Market Segmentation, Market Targeting and Market Positioning
Market Segmentation, Market Targeting and Market Positioning
Basic Concepts: Definitions
Market Segmentation: Levels of Market Segmentation
Basic Concepts: Relationships
Segment Strategy
Segment Strategy
Segment Strategy
Market Segmentation: Requirements for Effective Segmentation
Market Segmentation: Segmenting Consumer Markets
Market Targeting: Factors for Evaluating Market Segments
Deciding on the breath of market coverage
Market positioning
Differentiation and Positioning
Market Positioning: Objective and Subjective Positioning
Market Positioning: 4 main ways to Differentiate
Market Positioning: Positioning Strategies
How many differences to promote?
A difference is worth establishing to the extent that it satisfies the following criteria:
A difference is worth establishing to the extent that it satisfies the following criteria:
Market Positioning: Value Positioning
MORE FOR MORE
MORE FOR THE SAME
THE SAME FOR LESS
LESS FOR MUCH LESS
MORE FOR LESS
Market Positioning: Positioning Maps
Developing a Positioning Statement
Market Positioning: The potential pitfalls of weak positioning
Repositioning strategies
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Market Segmentation, Market Targeting and Market Positioning

1. Market Segmentation, Market Targeting and Market Positioning

Nina Zlateva, Ph. D.
1

2. Market Segmentation, Market Targeting and Market Positioning

2
Market Segmentation, Market
Targeting and Market
Positioning
Basic
concepts
Market segmentation
Market targeting
Market positioning

3. Basic Concepts: Definitions

3
Basic Concepts: Definitions
Market
segmentation – dividing a market into
distinct groups of buyers with different needs,
characteristics or behaviour, who might require
separate products or marketing mixes;
Market targeting – the process of evaluating each
market segments attractiveness and selecting one
or more segments to enter;
Market positioning – arranging for a product to
occupy a clear, distinctive and desirable place
relative to competing products in the minds of
target consumers;

4. Market Segmentation: Levels of Market Segmentation

4
Market Segmentation:
Levels of Market Segmentation
Mass marketing – using almost the same marketing mix
for all consumers;
Segment marketing – adapting a company’s
marketing mix so it more easily matches the needs of
one or more segments;
Niche marketing – adapting a company’s marketing
mix so it more easily matches the needs of one or more
subsegments where there is usually little competition;
Micromarketing – the company tailors its marketing
programmes to the needs and wants of narrowly
defined geographic, demographic, psychographic or
behavioural segments. It includes local and individual
marketing;

5. Basic Concepts: Relationships

5
Basic Concepts: Relationships
Market
segmentation
Market
targeting
Market
positioning
1.Develop profiles
of resulting
segments
3.Develop measures
of segment
attractiveness
5.Develop positioning
for each target
segment
2.Identify bases for
segmenting the
market
4.Select the target
segment(s)
6.Develop marketing
mix for each target
segment

6. Segment Strategy

6
Segment Strategy
Undifferentiated
marketing – a market-coverage
strategy in which a firm decides to ignore market
segment differences and go after the whole
market with one offer.
Company
marketing
mix
Market

7. Segment Strategy

7
Segment Strategy
Differentiated
marketing – a market-coverage
strategy in which a firm decides to target several
market segments and designs separate offers for
each.
Company marketing mix 1
Company marketing mix 2
Company marketing mix 3
Segment 1
Segment 2
Segment 3

8. Segment Strategy

8
Segment Strategy
Concentrated
marketing – a market-coverage
strategy in which a firm goes after a large share
of one or a few segments.
Company
marketing
mix
Segment 1
Segment 2
Segment 3

9. Market Segmentation: Requirements for Effective Segmentation

9
Market Segmentation:
Requirements for Effective Segmentation
The segments must be:
Measurable
Accessible
Substantial, cost-effective
Unique in its response
Appropriate
Stable

10. Market Segmentation: Segmenting Consumer Markets

10
Market Segmentation:
Segmenting Consumer Markets
Geographic and geodemographic segmentation
– region, city size, density, climate;
Demographic segmentation – gender, age and
family life cycle, family size, income and
occupation, education, religion, race, nationality
Behavioural segmentation – purchase occasion,
benefits sought, user status, usage rate, loyalty
status, readiness state, attitude towards the
product
Psychographic segmentation – social class,
lifestyle, personality

11. Market Targeting: Factors for Evaluating Market Segments

11
Market Targeting:
Factors for Evaluating Market Segments
The
size and growth potential of each segment;
The structural attractiveness – Porter’s Five
Competitive Forces: competitive rivalry, threat of
new entrants, threat of substitute products,
bargaining power of suppliers and bargaining
power of buyers;
The organization’s objectives and resources / is
the segment growing or declining, is the segment
changing?

12. Deciding on the breath of market coverage

12
Deciding on the breath of
market coverage
Single
segment concentration;
Several segments;
Product specialization;
Market specialization;
Full market coverage;

13. Market positioning

13
Market positioning
A product’s position is the complex
set of perceptions, impressions, and
feelings that consumers have for the
product compared with competing
products.

