Week 4, "Market Segmenting, Targeting, and Positioning" was derived from Principles of Marketing, which was adapted by the Saylor Foundation under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial- ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license without attribution as requested by the work's original creator or licensee. © 2015, The Saylor Foundation. Week 4 Market Segmenting, Targeting, and Positioning Suppose you've created a great new offering you hope will become a hot seller. Before you quit your day job to market it, you'll need to ask yourself, "Who's going to buy my product?" and "Will there be enough of these people to make it worth my while?" Certain people will be more interested in what you have to offer than others. Not everyone needs homeowners' insurance, not everyone needs physical therapy services, and not everyone needs the latest and greatest cell phone. Among those that do, some will buy a few, and a few will buy many. In other words, in terms of your potential buyers, not all of them are "created equal." Some customers are more equal than others, however. A number of people might be interested in your product if it's priced right. Other people might be interested if they simply are aware of the fact that your product exists. Your goal is to figure out who these people are. To do this, you will need to divide them into different categories. The process of breaking down all consumers into groups of potential buyers with similar characteristics is called market segmentation. The key question to ask yourself when segmenting markets: What groups of buyers are similar enough that the same product or service will appeal to all of them? (Barringer & Ireland, 2010). After all, your marketing budget is likely to be limited. You need to focus on those people you truly have a shot at selling to and tailoring your offering toward them. Once market segments are identified, the next step is to identify which of those segments, if any, the company wants to pursue with its limited resources and consistency with its mission. This is called target marketing. A company may decide not to target market, in which case it is mass marketing. But mass marketing is rare. 4.1 Targeted Marketing vs. Mass Marketing LEARNING OBJECTIVES 1. Distinguish between targeted marketing and mass marketing and explain what led to the rise of each. 2. Describe how targeted marketing can benefit firms. 3. Explain why companies differentiate among their customers. Choosing select groups of people and organizations to sell to is called targeted marketing, or differentiated marketing. It is a relatively new phenomenon. Mass marketing, or undifferentiated marketing, came first. It evolved along with mass production and involves selling the same product to everybody. You didn't need to conduct any market research to know that a household could use an electric washing machine. Build it and they will come. You can think of mass marketing as a shotgun approach: you blast out as many marketing messages as possible on every medium available as often as you can afford (Spellings Jr., 2009). (By contrast, targeted marketing is more like shooting a rifle; you take careful aim at one type of customer with your message.) Automaker Henry Ford was very successful at both mass production and mass marketing. Ford pioneered the modern-day assembly line early in the twentieth century, which helped him cost- effectively pump out huge numbers of identical Model T automobiles. They came in only one color: black. "Any customer can have a car painted any color he wants, so long as it is black," Ford used to joke. He also advertised in every major newspaper and persuaded all kinds of publications to carry stories about the new, inexpensive cars. By 1918, half of all cars on America's roads were Model Ts (Ford, 1922). Figure 4.1 You could forget about buying a custom Model T from Ford in the early 1900s. The good news? The price was right. Source: Unknown. Wikimedia Commons. In the public domain. Then Alfred P. Sloan, the head of General Motors (GM), appeared on the scene. Sloan began to segment consumers in the automobile market—to divide them by the prices they wanted to pay and the different cars they wanted to buy. His efforts were successful, and in the 1950s, GM overtook Ford in the as the nation's top automaker (Manzanedo, 2005). (You might be interested to know that before GM declared bankruptcy in 2009, it was widely believed the automaker actually had too many car models. Apparently, "old habits die hard," as the saying goes.) Benefits of Segmenting and Targeting Markets The story of General Motors raises an important point, which is that segmenting and targeting markets doesn't necessarily mean "skinnying down" the number of your customers. In fact, it can help you enlarge your customer base by giving you information with which to successfully adjust some component of your offering—the offering itself, its price, the way you service and market it, and so on. More specifically, the process can help you do the following: • Avoid head-on competition with other firms trying to capture the same customers • Develop new offerings and expand profitable brands and product lines • Remarket older, less-profitable products and brands • Identify early adopters • Redistribute money and sales efforts to focus on your most profitable customers • Retain "at-risk" customers in danger of defecting to your competitors The trend today is toward more precise, targeted marketing. Figuring out "who's who" in terms of your customers involves some detective work, though—often market research. A variety of tools and research techniques can be used to segment markets. Government agencies, such as the US Census Bureau, collect and report vast amounts of population information and economic data that can reveal changing consumption trends. Technology is also making it easier for even small companies and entrepreneurs to gather information about potential customers. For example, the online game company GamePUMA.com originally believed its target market consisted of US customers. But when the firm looked more closely at who was downloading games from its website, they were people from all over the globe. The great product idea you had? As we explained in Week 3, "Consumer Behavior: How People Make Buying Decisions," companies are now using the Internet to track people's web browsing patterns and segment them into groups that can be marketed to. Even small businesses are able to do this cost-effectively now because they don't need their own software and programs. They can simply sign up online for products like Google's AdSense and AdWords programs. You can locate potential customers by looking at blog sites and discussion forums on the web. Big- boards.com has thousands of discussion forums you can mine to find potential customers. Do you have a blog? Go to BlogPoll.com, and you can embed a survey in your blog to see what people think of your idea. If you have a website, you can download an application onto your iPhone that will give you up-to-the-minute information and statistics on your site's visitors. Getting a read on potential target markets doesn't have to involve technology, though. Your own experience and talking to would-be buyers is an important part of the puzzle. Go where you think would-be buyers go—restaurants, malls, gyms, subways, grocery stores, day care centers, and offices. Ask questions: What do buyers do during the day? What do they talk about? What products or services do you see them using? Are they having an enjoyable experience when using those products, or are they frustrated? Figure 4.2 The Healthy Choice line of frozen dinners was launched by a heart attack victim. Source: Photo by Ken. (2008). Flickr. Used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license. Healthy Choice frozen dinners were conceived as a result of questioning potential customers. The food-maker ConAgra launched the dinners in the late 1980s after its CEO, Charlie Harper, suffered a heart attack. One day a colleague complimented Harper on his wife's tasty low-fat turkey stew. That's when Harper realized there were people like him who wanted healthy convenience foods, so he began talking to them about what they wanted. Two years after the Healthy Choice line was launched, it controlled 10 percent of the frozen-dinner market (Birchall [b.], 2009). Segmenting and Targeting a Firm's Current Customers Finding and attracting new customers is generally more difficult than retaining your current customers. People are creatures of habit. Think about how much time and energy you spend when you switch your business from one firm to another—even when you're buying something as simple as a haircut. If you aren't happy with your hair and want to find a new hairdresser, you first have to talk to people with haircuts you