marketing manajemen_identifying market, segment and targets

Post on 18-Feb-2016

216 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

marketing

TRANSCRIPT

MARKETING MANAGEMENT12th edition

8 Identifying Market

Segments and Targets

Kotler Keller

8-2

Chapter Questions

• What are the different levels of market segmentation?

• How can a company divide a market into segments?

• How should a company choose the most attractive target markets?

• What are the requirements for effective segmentation?

8-3

Mature consumers are a rapidly growing market

8-4

Effective Targeting Requires…

• Identify and profile distinct groups of buyers who differ in their needs and preferences.

• Select one or more market segments to enter.

• Establish and communicate the distinctive benefits of the market offering.

8-5

Ford’s Model T Followed a Mass Market Approach

8-6

Four levels of Micromarketing

Segments

Local areas Individuals

Niches

8-7

Segment Marketing

Targeting a group of customerswho share a similar set of

needs and wants.

8-8

Flexible Marketing Offerings

• Naked solution– Product and service

elements that all segment members value

• Discretionary options– Some segment

members value– Options may carry

additional charges

8-9

Figure 8.1 Basic Market Preference Patterns

8-10

Niche Marketers

Enterprise Rent-a-Cartargets the insurance-replacement market

8-11

Niche Marketers: Tom’s

8-12

The Experience Economy

Commodity

Goods

Services

Experience

8-13

Customerization

Combines operationally drivenmass customization with customizedmarketing in a way that empowers

consumers to design theproduct and service offering

of their choice.

8-14

Figure 8.2 Examples of Market Customization

8-15

Segmenting Consumer Markets

Geographic

Demographic

Psychographic

Behavioral

8-16

Claritas’ Prizm

8-17

Demographic Segmentation

Age and Life Cycle

Life Stage

Gender

Income

Generation

Social Class

8-18

Toyota Scion targets Gen Y consumers

8-19

Figure 8.3 Profiling American Generations

• GI Generation– 1901-1924

• Silent Generation– 1925-1945

• Baby Boomers– 1946-1964

• Generation X– 1965-1977

• Generation Y– 1978-1994

• Millenials– 1995-2002

8-20

Figure 8.4 The VALS Segmentation System

8-21

Behavioral Segmentation

Decision Roles• Initiator• Influencer• Decider• Buyer• User

Behavioral Variables• Occasions• Benefits• User Status• Usage Rate• Buyer-Readiness• Loyalty Status• Attitude

8-22

Mobil’s 5 Customer Segments

Road Warriors

Gen F

True Blues

Home Bodies

Price Shoppers

8-23

Loyalty Status

Switchers

Shifting loyals

Split loyals

Hard-core

8-24

The Conversion Model

Convertible Shallow Average Entrenched

Stronglyunavailable

Ambivalent AvailableWeakly

unavailable

Users Nonusers

8-25

Figure 8.5 Behavioral Segmentation Breakdown

8-26

Segmenting for Business Markets

Demographic

Operating Variable

Purchasing Approaches

Situational Factors

PersonalCharacteristics

8-27

BB&T Bank’s B-to-B advertising

8-28

Nextel

8-29

Models of Sequential Segmentation

Stage of decision• First-time

prospects• Novices• Sophisticates

Orientation• Price-oriented• Solution-oriented• Strategic-value

8-30

Steps in Segmentation Process

Needs-based segmentation

Segment identification

Segment attractiveness

Segment profitability

Segment positioning

Segment acid test

Marketing-MixStrategy

8-31

Figure 8.6 Patterns of Target Market Selection

8-32

Figure 8.6 Patterns of Target Market Selection

8-33

Figure 8.6 Patterns of Target Market Selection

8-34

Effective Segmentation Criteria

Measurable

Substantial

Accessible

Differentiable

Actionable

8-35

Figure 8.7 Segment-by-Segment Invasion Plan

8-36

Pepsi used megamarketing in India

8-37

Marketing Debate

Is mass marketing dead?

Take a position:1. Mass marketing is dead.2. Mass marketing is still a viable wayto build a profitable brand.

8-38

Marketing Discussion

How would you classify yourself interms of the various segmentationschemes?

top related