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Sharpening the Focus: Target Marketing Strategies and Customer Relationship Management

Sharpening the Focus: Target Marketing Strategies and Customer Relationship Management. Real People, Real Choices. Reebok (Que Gaskins) How to capture the pulse of youth culture in the long run? Option 1: mimic Nike’s moves with Michael Jordan

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Sharpening the Focus: Target Marketing Strategies and Customer Relationship Management

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  1. Sharpening the Focus: Target Marketing Strategies and Customer Relationship Management

  2. Real People, Real Choices • Reebok (Que Gaskins) • How to capture the pulse of youth culture in the long run? • Option 1: mimic Nike’s moves with Michael Jordan • Option 2: build on Reebok’s success with Iverson, while separating the brand from other performance sneaker brands like Nike • Option 3: maintain the Iverson emphasis and increase efforts to build credibility as a shoe for soccer and track

  3. Target Marketing Strategy: Selecting and Entering a Market • Market fragmentation: The creation of many consumer groups due to the diversity of their needs and wants. • Target marketing strategy: dividing the total market into different segments based on customer characteristics, selecting one or more segments, and developing products to meet those segments’ needs.

  4. Figure 7.1: Steps in the Target Marketing Process

  5. Step 1: Segmentation • The process of dividing a larger market into smaller pieces based on one or more meaningful shared characteristics • Segmentation variables: dimensions that divide the total market into fairly homogeneous groups, each with different needs and preferences

  6. VANS.COM Segmenting Consumer Markets • Segmentation variables can slice up the market • Demographic, psychological, and behavioral differences

  7. Segmenting by Demographics Age: Generational Marketing • Children • Teens/tweens • Generation Y: born between 1977 and 1994 • Generation X: born between 1965 and 1976 • Baby boomers: born between 1946 and 1964 • Older consumers

  8. Segmenting by Demographics Gender • Many products appeal to one sex or the other • Metrosexual: a man who is heterosexual, sensitive, educated, and an urban dweller in touch with his feminine side

  9. MINORITEAM ON ADULT SWIM VOSS WATER Segmenting by Demographics (cont’d) • Family Structure • Income • Social Class • Race and Ethnicity • African Americans • Asian Americans • Hispanic Americans

  10. CLARITAS.COM Segmenting by Geography • Geodemography: combines geography with demographics • Geocoding: Customizes Web advertising so people who log on in different places see ad banners for local businesses

  11. Segmenting by Psychographics • Psychographics: The use of psychological, sociological and anthropological factors to construct market segments. • AIOs: Psychographics segments consumers in terms of shared activities, interests, and opinions.

  12. Figure 7.2: VALS

  13. AMAZON.COM Segmenting by Behavior • Segments consumers based on how they act toward, feel about, or use a product • 80/20 rule: 20 percent of purchasers account for 80 percent of a product’s sales • Heavy, medium, and light users and nonusers of a product • Usage occasions

  14. Segmenting Business-to-Business Markets • By organizational demographics • By production technology used • By whether customer is a user/nonuser of product • By North American Industry Classification System (NAICS)

  15. Step 2: Targeting • Marketers evaluate the attractiveness of each potential segment and decide in which they will invest resources to try to turn them into customers • Target market: customer group(s) selected

  16. Evaluation of Market Segments • A viable target segment should: • Have members with similar product needs/wants • Be measurable in size and purchasing power • Be large enough to be profitable • Be reachable by marketing communications • Have needs the marketer can adequately serve

  17. Discussion • How large should a segment be? • How do you think a firm should determine whether a segment is profitable? • Have technological advances made it possible for smaller segments to be profitable? • Do firms have a moral or ethical obligation to develop products for small, unprofitable segments?

  18. Developing Segment Profiles • Need to develop a profile or description of the “typical” customer in a segment. • Segment profile might include demographics, location, lifestyle, and product-usage frequency.

  19. Discussion • Alcohol and tobacco-product manufacturers have been criticized for targeting unwholesome products to certain segments of the market – the young, the aged, ethnic minorities, the disabled, and others. • Do you view this as a problem? • Should a firm use different criteria in targeting such groups? • Should the government oversee and control such marketing activities?