like or read reviews of salons. Once you decide to go to a particular salon, you have to look it up on the Internet or your GPS device and hope you don't get lost. When you get to the salon, you explain to the new hairdresser how you want your hair cut and hope he or she gets it right. You might also have to navigate different methods of payment. Perhaps the new salon won't accept your American Express card or won't let you put the tip on your card. However, once you have learned how the new salon operates, doing business with it gets much easier. The same is true for firms when it comes to finding new customers. Finding customers, getting to know them, and figuring out what they really want is a difficult process—one that's fraught with trial and error. That's why it's so important to get to know and form relationships with your current customers. Broadly speaking, your goal is to do as much business with each one of them as possible. The economic downturn of the first decade in the 2000s drove home the point of making the most of one's current customers. During the downturn, new customers were hard to find, and firms' advertising and marketing budgets were cut. Expensive, untargeted, shotgun-like marketing campaigns that would probably produce spotty results were out of the question. Consequently, many organizations chose to focus their selling efforts on current customers in hopes of retaining their loyalty once the downturn was over (Birchall [a.], 2009). This is the situation in which the adventure-based travel firm Backroads found itself in 2009. The California-based company increased its revenues by creating a personalized marketing campaign for people who had done business with Backroads in the past. The firm looked at information such as customers' past purchases, the seasons in which they took their trips, the levels of activity associated with them, and whether or not the customers tended to vacation with children. The company then created three relevant trip suggestions for each customer based on the information. The information was sent to customers via postcards and e-mails with links to customized web pages reminding them of the trips they had previously booked with Backroads and suggesting new ones. "In terms of past customers, it was like off-the-charts better [than past campaigns]," says Massimo Prioreschi, the vice president of Backroads' sales and marketing group (MarketingSherpa, 2009). In addition to studying buying patterns, firms also try to know their customers by surveying them or hiring marketing research firms to do so. Firms also use loyalty programs to find out about their customers. For example, if you sign up to become a frequent flier with a certain airline, the airline will likely ask to you a number of questions about your likes and dislikes. This information will then be entered into a customer relationship management (CRM) system, and you might be e-mailed special deals based on the routes you tend to fly. British Airways goes so far as to track the magazines its most elite fliers like to read so the publications are available on its planes. Many firms—even small ones—are using Facebook to develop closer relationships with their customers. At Hansen Cakes, a Beverly Hills (California) bakery, employee Suzi Finer posts "cake updates" and photos of the goodies she's working on to the company's Facebook page. Along with information about the cakes, Finer extends special offers to customers and mixes in any gossip about Hollywood celebrities she's spotted in the area. After Hansen Cakes launched its Facebook page, the bakery's sales shot up 15–20 percent. "And that's during the recession," noted Finer (Graham, 2009). Twitter is another way companies are keeping in touch with their customers and boosting their revenues. For example, when the homemaking maven Martha Stewart schedules a book signing, she tweets her followers, and voilà—many of them show up at the bookstore she's appearing at to buy copies. Finding ways to interact with customers that they enjoy—whether it's meeting or "tweeting" them, or putting on events and tradeshows they want to attend—is the key to forming relationships with them. Remember what you learned in Week 2, "Customer Satisfaction, Loyalty, Empowerment , and Management": not all customers are created equal, including your current customers. Some customers are highly profitable, and others aren't. Still others will actually end up costing your company money to serve. Consequently, you will want to interact with some more than others. Believe it or not, some firms deliberately "untarget" unprofitable customers. That's what Best Buy did. In 2004, Best Buy got a lot of attention (not all good) when it was discovered the company had categorized its buyers into "personas," or types of buyers, and created customized sales approaches for each. For example, an upper-middle-class woman was referred to as a "Jill." A young urban man was referred to as a "Buzz." And pesky, bargain-hunting customers that Best Buy couldn't make much of a profit from? They were referred to as "devils" and taken off the company's mailing lists (Marco, 2009). The knife cuts both ways, though. Not all firms are equal in the minds of consumers, who will choose to do business with some companies rather than others. To consumers, market segmentation means: meet my needs—give me what I want (Market Segmentation, 2009). "Steps in One-to-One Marketing" outlines the steps companies can take to target their best customers, form close, personal relationships with them, and give them what they want—a process called one-to-one marketing. In terms of our shotgun vs. rifle approach, you can think of one-to-one marketing as a rifle approach, but with an added advantage: now you have a scope on your rifle. One-to-one marketing is an idea proposed by Don Peppers and Martha Rogers in their 1994 book The One to One Future. The book described what life would be like after mass marketing. We would all be able to get exactly what we want from sellers, and our relationships with them would be collaborative, rather than adversarial. Are we there yet? Not quite. But it does seem to be the direction the trend toward highly targeted marketing is leading. Steps in One-to-One Marketing 1. Establish short-term measures to evaluate your efforts. Determine how you will measure your effort. For example, will you use higher customer satisfaction ratings, increased revenues earned per customer, number of products sold to customers, transaction costs, or another measure? 2. Identify your customers. Gather all the information you can about your current customers, including their buying patterns, likes, and dislikes. When conducting business with them, include an "opt in" question that allows you to legally gather and use their phone numbers and e-mail addresses so you can remain in contact with them. 3. Differentiate among your customers. Determine who your best customers are in terms of what they spend and will spend in the future (their customer lifetime value), and how easy or difficult they are to serve. Identify and target customers that spend only small amounts with you but large amounts with your competitors. 4. Interact with your customers, targeting your best ones. Find ways and mediums in which to talk to customers about topics they're interested in and enjoy. Spend the bulk of your resources interacting with your best (high-value) customers. Minimize the time and money you spend on low-value customers with low growth potential. 5. Customize your products and marketing messages to meet their needs. Try to customize your marketing messages and products in order to give your customers exactly what they want—whether it's the product itself, its packaging, delivery, or the services associated with it (Harler, 2008; Peppers & Rogers, 1999; Peppers, Rogers, & Dorf, 1999). 4.1 KEY TAKEAWAY Choosing select groups of people to sell to is called targeted marketing, or differentiated marketing. Mass marketing, or undifferentiated marketing, involves selling the same product to everyone. The trend today is toward more precise, targeted marketing. Finding and attracting new customers is generally far more difficult than retaining one's current customers, which is why organizations try to interact with and form relationships with their current customers. The goal of firms is to do as much business with their best customers as possible. Forming close, personal relationships with customers and giving them exactly what they want is a process called one-to-one marketing. It is the opposite of mass marketing. 4.2 How Markets Are Segmented LEARNING OBJECTIVES 1. Understand and outline the ways in which markets are segmented. 