Chapter 9 Identifying Market Segments and Selecting Target Markets PowerPoint by Karen E. James Louisiana State University - Shreveport ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 0 in Chapter 9 Objectives Learn how companies identify the segments that make up a market. Understand the criteria companies use to choose the most attractive market segments. ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 1 in Chapter 9 Target Marketing Target marketing requires marketers to take three major steps: – Market segmentation: Identifying and profiling distinct groups of buyers who differ in their needs and preferences. – Market targeting: Selecting one or more market segments to enter. – Market positioning: Establishing and communicating the key distinctive benefit(s) of the company’s market offering to each target. ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 2 in Chapter 9 Using Market Segmentation Mass marketing is losing popularity Micromarketing can be undertaken at four levels: – Segment marketing – Niche marketing – Local marketing – Individual marketing ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 3 in Chapter 9 Using Market Segmentation Three patterns of preference segments are typically identified: – Homogeneous preferences – Diffused preferences – Clustered preferences ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 4 in Chapter 9 Using Market Segmentation Needs-based Segmentation Process Needs-based segmentation Segment profitability Segment identification Segment positioning Segment attractiveness Segment “acid test” Marketing-mix strategy ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 5 in Chapter 9 Using Market Segmentation Useful market segments share certain characteristics: – Measurable – Substantial – Accessible – Differentiable – Actionable ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 6 in Chapter 9 Segmenting Consumer Markets Bases for Segmentation Nation or country State or region Geographic Demographic City or metro size Psychographic Density Behavioral Climate ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 7 in Chapter 9 Segmenting Consumer Markets Bases for Segmentation Age, race, gender Income, education Family size Geographic Family life cycle Demographic Occupation Psychographic Behavioral ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. Religion, nationality Generation Social class To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 8 in Chapter 9 Segmenting Consumer Markets Bases for Segmentation Geographic Lifestyle – Activities – Interests – Opinions Demographic Personality Psychographic Core values Behavioral ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 9 in Chapter 9 Segmenting Consumer Markets Bases for Segmentation Geographic Demographic Occasions Benefits User status Usage rate Loyalty status Psychographic Buyer-readiness Behavioral Attitude ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 10 in Chapter 9 Segmenting Consumer Markets Multi-attribute segmentation via geoclustering combines multiple variables to identify smaller, betterdefined target groups – PRIZM Geoclustering system uses demographic, geographic, lifestyle, and behavioral characteristics ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 11 in Chapter 9 Segmenting Business Markets Bases for Segmentation Operating variables Situational factors Purchasing approaches Personal characteristics Demographic variables ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 12 in Chapter 9 Segmenting Business Markets Rackman and Vincentis proposed a segmentation scheme that classifies business buyers into three groups: – Price-oriented customers: best served via transactional selling – Solution-oriented customers: best served by means of consultative selling – Strategic-value customers: best served by means of enterprise selling ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 13 in Chapter 9 Market Targeting Strategies Evaluating and selecting market segments requires assessing the segment’s overall attractiveness in light of company’s objectives and resources. Five patterns of target market selection can then be considered. ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 14 in Chapter 9 Market Targeting Strategies Patterns of Target Market Selection Single-segment concentration Product specialization Selective specialization Market specialization Full market coverage ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 15 in Chapter 9 Market Targeting Strategies Targeting multiple segments may result in cost economies Supersegment targeting may be appropriate Blocked markets often require megamarketing countermeasures Be aware of ethical concerns ©2003 Prentice Hall, Inc. To accompany A Framework for Marketing Management, 2nd Edition Slide 16 in Chapter 9