14. Differentiation and Positioning

14
Differentiation and Positioning
The differentiation and positioning task
consists of three steps:
identifying a set of possible customer
value differences that provide
competitive advantages upon which to
build a position,
choosing the right competitive
advantages
selecting an overall positioning strategy.

15. Market Positioning: Objective and Subjective Positioning

15
Market Positioning:
Objective and Subjective Positioning
Objective
positioning – refers to the
tangible, real or physical attributes that a
hotel or restaurant offers customers;
Subjective positioning – focuses on the
intangible aspects of the offer or
experience. What matters in the customer’s
perception of the service;

16. Market Positioning: 4 main ways to Differentiate

16
Market Positioning:
4 main ways to Differentiate
(Physical)
product differentiation
Services differentiation
Personnel differentiation
Image differentiation
Location differentiation

17. Market Positioning: Positioning Strategies

17
Market Positioning: Positioning
Strategies
Product
attributes – technical products;
Benefits offered ;
Usage occasions - Orange juice;
Different users – Red Bull;
Activities (sporting events);
Personalities – famous stars;
Origin;
Other brands – co-branding;
Competitors – against competitors or away from
competitors;
Product class positioning;

18. How many differences to promote?

18
How many differences to
promote?
Unique
selling proposition(USP)
Positioning on more than one
differentiator

19. A difference is worth establishing to the extent that it satisfies the following criteria:

19
A difference is worth establishing to the
extent that it satisfies the following
criteria:
Important: The difference delivers a highly valued
benefit to target buyers.
Distinctive: Competitors do not offer the
difference, or the company can offer it in a more
distinctive way.
Superior: The difference is superior to other ways
that customers might obtain the same benefit.

20. A difference is worth establishing to the extent that it satisfies the following criteria:

20
A difference is worth establishing to the
extent that it satisfies the following
criteria:
Communicable: The difference is communicable
and visible to buyers.
Preemptive: Competitors cannot easily copy the
difference.
Affordable: Buyers can afford to pay for the
difference.
Profitable: The company can introduce the
difference profitably.

21. Market Positioning: Value Positioning

21
Market Positioning: Value
Positioning
Value
positioning – a range of positioning
alternatives based on the value an offering
delivers and its price
Value
More
Same
Less
More for less More for same More for more
Me too
Same for less
Same for more
Less for less Less for same Less for more
Price
Less
Same
More

22. MORE FOR MORE

22
MORE FOR MORE
“More-for-more”
positioning involves
providing the most upscale product or
service and charging a higher price to
cover the higher costs;
gives prestige to the buyer, It symbolizes
status and a loftier lifestyle;

23. MORE FOR THE SAME

23
MORE FOR THE SAME
Companies
can attack a competitor’s
more-for-more positioning by introducing
a brand offering comparable quality but
at a lower price.

24. THE SAME FOR LESS

24
THE SAME FOR LESS
Companies
offer equivalent quality
products at a lower price.
Companies develop imitative but lowerpriced brands

25. LESS FOR MUCH LESS

25
LESS FOR MUCH LESS
Few
people need, want, or can afford
“the very best” in everything they buy. A
market almost always exists for products
that offer less and therefore cost less.

26. MORE FOR LESS

26
MORE FOR LESS
The winning value proposition would be to
offer “more for less.”
In the short run, some companies can
actually achieve such positions
In the long run, companies will find it very
difficult to sustain such best-of-both
positioning. Offering more usually costs
more.

27. Market Positioning: Positioning Maps

27
Market Positioning: Positioning Maps
250 Price
High price
High quality
200
Star rating
3
Unsustainable 100
strategy
Low price
High quality
Rip-off
strategy
150
4
5
High price
Low quality
50
2
1
Low price
Low quality
Lovelock (2002)

28. Developing a Positioning Statement

28
Developing a Positioning
Statement
The
statement should follow the form: To
(target segment and need) our (brand) is
(concept) that (point of difference). For
example: “To busy, mobile professionals
who need to always be in the loop,
BlackBerry is a wireless connectivity
solution that allows you to stay connected
to data, people, and resources while on
the go, easily and reliably—more so than
competing technologies.”

29. Market Positioning: The potential pitfalls of weak positioning

29
Market Positioning:
The potential pitfalls of weak positioning
o
o
o
Confused positioning - where buyers are unsure of what the
organization stands for
Over-positioning, where consumers perceive the
organization’s products as being expensive and fail to
recognize the full breadth and value of the range (this can
be summed up in terms of over-promise and under-delivery)
Under-positioning, where the message is simply too vague
and consumers have little real idea of what the organization
stands for or how it differs from the competition.

30. Repositioning strategies

30
Repositioning strategies
Gradual
repositioning , which involves a
planned and continuous adaptation to the
changing market environment.
Radical repositioning, where an increasing
gap between what the brand offers and what
the market wants leads the management
team to think about a major strategic
change.
Innovative repositioning, where the planner
nds a new strategic position that offers
market opportunities that have not so far
been identi ed by competitors.
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