2. Explain why marketers use some segmentation bases vs. others. We will learn more about business markets and how they are segmented in Week 8. Now, we will focus on consumer markets and how they can be segmented. In Week 3, "Consumer Behavior: How People Make Buying Decisions," we mentioned that certain factors drive consumers to buy certain things. Many of the same factors can also be used to segment customers. A firm will often use multiple segmentation bases, or criteria to classify buyers, to get a fuller picture of its customers and create real value for them. Each variable adds a layer of information about those buyers until you have a profile of a market segment. There are all kinds of characteristics you can use to segment a market. You might not immediately think of some of them. What about the physical sizes of people? "Big-and-tall" stores cater to the segment of population that's larger-sized. What about people with wide or narrow feet, or people with medical conditions, certain hobbies, or different sexual orientations? Next, we'll look at some of the more common characteristics market researchers look at when segmenting buyers. Types of Segmentation Bases Table 4.1, "Common Ways of Segmenting Buyers," shows some of the different types of buyer characteristics used to segment markets. Notice that the characteristics fall into one of four segmentation categories: behavioral, demographic, geographic, or psychographic. We'll discuss each of these categories in a moment. For now, you can get a rough idea of what the categories consist of by looking at them in terms of how marketing professionals might answer the following questions: • Behavioral segmentation. What benefits do customers want, and how do they use our product? • Demographic segmentation. How do the ages, races, and ethnic backgrounds of our customers affect what they buy? • Geographic segmentation. Where are our customers located, and how can we reach them? What products do they buy based on their locations? • Psychographic segmentation. What do our customers think about and value? How do they live their lives? Table 4.1 Common Ways of Segmenting Buyers By Behavior By Demographics By Geography By Psychographics • Benefits sought from the product • How often the product is used (usage rate) • Usage situation (daily use, holiday use, etc.) • Buyer's status and loyalty to product (nonuser, potential user, first-time users, regular user) • Age/generation • Income • Gender • Family life cycle • Ethnicity • Family size • Occupation • Education • Nationality • Religion • Social class • Region (continent, country, state, neighborhood) • Size of city or town • Population density • Climate • Activities • Interests • Opinions • Values • Attitudes • Lifestyles Segmenting by Behavior Behavioral segmentation divides people into groups according to how they behave with or act toward products. Benefits segmentation—segmenting buyers by the benefits they want from products—is very common. Take toothpaste, for example. Which benefit is most important to you when you buy toothpaste: the toothpaste's price, ability to whiten your teeth, fight tooth decay, freshen your breath, or something else? Perhaps it's a combination of two or more benefits. If marketing professionals know what those benefits are, they can then tailor different toothpaste offerings to you (and other people like you). For example, Colgate 2-in-1 Toothpaste & Mouthwash, Whitening Icy Blast is aimed at people who want the benefits of both fresher breath and whiter teeth. Another way in which businesses segment buyers is by their usage rates—that is, how often, if ever, they use certain products. For example, the entertainment and gaming company Harrah's gathers information about the people who gamble at its casinos. High rollers, or people who spend a lot of money, are considered "VIPs." VIPs get special treatment, including a personal "host" who looks after their needs during their casino visits. Companies are interested in frequent users because they want to reach others like them. They are also keenly interested in nonusers and how they can be persuaded to use products. The way in which people use products is also a basis for segmentation. Avon Skin So Soft was originally a beauty product. But after Avon discovered that some people were using it as a mosquito repellant, the company began marketing it for that purpose. Eventually, Avon created a separate product called Skin So Soft Bug Guard, which competes with repellents like Off! Similarly, Glad, the company that makes plastic wrap and bags, found out customers were using its Press 'n Seal wrap in ways the company could never have imagined. The personnel in Glad's marketing department subsequently launched a website called 1000uses.com that contained both the company and consumers' use tips. Some of the ways in which people use the product are pretty unusual, as evidenced by the following comment posted on the site: "I have a hedgehog who likes to run on his wheel a lot. After quite a while of cleaning a gross wheel every morning, I got the tip to use 'Press 'n Seal wrap' on his wheel, making clean up much easier! My hedgie can run all he wants, and I don't have to think about the cleanup. Now we're both GLAD!" (Glad, 2009). Although we doubt Glad will ever go to great lengths to segment the Press 'n Seal market by hedgehog owners, the firm has certainly gathered a lot of good consumer insight about the product and publicity from its 1000uses.com website. Segmenting by Demographics Segmenting buyers by tangible, personal characteristics such as their ages, incomes, ethnicity, family sizes, and so forth is called demographic segmentation. This section will discuss some prominent demographic characteristics used to segment buyers, including age, income, gender, and family life cycles. Other demographic characteristics include occupation, education, nationality, religion, and social class. Demographics are commonly used to segment markets because a mountain of demographic information is publicly available in databases around the world. You can obtain a great deal of demographic information on the US Census Bureau's website (http://www.census.gov). Other government websites you can tap include FedStats (http://fedstats.sites.usa.gov/) and The World Factbook (https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/index.html), which contains statistics about countries around the world. In addition to current statistics, the sites contain forecasts of demographic trends, such as whether some segments of the population are expected to grow or decline. Age At some point in your life, you are more likely to buy your first home than a funeral plot. Marketing professionals know this. That's why they try to segment consumers by their ages. You're probably familiar with some of the age groups most commonly segmented in the United States. They are shown in Table 5.2, "US Generations and Characteristics." Into which category do you fall? Table 5.2 US Generations and Characteristics Generation Also Known As Birth Years Characteristics Seniors "The Silent Generation," "Matures," "Veterans," and "Traditionalists" 1945 and prior • Experienced very limited credit growing up • Tend to live within their means • Spend more on health care than any other age group • Internet usage rates increasing faster than any other group Baby Boomers 1946– 1964 • Second-largest generation in the United States • Grew up in prosperous times before the widespread use of credit • Account for 50 percent of US consumer spending • Willing to use new technologies as they see fit Generation X 1965– 1979 • Comfortable but cautious about borrowing • Buying habits characterized by their life stages • Embrace technology and multitasking Generation Y "Millennials," "Echo Boomers," includes "Tweens" (preteens) 1980– 2000 • Largest US generation • Grew up with credit cards • Adept at multitasking; technology use is innate • Ignore irrelevant media Note: Not all demographers agree on the cutoff dates between the generations. Sources: U.S. Census Bureau, http://www.census.gov/population/www/popdata.html; Richard K. Miller and Kelli Washington, The 2009 Entertainment, Media & Advertising Market Research Handbook, 10th ed. Loganville, GA: Richard K. Miller & Associates, 2009, 157–66; Sydney Jones and Susannah Fox, "Generations Online in 2009," Pew Research Center,http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2009/Generations-Online-in-2009.aspx; Maria Paniritas, "Generation Gap: Boomers, Xers Are Reining in Spending," Philadelphia Inquirer, August 2, 2009, http://articles.philly.com/2009-08-02/business/25275378_1_spending-habits-boomers-consumer-economy. Today, Generation Y is the largest generation. The baby boomer generation is the second largest, and over the course of the last 30 years, it has been a very attractive market for sellers. Retro brands—old brands or products that companies "bring back" for a period of time—were aimed at baby boomers during the economic downturn in