Week 5 | Positioning, marketing information and research Flashcards
Selecting target segments
the second stage of developing a target marketing strategy is to decide which of the segments identified are worth pursuing and then deciding on an appropriate market coverage strategy. Market coverage simply refers to the number of segments to which the company will market and whether to adapt the marketing mix for these segments.
Size and growth
- Is this segment the right size?
- Will it be profitable and is it a growing segment for our firm?
Structural attractiveness
- Can we access and compete in this market?
- How different do the marketing mixes need to be to satisfy the
differing needs of the various segments? If very different, then does
the organisation have the required capabilities to target more than one
segment? - Can we communicate and reach consumers in this segment?
- Can we deliver the product to the consumers in this segment?
Company objectives and resources
Does this segment match our firm’s organisational capabilities and objectives?
Developing targeting strategies
A target market is defined as ‘a group of people or organisations for which an organisation designs, implements and maintains a marketing mix intended to met the needs of that group, resulting in mutually satisfying exchanges’ (Lamb et al. 2018, p. 90).
Undifferentiated targeting
he market is viewed as one big entity with no individual segments and thus requires a single marketing mix.
Concentrated targets
This is used to select one niche segment for targeting marketing efforts.
Multi-segmented targeting
A strategy that chooses two or more well-defined market segments and develops a distinct marketing mix for each.
Cannibalisation
Cannibalisation in relation to marketing does not involve eating people. Instead, it means a company seeing a reduction in sales, revenue or market share for a specific product as a result of introducing a new product by the same organisation, i.e. the company’s own products ‘cannibalise’ each other
Positioning: The final step in the process of target marketing
Once a company has decided which segments of the market it will enter, it must decide which ‘position’ it wants to occupy in those segments. A product’s position is the ‘… way the product is defined by consumers on important attributes—the place the product occupies in consumers’ minds relative to competing products’ (Armstrong et al. 2012, p. 201).
Four steps to Positioning
- identifying sources of competitive advantage
- choosing which to apply (and to which parts of the target market)
- selecting the overall positioning strategy (that is the value proposition)
- communicating and delivering that value proposition (via the marketing mix).
Positioning
The process of developing a specific marketing mix to influence current and potential customers’ overall perception of a brand, product line or organisation, and the place the products hold inside their mind
Position
The place a product, brand or groups of products hold in the consumers’ mind in relation to similar products. ‘Position’ is sometimes confused with the ‘Place’ part of the 4Ps. You need to put the physical idea of positioning out of your head when talking about target marketing.
Product differentiation
A positioning strategy that some organisations use to to distinguish their products from those of their competitors. Product (or brand) differentiation refers to how the product is able to be distinguished from other products—what attributes set it apart? In target marketing, competitive advantage is gained when a product is differentiated in some way—so much so that it is positioned in consumers’ mind in a way that reflects it can offer superior value compared to alternatives. Some bases for differentiation include product, services, channel, people or image.
Differentiation
Competitive advantage is an advantage over competitors gained by offering consumers greater value, either through lower prices or by providing more benefits that justify higher prices