Post on 18-Jan-2016
MarketingMini Lesson for IA
Market Segmentation
• A segment refers to a sub-group of consumers with similar characteristics in a given market• Market segmentation is the process of dividing the market into
smaller or distinct groups to meet their needs• Types of segmentation:• Demographic (age, gender, religion, family characteristics, ethnic grouping)• Geographic (regions in a country, climatic conditions)• Psychographic (social and economic status, values)
Advantages of Segmentation
• Segmentation helps businesses identify existing gaps and new opportunities • Designing products for a specific group of consumers can increase
sales• Segmentation minimizes waste of resources• Businesses can diversify and spread their risk by differentiating
products
Targeting
• A target market consists of a group of consumers with common needs or wants that a business decides to serve or sell to• Targeting can be carried out in the following ways:• Undifferentiated marketing (aka mass marketing)• Differentiated marketing (aka segmented marketing)• Concentrated marketing (aka niche marketing)
4 P’s of the Marketing Mix
• Product• The good or service that is offered in the market• Aim to satisfy needs and wants of consumers
• Price• The amount consumers are charged for a product• Indicates the value consumers perceive the product to have
• Promotion• The ways in which consumers are informed about and persuaded to purchase
product
• Place• The product’s location or channels of distribution used
An appropriate marketing mix
• Inappropriate examples:• Advertising an expensive car in a colorful children’s magazine• Selling an exclusive perfume in a stall where second-hand clothes are sold• A real-estate agent attempting to sell houses in a vegetable market
• An appropriate marketing mix must:• Be well coordinated• Be clear, focused, and not abstract or ambiguous• Consider the market it is aiming to sell the product to• Look into the degree of competition that its product faces• Target the right consumer
Product – Product Life Cycle
• Shows the course that a product takes from its development to its decline in the market• Six stages:• Development• Introduction• Growth• Maturity• Saturation• Decline
Product – BCG Matrix
BCG Matrix for Adidas
Ansoff MatrixPenetration: When marketers try to sell the existing product to the existing customers. It can be achieved in multiple ways. For example, by changing pricing, by adding minor features (new and improved!), changing the packaging (shampoo sachets), or highlighting alternative uses.
Product Development: McDonald's introduced salads in their outlets in order to retain its existing customers, many of whom were becoming more health conscious.Salads are exactly opposite of what McDonald's is known for! However, regulatory pressures, changing consumer behavior, and negative media coverage forced them to introduce more healthy choices on the menu.
Market Development: Introducing an existing product in different markets is perhaps one of the most used strategies to extract full benefit of a successful product. A very common example is entering different geographical areas nationally and internationally.
Diversification: When marketers introduce a totally new product to a completely new market, they engage in diversification. I think that iPod was perhaps one of the most successful diversification ever. With its launch Apple targeted a very large customer group, very different from its traditional smaller cult-like following.
Ansoff Matrix for Coca Cola
Price – Pricing Strategies
• Cost-plus pricing (mark-up pricing)• Penetration pricing• Price skimming• Psychological pricing• Price discrimination• Competitive pricing
Promotion – Promotional Strategies
• Above-the-line promotion• Advertising
• Informative advertising• Persuasive advertising• Reassuring advertising
• Below-the-line promotion• Direct marketing• Personal selling• Public relations• Sales promotions
Place – Distribution Channels
• Types of distribution channels:• Zero intermediary channel• One intermediary channel• Two intermediaries channel
Unique Selling Point (or Proposition)
• This is a feature of a product that differentiates it from other competing products in the market.
• Your USP can come from any area of the marketing mix:• Product: Apple• Price: Walmart• Place: Coca Cola• Promotion: Nike
Product Positioning (customer perception)• Product positioning involves analyzing how consumers define or
perceive a product compared to other products in the market• An effective tool they could use in planning their positioning
strategies is a position or perception map• Importance of a position map:• Helps a company to establish which are its close competitors and threats• Helps identify gaps or opportunities in the market• Simple and quick way to present research data• Helps in targeting specific market segments
Product Positioning: Chocolates
Product Positioning: Cars