the early 2000s. Pepsi Throwback and Mountain Dew Throwback, which are made with cane sugar—like they were "back in the good old days"—instead of corn syrup, are examples (Schlacter, 2009). Take a look at Figure 4.3 illustrating Coke's retro look bottle. This was the original Coca-Cola bottle from Coke's early history through the mid-twentieth century when technology allowed for cans and simpler bottle designs. Marketing professionals believe they appealed to baby boomers because they reminded them of better times—times when they didn't have to worry about being laid off, about losing their homes, or about their retirement funds and pensions drying up. Figure 4.3 Coca-Cola's Retro Look Bottle If you are old enough to remember this bottle, you are probably a baby boomer, and the bottle design may appeal to you when buying soft drinks. Source: Photo by Kansir. (2012). Flickr. Used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license. But baby boomers are aging, and the size of the group will eventually decline. By contrast, the members of Generation Y have a lifetime of buying still ahead of them, which translates to a lot of potential customer lifetime value (CLV) for marketers if they can capture this group of buyers. However, a survey found that the latest recession had forced teens to change their spending habits and college plans, and that roughly half of older Generation Yers reported they had no savings (Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 2009). So which group or groups should your firm target? Although it's hard to be all things to all people, many companies try to broaden their customer bases by appealing to multiple generations so they don't lose market share when demographics change. Several companies have introduced lower- cost brands targeting Generation Xers, who have less spending power than boomers. For example, kitchenware and home-furnishings company Williams-Sonoma opened the Elm Street chain, a less-pricey version of the Pottery Barn franchise. The Starwood hotel chain's W hotels, which feature contemporary designs and hip bars, are aimed at Generation Xers (Miller & Washington, 2009). The video game market is very proud of the fact that along with Generation X and Generation Y, many older Americans still play video games. (You probably know some baby boomers who own a Nintendo Wii.) The spa market is another example. Products and services in this market used to be aimed squarely at adults. Not anymore. Parents are now paying for their tweens to get facials, pedicures, and other pampering in numbers no one in years past could have imagined. Staying abreast of changing demographics can be a matter of life or death for many companies. As early as the 1970s, US automakers found themselves in trouble because of demographic reasons. Many of the companies' buyers were older Americans inclined to "buy American." These people hadn't forgotten that Japan bombed Pearl Harbor during World War II and weren't about to buy Japanese vehicles. But younger Americans were. Plus, Japanese cars had developed a better reputation. Despite the challenges US automakers face today, they have taken great pains to cater to the "younger" generation—today's baby boomers who don't think of themselves as being old. If you are a car buff, you perhaps have noticed that the once-stodgy Cadillac now has a sportier look and stiffer suspension. And what about Generations X and Y? Automakers have begun reaching out to them, too. General Motors (GM) has sought to revamp the century-old company by hiring a new younger group of managers—managers who understand how Generation X and Y consumers are wired and what they want. "If you're going to appeal to my daughter, you're going to have to be in the digital world," explained one GM vice president (Cox, 2009). Companies have to not only develop new products designed to appeal to Generations X and Y but also find new ways to reach them. People in these generations not only tend to ignore traditional advertising but also are downright annoyed by it. To market to Scion drivers, who are generally younger, Toyota created Scion Speak, a social networking site where they can communicate, socialize, and view cool new models of the car. Online events such as the fashion shows broadcast over the web are also getting the attention of younger consumers, as are text, e-mail, and Twitter messages they can sign up to receive so as to get coupons, cash, and free merchandise. The Millennial Generation, or Generation Y, is the demographic cohort following Generation X. There are no precise dates when the generation starts and ends; generally, birth years range from the early 1980s to the early 2000s (Wikipedia). This group is about 25 percent of the US population and wields considerable buying power. Its members are in their prime consumer years, raising families and earning incomes. Marketers are paying special attention to millennials' needs and have significantly altered their branding and promotion strategies to reach them. Millennials grew up with technology and widely use it for their information and purchase behaviors. They also note a preference for supporting causes with their purchases. Income Tweens might appear to be a very attractive market when you consider they will be buying products for years to come. But would you change your mind if you knew that baby boomers account for 50 percent of all consumer spending in the United States? Americans over 65 now control nearly three-quarters of the net worth of US households; this group spends $200 billion a year on major "discretionary" (optional) purchases such as luxury cars, alcohol, vacations, and financial products (Reisenwitz, Iyer, Kuhlmeier, & Eastman, 2007). Income is used as a segmentation variable because it indicates a group's buying power. People's incomes also tend to reflect their education levels, occupation, and social classes. Higher education levels usually result in higher-paying jobs and greater social status. The makers of upscale products such as Rolexes and Lamborghinis aim their products at high- income groups. However, a growing number of firms are aiming their products at lower-income consumers. The fastest-growing product in the financial services sector is prepaid debit cards, most of which are being bought and used by people who don't have bank accounts. Firms are finding that this group is a large, untapped pool of customers who tend to be more brand-loyal than most. If you capture enough of them, you can earn a profit (von Hoffman, 2006). Sometimes income isn't always indicative of who will buy your product, however. Companies are aware that many consumers want to be in higher-income groups and behave like they are already part of them (recall the reference groups discussed in Week 3, "Consumer Behavior: How People Make Buying Decisions"). Mercedes Benz's cheaper line of "C" class vehicles is designed to appeal to these consumers. Gender Gender is another way to segment consumers. As we explained in Week 3, "Consumer Behavior: How People Make Buying Decisions," men and women have different physiological and other needs. They also shop differently. Consequently, the two groups are often, but not always, segmented and targeted differently. Marketing professionals don't stop there, though. For example, because women make many of the purchases for their households, market researchers sometimes try to further divide them into subsegments. (Men are also often subsegmented.) For women, those segments might include stay-at-home housewives, plan-to-work housewives, just- a-job working women, and career-oriented working women. Women who are solely homemakers tend to spend more money, research has found—perhaps because they have more time. In addition to segmenting by gender, market researchers might couple people's genders along with their marital statuses and other demographic characteristics. For, example, did you know that more women in America than ever before (51 percent) now live without spouses? Can you think of any marketing opportunities this might present? (Barry, Gilly, & Doran, 1985). Family Life Cycle Family life cycle refers to the stages families go through over time and how the stages affect people's buying behavior. The primary life cycle stages used by marketers are illustrated in Figure 4.4. For example, if you have no children, your demand for pediatric services (medical care for children) is likely to be slim to none. But if you have children or adopt them, your demand might be very high because children frequently get sick. You will be part of the target market not only for pediatric services but also for a host of other products, such as children's clothing, entertainment services, and educational products. A secondary segment of interested consumers might be grandparents who are likely to spend less on day-to-day child care