  20. Choosing a Targeting Strategy • Undifferentiated targeting: appealing to a broad spectrum of people • Differentiated targeting: developing one or more products for each of several customer groups • Concentrated targeting: offering one or more products to a single segment

  21. Choosing a Targeting Strategy (cont’d) • Custom marketing: tailoring specific products to individual customers • Mass customization: modifying a basic good or service to meet the needs of an individual

  22. Figure 7.3: Choosing a Target Marketing Strategy

  23. Discussion • Critics of marketing suggest that market segmentation and target marketing lead to an unnecessary increase in product choices that wastes valuable resources. • Are the results of segmentation and target marketing harmful or beneficial to society as a whole? • Should firms be concerned about these criticisms?

  24. Group Activity Your company is planning to enter the consumer market for videogames. You’ve considered mass-marketing, concentrated marketing, differentiated marketing, and custom marketing strategies. Pick a strategy for your firm. Explain why you chose it and how you will implement it.

  25. Step 3: Positioning • Developing a marketing strategy aimed at influencing how a particular market segment perceives a good/service in comparison to the competition

  26. Steps in Developing a Positioning Strategy • Analyze competitors’ positions. • Offer a good/service with competitive advantage. • Match elements of the marketing mix to the selected segment. • Evaluate target market’s responses and modify strategies if needed.

  27. Positioning (cont’d) • Repositioning: redoing a product’s position to respond to marketplace changes. • Retro brand: a once-popular brand that has been revived to experience a popularity comeback, often by riding a wave of nostalgia.

  28. The Brand Personality • A distinctive image that captures the brand’s character and benefits • Perceptual map: a picture of where products/brands are “located” in consumers’ minds

  29. Figure 7.4: Perceptual Map

  30. Individual Activity • Pick a store at which you shop frequently… • If the store were a person, how would describe its personality?

  31. Group Activity • You’re account executives for a marketing consulting firm, and your newest client is a university – your university. • You’ve been asked to develop a positioning strategy for the university. Develop an outline of your ideas, including : • Who are your competitors? • What are your competitors’ positions? • What target markets are most attractive to you? • How will you position the university for those segments relative to the competition?

  32. Customer Relationship Management (CRM) • Sees marketing as a process of building long-term relationships with customers to keep them satisfied and coming back. • CRM facilitates one-to-one marketing.

  33. Four Steps in One-to-One Marketing • Identify customers; know them in as much detail as possible. • Differentiate customers by their needs and value to the company. • Interact with customers; find ways to improve the interaction. • Customize some aspect of the products you offer each customer.

  34. CRM: A New Perspective on an Old Problem • CRM systems use computers, software, databases, and the Internet to capture information at each touch point between customers and companies, to allow better customer care. • CRM proposes that customers are relationship partners, with each partner learning from the other every time they interact.

  35. Characteristics of CRM • Share of customer (vs. share of market) • Lifetime value of the customer • Customer equity • Focus on high-value customers

  36. Discussion • Do you see any problems with a firm’s focusing on share of market rather than share of customer?

  37. RBK.COM Real People, Real Choices • Reebok (Que Gaskins) • Que chose option 2: build on Reebok’s success with Iverson, while separating the brand from other performance sneaker brands like Nike • Reebok created a new category called Rbk that fuses sports with youth lifestyle and entertainment Reebok Video

  38. Marketing Plan Exercise • Visit the Web site for a company that manufactures products you like and are familiar with. • Select one product and answer the following: • What market segmentation approaches are most relevant for the product? • Describe the top three target markets for the product. What makes them so attractive?

  39. Marketing Plan Exercise (cont’d) • Write a positioning statement of a few sentences for the product. Start with “Product X is positioned as…” • How could CRM help the company successfully target and position the product?

  40. Marketing in Action Case:You Make the Call • What is the decision facing Oracle? • What factors are important in understanding this decision situation? • What are the alternatives? • What decision(s) do you recommend? • What are some ways to implement your recommendation?

  41. Keeping It Real: Fast Forward to Next Class Decision Time at Black & Decker • Meet Eleni Rossides, a senior manager in the Black & Decker Consumer Group. • ScumBuster users had recommended product improvements. • The decision: What changes, if any, to make in the ScumBuster.

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