap price, and it’s true!” she exclaims. Such enthusiasm has made H&M one of the hottest fashion companies around. Central to its success is its ability to spot shifts in demand and respond with lightning speed. While traditional clothing retailers design their wares at least six months ahead of time, H&M can rush items into stores in as little as three weeks. Most of the work is done ahead, too. But when it sees consumers scooping up something like vests, it speeds a slew of new variations into stores within the same season, to the delight of shoppers like Saldana. “Speed is important. You need to have system where you can react in a short lead time with the right products,” says Chief Executive Rolf Eriksen. 6-18 How does it work? H&M designers had included a couple of cropped vests in their autumn/winter collections. In august, shortly after the vests went on sales, they started “flying out of the stores,” say Margareta van den Bosch, H&M’s head of design. H&M’s designers in Stockholm (it has more than 100) spotted the trend in the company’s worldwide sales reports, published internally every Monday. About half of them immediately started sketching new styles. As quickly as designs came off their desks, pattern makers snipped and pinned, pressing employees into service as live models. At the same time, buyers ordered fabrics. The designs were zoomed electronically to workers at H&M’s production offices in Europe and Asia, which then selected manufacturers that could handle the jobs quickly. In less than two months most H&M stores had 5 to 10 new vest styles in stock. One of the secrets to H&M’s speed is decisiveness. The people in charge of each collection can dream up and produce new fashions on their own authority. Only huge orders require approval from higher ups. “We have a flat organization. We have a shorter way to a decision,” says Sanna Lindberg, president of H&M Hennes & Mauritz USA. That makes H&M fashionable in more ways than one. Source: Steve Hamm, “SPEEDDEMONS,” BusinessWeek, March 27, 2006, 70-71. 6-19 The Perception or Association that Management Wants Buyers to Have Concerning the Brand Symbolic Functional SELECTING THE POSITIONING CONCEPT Experiential 6-20 DEVELOPING THE POSITIONING STRATEGY The Positioning Strategy Places the Marketing Program (mix) Components into a Coordinated Set of Actions Designed to Deliver Superior Customer Value PRODUCT VALUE CHAIN PROMOTION PRICE 6-21 Positioning Issues 1. The positioning concept applies to a specific brand rather than all the competing brands that compose a product classification 2. The concept is used to guide positioning decisions over the life of the brand 3. Multiple concepts are likely to confuse buyers and may weaken the effectiveness of positioning actions 6-22 The positioning strategy indicates how (and why) the product mix, line, or brand is to be positioned for each market target. This strategy includes: •The product strategy, indicating how the product(s) will be positioned against the competition in the product-market. •The value chain (distribution) strategy to be used. •The pricing strategy, including the role and positioning of price relative to competition. •The advertising and sales promotion strategy and the objectives these promotion components are expected to achieve. •The sales force strategy, direct marketing strategy, and the Internet strategy, indicating how they are used in the positioning strategy. 6-23 DETERMINING POSITIONING EFFECTIVENESS The marketing offer (product, distribution, price, and promotion) is both distinct and valued in the minds of the customers in the market target. 6-24 Customer and Competitor Research Methods for Determining Positioning Effectiveness Analytical Positioning Models Test Marketing 6-25 Customer and Competitor Research * Research Studies * Preference Maps Test Marketing * Generates information about commercial feasibility and marketing program * Provides market (sales forecasts) and effectiveness measures Positioning Models * Incorporates research data into formal models of decision analysis 6-26 Positioning Errors * Under-positioning – customers have only vague ideas about the company and do not perceive anything distinctive about it * Over-positioning – Customers have too narrow an understanding of the company, product, or brand * Confused positioning – Frequent changes and contradictory messages confuse customers * Doubtful positioning – claims made for the product or brand are not regarded as credible 6-27 Positioning in Perspective * Positioning is a central part of business strategy * Positioning analysis starts with an understanding of the value proposition for the target segment * Value-driven positioning is the objective * Positioning seeks to differentiate the organization’s offer from the competition * Positioning seeks to create a unique perception in buyers’ minds of the target market segment * Positioning is the unifying dimension of market-driven strategy 6-28 Positioning usually means that an overt decision is being made to concentrate only on certain segments. Such an approach requires commitment and discipline because it’s not easy to turn your back on potential buyers. Yet, the effect of generating a distinct, meaningful position is to focus on the target segments and not to be constrained by the reaction of other segments. Source: Aaker and Shansby, Business Horizons, May-June 1982, 61. 6-29 Illustrative Impacts of Changes in Business Strategy on Targeting and Positioning Strategies Changes in Business Strategy Rapid Growth/ Retrenchment Market Targeting Impact Market scope may not change although targets may be increased or reduced. Substantial changes in resource allocation, (e.g. advertising expenditures Changing the Product Mix No change is necessary unless increase in product scope creates opportunities in new segments. Changes in product strategy, methods of distribution, and promotional strategies may be necessary. Changing the Market Scope Targeting is likely to change to include new targets. Positioning strategy must be developed for each new target. Repositioning Should not have a major effect on targeting strategy. Product, distribution, price, and promotion strategies may be affected. Value Chain Integration Should have no effect on targeting strategy. Primary impact on channel, pricing and promotion strategies. Targeting strategies must be selected in new business areas. Positioning strategies must be developed (or acquired for the new business areas. Targeting strategy may be affected based on the nature and scope of the alliance. Operating relationships and assignment or responsibilities must be established. Diversification Strategic Alliance Positioning Impact 6-30 Targeting and Positioning Product Strategy Positioning Strategy Promotion Strategy Market Target Distribution Strategy Price Strategy 6-31