items but more on special-occasion gifts for children. In fact, many markets are segmented based on the special events in people's lives. Think about brides (and wannabe brides) and all the products targeted at them, including websites and television shows such as Platinum Weddings, Married Away, Whose Wedding Is It Anyway, and Bridezilla. Figure 4.4 Family Life Cycle Stages One main concern of marketing research firms is how to identify the similarities and differences between various life-stage segments. Source: Mediamark Research, Inc. (1990), Lifestage Marketing. Mediamark Research: New York. Resorts also segment vacationers depending on where they are in their family life cycles. When you think of family vacations, you probably think of Disney resorts. Some vacation properties, such as Sandals, exclude children from some of their resorts. Perhaps they do so because some studies show that the market segment with greatest financial potential is married couples without children (Barry, Gilly, & Doran, 1985). Keep in mind that although you might be able to isolate a segment in the marketplace, including one based on the family life cycle, you can't make necessarily make assumptions about what the people in it will want. Just like people's demographics change, so do their tastes. For example, over the past few decades, US families have been getting smaller. Households with a single occupant are more common than ever. But that hasn't stopped people from demanding bigger cars (and more of them) as well as larger houses, or what some people jokingly refer to as "McMansions." But like the trend toward larger cars, the trend toward larger houses appears to be reversing. High energy costs, the credit crunch, and concern for the environment are leading people to demand smaller houses. To attract people such as these, D. R. Horton, a leading national homebuilder, and other construction firms are now building smaller homes. Ethnicity People's ethnic backgrounds have a big impact on what they buy. If you've visited a grocery store that caters to a different ethnic group than your own, you were probably surprised to see the types of products sold there. It's no secret that the United States is becoming—and will continue to become—more diverse. Hispanic Americans are the largest and the fastest-growing minority in terms of real numbers in the United States. Companies are courting this once-overlooked group. In California, the health care provider Kaiser Permanente runs television ads letting members of this segment know that they can request Spanish-speaking physicians, and that Spanish-speaking nurses, telephone operators, and translators are available at all of its clinics (Berkowitz, 2006). African Americans are the second-largest ethnic group in America. Collectively, they have the most buying power of any ethnic group in America. Many people of Asian descent are known to be early adapters of new technology and have above-average incomes. Percentage-wise, Asians are the fastest-growing ethnic group in the United States. As a result, companies that sell electronic products, such as AT&T, spend more money segmenting and targeting the Asian community (Insight Research Corporation, 2003). Table 4.3, "Major US Ethnic Segments and Their Spending," contains information about the number of people in these groups and their buying power. Table 4.3 Major US Ethnic Segments and Their Spending Group Percentage of US Population Annual Spending Power (Billions of Dollars) Hispanic 13.7 736 African American 13.0 761 Asian 5.0 397 Source: New American Dimensions, LLC. As you can guess, even within ethnic groups, there are many differences in terms of the goods and services buyers choose. Consequently, looking broadly at each group would leave an incomplete picture of your buyers. For example, although the common ancestral language among the Hispanic segment is Spanish, Hispanics trace their lineages to different countries. Nearly 70 percent of Hispanics in the United States trace their lineage to Mexico; others trace theirs to Central America, South America, and the Caribbean. The percentage of these multicultural groups' representation in the US population was outlined in Week 3. The Asian ethnic group has distinct divisions. Chinese, Japanese, and Korean immigrants do not share the same language (Insight Research Corporation, 2003). Moreover, both the Asian and Hispanic market segments include new immigrants, people who immigrated to the United States years ago, and native-born Americans. So what language will you use to communicate your offerings to these people, and where? Multisegmenting the markets could potentially help you. New American Dimensions, a multicultural research firm, has further divided the Hispanic market into the following multisegments (HispanicAd.com, 2008): • Just moved in'rs. Recent arrivals, Spanish-dependent, struggling but optimistic. • FOBrs (fashionistas on a budget). Spanish-dominant, traditional, but striving for trendy. • Accidental explorers. Spanish-preferred, not in a rush to embrace US culture. • The englightened. Bilingual, technology-savvy, driven, educated, modern. • Doubting Tomáses. Bilingual, independent, skeptical, inactive, shopping uninvolved. • Latin flavored. English-preferred, reconnecting with Hispanic traditions. • SYLrs (single, young Latinos). English-dominant, free thinkers, multicultural. You could go so far as to break down segments to the individual level (which is the goal behind one-to-one marketing). However, doing so would be expensive, notes Juan Guillermo Tornoe, a marketing expert who specializes in Hispanic issues. After all, are you really going to develop different products for each of the groups? Different marketing campaigns and communications? Perhaps not. However, "you need to perform your due diligence and understand where the majority of the people you are trying to reach land on this matrix, modifying your message according to this insight," Tornoe (2008) explains. Segmenting by Geography Where will your customers come from? Suppose your new product or service idea involves opening a local store. Before you open the store, you will probably want to do some research to determine which geographical areas have the best potential. For instance, if your business is a high-end restaurant, should it be located near the local college or country club? If you sell ski equipment, you probably will want to locate your shop in the vicinity of a mountain range where there is skiing. You might see a snowboard shop in the same area but probably not a surfboard shop. By contrast, a surfboard shop is likely to be located along the coast, but you probably would not find a snowboard shop on the beach. Geographic segmentation explains why the checkout clerks at stores sometimes ask you what your zip code is. It's also why businesses print codes on coupons that correspond to zip codes. When the coupons are redeemed, the store can then find out where its customers are located—or not located. Geocoding is a process that takes data such as this and plots it on a map. Geocoding can help businesses see where prospective customers might be clustered and target them with various ad campaigns, including direct mail, for example. One of the most popular geocoding software programs is PRIZM NE, which is produced by a company called Claritas. PRIZM NE uses zip codes and demographic information to classify the American population into segments. The idea behind PRIZM is that "you are where you live." Combining both demographic and geographic information is referred to as geodemographics. To see how geodemographics works, visit the following page on Claritas’ website: http://www.claritas.com/MyBestSegments/Default.jsp?ID=20. Type in your zip code, and you will see customer profiles of the types of buyers who live in your area. Table 4.4, "An Example of Geodemographic Segmentation for 76137 (Fort Worth, TX)," shows the profiles of buyers who can be found in the zip code 76137—the "Brite Lites, Li'l City" bunch, Home Sweet Home" set, and so on. Click on the profiles on the Claritas site to see which one most resembles you. Table 4.4 An Example of Geodemographic Segmentation for 76137 (Fort Worth, TX) Number Profile Name 12 Brite Lites, Li'l City 19 Home Sweet Home 24 Up-and-Comers 13 Upward Bound 34 White Picket Fences The tourism bureau for the state of Michigan was able to identify different customer profiles and target them using PRIZM. Michigan's biggest travel segment are Chicagoans in certain zip codes consisting of upper-middle-class households with children—or the "kids in cul-de-sacs" group, as Claritas puts it. The bureau was also able to identify segments significantly different from the Chicago segment, including blue-collar adults in the Cleveland area who vacation without their children. The organization then created significantly different marketing campaigns to appeal to each group. City size and population density (the number of people per square mile) are also used for segmentation purposes. Have you ever noticed that in rural towns, McDonald's restaurants are hard to find? But Dairy Queens are usually easy to locate. McDonald's generally won't put a store in a town of fewer than 5,000 people. However, this is prime turf for the "DQ"—for one, because it doesn't have to compete with bigger franchises like McDonald's. Proximity marketing is an interesting new technology firms are using to segment buyers geographically and target them within a few hundred feet of their businesses using wireless technology. In some areas, you can switch your mobile phone to a "discoverable mode" while you're shopping and, if you want, get ads and deals from stores as you pass by them. And it's often less expensive than hiring people to hand you a flier as you walk by (Bluetomorrow.com, 2007). In addition to figuring out where to locate stores and advertise to customers in that area, geographic segmentation helps firms tailor their products. Chances are you won't be able to find the same heavy winter coat you see at a Walmart in Montana at a Walmart in Florida because of the climate differences. Market researchers also look at migration patterns to evaluate opportunities. TexMex restaurants are commonly found in the southwestern United States. However, northern states are now seeing more of them as more people of Hispanic descent move northward and the offerings become more popular nationwide. Segmenting by Psychographics If your offering fulfills the needs of a specific demographic group, then the demographic can be a basis for identifying groups of consumers interested in your product. But what if your product crosses several market segments? Take cereal, for example. The group of potential consumers could be "almost" everyone. However, there are groups of people who have different needs with regard to their cereal. Some consumers might be interested in the fiber, some consumers (especially children) may be interested in the prize that comes in the box, other consumers may be interested in the added vitamins, and still other consumers may be interested in the type of grains. Associating these specific needs with consumers in a particular demographic group could be difficult. Marketing professionals often desire more information about consumers than just demographic data. You want to know why consumers behave the way they do, what is of high priority to them, or how they rank the importance of specific buying criteria. Think about some of your friends who seem a lot like you. Have you ever gone their homes and been shocked by their lifestyles and how vastly different they are from yours? Why are their families so much different from yours? Psychographic segmentation can help fill in some of the blanks. Recall that we first mentioned psychographics in Week 3, "Consumer Behavior: How People Make Buying Decisions." Psychographic information is frequently gathered via extensive surveys that ask people about their activities, interests, opinion, attitudes, values, and lifestyles. One of the most well-known psychographic surveys is VALS (which originally stood for "Values, Attitudes, and Lifestyles"), developed by a company called SRI International in the late 1980s. Thousands of Americans were asked by the California company the extent to which they agreed or disagreed with questions similar to the following ones: "My idea of fun at a national park would be to stay at an expensive lodge and dress up for dinner" and "I could stand to skin a dead animal" (Donnelly, 2002). (Which category do you fall into?) Consumers were then divided into categories: innovators, thinkers, achievers, experiencers, believers, strivers, makers, and survivors. Each category is characterized by certain buying behaviors; for example, innovators are "successful, sophisticated, take-charge people with high self-esteem" while thinkers are "mature, satisfied, comfortable, and reflective people who value order" (Strategic Business Insights, 2009). For detailed descriptions of the categories, visit http://www.strategicbusinessinsights.com/vals/ustypes.shtml#types. Note that both VALS and PRIZM group buyers are based on their values and lifestyles. But PRIZM also overlays the information with geographic data. As a result, you can gauge what are the buying habits of people in certain zip codes, which can be helpful if you are trying to figure out where to locate stores and retail outlets. The segmenting techniques we've discussed require gathering quantitative information—data, in other words. Quantitative information can be improved with qualitative information you gather by talking to your customers and getting to know them. (Recall that this is how Healthy Choice frozen dinners were created.) Consumer insight is what results when you use both types of information. You want to be able to answer the following questions: • Am I looking at the consumers the way they see themselves? • Am I looking at life from their point of view? Best Buy asked store employees to develop insight about local consumer groups in order to create special programs and processes for them. Employees in one locale invited a group of retirees to their store to explain how to make the switch to digital television. The store sold $350,000 worth of equipment and televisions in just two hours' time. How much did it cost? Ninety-nine dollars in labor costs plus coffee and donuts. Intuit, the company that makes the tax software Quicken, has a "follow me home" program. Teams of engineers from Intuit visit people's homes and spend a couple of hours watching consumers use Quicken. Then they use the insights they gain to improve the next version of Quicken. Contrast this story with that of a competing firm: When a representative of the firm was asked if he had ever observed consumers installing or using his company's product, he responded, "I'm not sure I'd want to be around when they were trying to use it" (Nee, 2003). This company is now struggling to stay in business. 4.2 KEY TAKEAWAY Segmentation bases are criteria used to classify buyers. The main types of buyer characteristics used to segment consumer markets are behavioral, demographic, geographic, and psychographic. Behavioral segmentation divides people and organizations into groups according to how they behave with or toward products. Segmenting buyers by tangible, personal characteristics such as their age, income, ethnicity, and family size is called demographic segmentation. Geographic segmentation involves segmenting buyers based on where they live. Psychographic segmentation seeks to differentiate buyers based on their activities, interests, opinions, attitudes, values, and lifestyles. Often, a firm uses multiple bases to get a fuller picture of its customers and create value for them. Marketing professionals develop consumer insight when they gather both quantitative and qualitative information about their customers. 4.3 Selecting Target Markets and Target-Market Strategies LEARNING OBJECTIVES 1. Describe the factors that make some markets more attractive targets than others. 2. Describe the market-segmenting strategies companies pursue and why. 3. Outline the market-segmentation strategies used in global markets. Selecting Target Markets After you segment buyers and develop a measure of consumer insight about them, you can begin to see those that have more potential. Now you are hunting with a rifle instead of a shotgun. The question is, do you want to spend all day hunting squirrels, ducks, or 10-point bucks? An attractive market has the following characteristics: • It's sizeable enough to be profitable given your operating cost. Only a tiny fraction of the consumers in China can afford to buy cars. However, because the country's population is so large (nearly 1.5 billion people), more cars are sold in China than in Europe (and in the United States, depending on the month). Three billion people in the world own cell phones. But that still leaves 3 billion who don't (Corbett, 2008). • It's growing. For example, the middle class of India is growing rapidly, making it a very attractive market for consumer product companies. People under 30 make up the majority of the Indian population, fueling the demand for "Bollywood" (Indian-made) films. • It's not already swamped by competitors, or you have found a way to stand out in a crowd. IBM used to make PCs. However, after the marketplace became crowded with competitors, IBM sold the product line to a Chinese company called Lenovo. • Either it's accessible or you can find a find a way to reach it. Accessibility, or the lack of it, could include geographic accessibility, political and legal barriers, technological barriers, or social barriers. For example, to overcome geographic barriers, the consumer products company Unilever hires women in third-world countries to distribute the company's products to rural consumers who lack access to stores. (See the discussion in Week 1, "Strategic Planning," about assessing the external environment.) • You have the resources to compete in it. You might have a great idea to compete in the wind-power market. However, it is a business that is capital-intensive. What this means is that you will either need a lot of money or must be able to raise it. You might also have to compete with the likes of T. Boone Pickens, an oil tycoon who is attempting to develop and profit from the wind-power market. Does your organization have the resources to do this? (See the discussion in Week 1, "Strategic Planning," about assessing the internal environment.) • It "fits in" with your firm's objectives and mission. Consider TerraCycle, which sells organic products in recycled packages. Fertilizer made from worm excrement and sold in discarded plastic beverage bottles is just one of its products. It wouldn't be a good idea for TerraCycle to open up a polluting, coal-fired power plant, no matter how profitable the market for the service might be. Target-Market Strategies: Choosing the Number of Markets to Target Henry Ford proved that mass marketing can work—at least for a while. Mass marketing is also efficient because you don't have to tailor any part of the offering for different groups of consumers, which is more work and costs more money. The problem is that buyers are not all alike. If a competitor comes along and offers these groups a product (or products) that better meet their needs, you will lose business. Multisegment Marketing Most firms tailor their offerings in one way or another to meet the needs of different segments of customers. Because these organizations don't direct all marketing to a single segment, they are less vulnerable to competition. Marriott International is an example of a company that operates in a multisegment market. The company has different types of facilities designed to meet the needs of different types of market segments, including the following (Marriott.com, n.d.): • Marriott Hotels. The flagship brand with mass traveler appeal. • Residence Inn, Townplace Suites, Marriott Executive Apartments. Targeted at extended stay travelers with week- or months-long accommodations. • Marriott Courtyard, Springhill Suites, Fairfield Inn and Suites, Protea Hotel. Targeted at over-the-road travelers, one-night stays, families, and pet owners. • Ritz-Carlton Hotels, Bulgari, JW Marriott. Targeted at luxury travelers. • Edition, Autograph Collection, Renaissance Hotels, AC hotels by Marriott, Moxy Hotels. Targeted at different traveler lifestyles. • Marriott Conference Centers. Targeted at businesses hosting small- and midsized meetings. • Marriott Vacation Clubs and Gaylord Hotels. Targeted at travelers seeking to buy timeshares or rent at resort destinations and entertainment areas. A multisegment marketing strategy can allow you to respond to demographic and other changes in markets. For example, as a customer's income increases or life stage progresses, so might the potential for seeking out some of Marriott's higher-priced, higher-luxury brands that can cater to a more affluent client with upscale dining, accommodations, and services such as spas and golf courses. A multisegment strategy can also help you weather an economic downturn by allowing customers to trade up or down among your brands and products. Suppose a customer takes a pay cut and can't afford to stay at Marriott's Ritz-Carlton hotels anymore. A room at a JW Marriott—the most luxurious of the Marriott-brand hotels but cheaper than the Ritz—is available. A multisegment marketing approach might allow you to keep a customer for life. As your customers change, you have an offering that changes with them. Or, if one of your products is "dying out," you have others to fall back on. Figure 4.5 Marriott Continues Its Multisegment Marketing Approach Marriott launched a new brand, AC Hotels by Marriott, targeting younger, tech- and design- savvy travelers, which the company believes has been underserved. The mid-priced hotel brand wants to attract millennials with coffeehouse-like spaces for work and play. Source: Photo by Leslie. (2012). Flickr. Used and modified under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license. Concentrated Marketing Some firms—especially smaller ones with limited resources—engage in concentrated marketing. Concentrated marketing involves targeting a very select group of customers. Essentially, you have only one market segment, and you use all your resources to fill the needs of that one market segment. Concentrated marketing can be a risky strategy because you really do have all of your eggs in one basket. The auto parts industry is an example. Traditionally, many North American auto parts makers have supplied parts exclusively to auto manufacturers. But when General Motors, Ford, Chrysler, and other auto companies experienced a slump in sales following the recession that began in 2008, the auto parts makers found themselves in trouble. Many of them began trying to make and sell parts for wind turbines, aerospace tools, solar panels, and construction equipment (Simon, 2008). Niche marketing involves targeting an even more select group of consumers. When you're engaging in niche marketing, your goal is to be a big fish in a small pond instead of a small fish in a big pond (BusinessDictionary.com, n.d.). Some examples of companies operating in niche markets include those shown in Table 4.5, "Companies That Operate in Niche Markets." Table 4.5 Companies That Operate in Niche Markets Company Niche Market Share (%) Hohner Harmonicas 85 Tetra Tropical fish food 80 Swarovski Crystal jewels 65 Uwatec Snorkeling equipment 60 St. Jude Medical Center Artificial heart valves 60 Source: Manzanedo, J. M. (2005, February 20). Market segmentation strategies. How to maximize opportunities on the potential market. Retrieved April 13, 2012, from http://www.daemonquest.com/en/research_and_insight/2006/10/11/market_segmentation_strategies_how_to_max imize_opportunities_on_the_potential_market Microtargeting, or narrowcasting, is a new effort to isolate markets and target them. It was originally used to segment voters during elections, including the 2004 US presidential election. Microtargeting involves gathering all kinds of data available on people—everything from their tax and phone records to the catalogues they receive. Acxiom compiles this kind of information. For a fee, Acxiom can provide a list of Hispanic consumers who own two pets, have caller ID, drive a sedan, buy certain personal care products, subscribe to certain television cable channels, read specified magazines, and have income and education levels within a given range (Shiffman & Kanuk, 2010). Clearly, microtargeting has ethical implications. Targeting Global Markets Firms that compete in the global marketplace can use any combination of the segmenting strategies we discussed or none at all. A microcosm of the targeting strategies used in global markets is shown in Figure 4.6, "Targeting Strategies Used in Global Markets." If you're a seller of a metal such as iron ore, you might sell the same product across the entire world via a metals broker. The broker would worry about communicating with customers around the world and devising marketing campaigns for each of them. Figure 4.6 Targeting Strategies Used in Global Markets Most companies, however, tailor their offerings to meet the needs of different buyers around the world. For example, Mattel sells Barbie dolls around the world—but not the same Barbie. Mattel has created thousands of different Barbie offerings to appeal to people in different countries. Pizza Hut has franchises around the world, but its products, packaging, and advertising are tailored to different markets. Squid is a popular topping in Asia, for instance. Companies tailor products not only for different countries but also for different customers in different countries. For example, Procter & Gamble's China division now offers products designed for different local market segments in that country. P&G has an advanced formulation of laundry detergent for the premium segment, a modified product for the second (economy) segment, and a very basic, inexpensive product created for the third (rural) segment (Sewell, 2009). Sellers are increasingly targeting consumers in China, Russia, India, and Brazil because of their fast-growing middle classes. For example, the cosmetics maker Avon's largest market is Brazil. Brazilians are increasingly able to afford cosmetic products as well as plastic surgery (Wheatley, 2010). So attractive are these countries that firms are changing how they develop goods and services, too. "Historically, American companies innovated in the US and took those products abroad," says Vjay Govindarahan, a professor at Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business. Now, says Govindarahan, companies are creating low-cost products to capture markets in developing countries and then selling them in developed countries. Acer's $250 laptop and General Electric's $1,000 electrocardiogram device are examples. The world's cheapest car, the $2,500 Tato Nano, was developed for India but was slated to be sold in the United States (McGinn, 2010). Other strategies for targeting markets abroad include acquiring (buying) foreign companies or companies with large market shares there. To tap the Indian market, Kraft made a bid to buy the candymaker Cadbury, which controls about one-third of India's chocolate market. Likewise, to compete against Corona beer, the Dutch brewer Heineken purchased Mexico's Femsa, which makes the beer brands Dos Equis, Tecate, and Sol (De la Merced & Nicholson, 2010). However, some countries don't allow foreign firms to buy domestic firms. They can only form partnerships with them. Other regulatory and cultural barriers sometimes prevent foreign firms from "invading" a country. IKEA, the Swedish home-furnishings maker, eventually left Russia because it found it hard to do business there. By contrast, McDonald's efforts to expand into Russia have been quite successful. Having saturated other markets, the hamburger chain is hoping to continue to grow by opening hundreds of new stores in the country. 4.3 KEY TAKEAWAY A market worth targeting has the following characteristics: (1) It's sizable enough to be profitable, given your operating costs; (2) it's growing; (3) it's not already swamped by competitors, or you have found a way to stand out in the crowd; (4) it's accessible, or you can find a way to reach it; (5) you have the resources to compete in it; and (6) it "fits in" with your firm's mission and objectives. Most companies tailor their offerings in one way or another to meet the needs of different segments of customers. A multisegment marketing strategy can allow a company to respond to demographic and other changes in markets, including economic downturns. Concentrated marketing involves targeting a select group of customers. Niche marketing involves targeting an even more select group of customers. Microtargeting, or narrowcasting, is a new effort to "super target" consumers by gathering all kinds of data available on people—everything from their tax and phone records to the catalogues they receive. Firms that compete in the global marketplace can use any combination of these segmenting strategies or none at all. Sellers are increasingly targeting consumers in China, Russia, India, and Brazil because of their fast-growing middle classes. Firms are creating low-cost products to capture large markets in developing countries such as these and then selling the products in developed countries. Other strategies for targeting markets abroad include acquiring foreign companies or forming partnerships with them. 4.4 Positioning and Repositioning Offerings LEARNING OBJECTIVES 1. Explain why positioning is an important element when it comes to targeting customers. 2. Describe how a product can be positioned and mapped. 3. Explain what repositioning is designed to do. Why should buyers purchase your offering vs. another? If your product faces competition, you will need to think about how to "position" it in the marketplace relative to competing products. After all, you don't want the product to be just another "face in the crowd" in the minds of consumers. Positioning involves tailoring your product so that it stands out from the competition, and people want to buy it. One way to position your product is to plot customer survey data on a perceptual map. A perceptual map is a two-dimensional graph that visually shows where your product stands, or should stand, relative to your competitors, based on criteria important to buyers. The criteria can involve any number of characteristics—price, quality, level of customer service associated with the product, and so on. An example is shown in Figure 4.7, "An Example of a Perceptual Map." To avoid head-to-head competition with your competitors, you want to position your product where your competitors aren't clustered. Figure 4.7 An Example of a Perceptual Map Source: Adapted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perceptual_mapping. Many companies use taglines in their advertising to try to position their products in the minds of the buyer—where they want them, of course. A tagline is a catchphrase designed to sum up the essence of a product. You perhaps have heard Wendy's tagline "It's better than fast food." The tagline is designed to set Wendy's apart from restaurants like McDonald's and Burger King—to plant the idea in consumers' heads that Wendy's offerings are less "fast foodish." Sometimes firms find it advantageous to reposition their products—especially if they want the product to appeal to different market segments. Repositioning is an effort to "move" a product to a different place in the minds of consumers. The i-house, a prefab house built by Clayton Homes, a mobile home manufacturer, is an example. According to the magazine Popular Mechanics, the i-house "looks like a house you'd order from IKEA, sounds like something designed by Apple, and consists of amenities—solar panels, tankless water heaters and rainwater collectors—that one would expect to come from an offbeat green company out of California selling to a high-end market" (Schwartz, 2009). A Clayton Homes spokesperson says, "Are we repositioning to go after a new market? I would think we are maintaining our value to our existing market and expanding the market to include other buyers that previously wouldn't have considered our housing product"(Knoxville News-Sentinel, 2009). Unfortunately, Clayton's repositioning strategy flopped. According to Mobile Home Living, the Clayton iHouse had a great layout and many unique features for approximately $75,000. However, they believed the mainstream, or at least the target market who buy pre-fab homes, wasn't quite ready for the modern green prefab home (Adkins, n.d.). Since this happened during the economic downturn, it could be that the target market did not have the income to afford it, or even buy new housing at all. Porsche unveiled its new line of Panamera vehicles at a Shanghai car show. The car is a global model, but unlike Porsche's other cars, it's longer. Why? Because rich car buyers in China prefer to be driven by chauffeurs (Gapper, 2009). How do you think Porsche is trying to reposition itself for the future? 4.4 KEY TAKEAWAY If a product faces competition, its producer will need to think about how to "position" it in the marketplace relative to competing products. Positioning involves tailoring a product or its marketing so that it stands out from the competition and people want to buy it. A perceptual map is a two-dimensional graph that visually shows where a product stands, or should stand, relative to its competitors, based on criteria important to buyers. Sometimes firms find it advantageous to reposition their products. Repositioning is an effort to "move" a product to a different place in the minds of consumers. WEEK 5 PREVIEW Week 5 begins our discussion of the marketing mix elements, the offering. What to offer to a mass or target market is totally within the control of a company and its limited resources. We will learn that an offering can be a product, service, or an idea, and most likely is a combination of product and service. It will be important to understand that companies design features, but consumers buy benefits. The concept of product levels and product lines will be explored, as well as the way we tend to categorize offerings. A major focus of Week 5 will be on branding, the name, picture, design, or symbol used to identify an offering, because a strong brand allows companies to offer new products and services under the umbrella effect of its brand name. Today, most companies organize themselves by brand managers instead of product managers, reflecting this important change in focus from product management to brand management. We will end Week 5 with a discussion on new products, which have some unique marketing challenges that set them apart from marketing existing products. New products enter the market in the introductory stage of the product life cycle where expenses run high as companies strive to get their product adopted by the market. Week 4 References Overview Barringer, B. R., & Ireland, D. (2010). Entrepreneurship: Successful Launching New Ventures, 3rd ed. Upper Saddle River NJ: Prentice Hall. Section 4.1 Birchall, J. [b.]. (2009, June 4). Out to launch in a downturn. Financial Times, 10. 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