Chapter 3: Segmentation: 1 Chapter 7 Customer Driven Marketing Strategy
Chapter 3: Segmentation: 1 Chapter 7 Customer Driven Marketing Strategy
Geographic Demographic
segmentation segmentation
Psychographic Behavioral
segmentation segmentation
Bases of Segmentation:
❑Geographic Segmentation
❑Demographic Segmentation
❑Psychographic segmentation: divides buyers
into different groups based on social class,
lifestyle or personality characteristics. People in
the same demographic group can have very
different psychographic makeup
❑Behavioral segmentation: which divides
buyers into groups based on their knowledge,
attitudes, uses, or responses to a product.
chapter 7 customer driven
8
marketing strategy
Market Segmentation:
Segmenting Consumer Markets
❑Geographic segmentation divides the market into
different geographical units such as nations, regions,
states, counties, or cities
e.g: P&G introduced Curry Pringles in England and
Funky Soy Sauce Pringles in Asia.
e.g:Mc Arabia in Arab Countries & Mc Mahraja in India
❑Demographic segmentation
divides the market into
groups based on variables
such as age, gender, family
size, family life cycle,
income, occupation,
education, religion, race,
generation, and nationality
.
Age and life-cycle stage segmentation is the process of offering different
products or using different marketing approaches for different age and
life-cycle groups
e.g: P&G sells Crest featuring children’s characters while for adults it sells
more serious models” a dentist- clean feeling twice a day”.
e.g: Olay segments it’s products based on age. Olay Provital features 50 years
aged women in their ads
e.g: C&CO promotional age campaign
Gender segmentation divides the market based on sex (male or female)
e.g: Nikewomen stores
e.g: L’Oreal offers men’s experts skin care products.
Income segmentation divides the market
into affluent or low-income
consumers
e.g:–Emaar. e.g: Metro vs. Khair Zaman ,
Juhayna vs. Bekhairo , credit cards ,
cars.
❑ Psychographic segmentation divides buyers into
different groups based on social class, lifestyle, or
personality traits. e.g: On the Run & Cilantro.
Lifestyle Achievers, strivers, survivors and techno-road
warriors who are business people spending a high
percentage of their working week travelling equipped
with laptop computers and mobile phones with
broadband network and electronic organizers
Social class: used by banks and financial institutions . It
could be indicated by level of education, income,
occupation
• What products/brands reflects your lifestyle and
personality ? How?
Behavioral segmentation divides buyers into groups
based on their knowledge, attitudes, uses, or
responses to a product
• Occasions
• Benefits sought
• User status
• Usage rate
• Loyalty status
Behavioral Segmentation
• Occasions: buyers are grouped according to occasions when they get the
idea to buy, actually make their purchase, or use the purchased item.
e.g: Enjoy Kamar el din at Ramadan, Valentine day gifts , mothers day
Differentiable Actionable
• Measurable: The size , purchasing power , and profiles of the segments can
be measured. e.g: we cant measure left handed population in Egypt and
many parts of the world. U.S.A has 32.5 million left handed.
• Accessible: The market segment can be effectively reached and served. Kito
targets Upper Egypt segment “ rural areas where by their distribution cars
can’t enter ,so they dropped this segment. Also fragrance company finds that
heavy users are single men and women who stay out late and socialize a lot.
• Actionable: Effective programs can be designed for attracting and serving the
segments. e.g: although one small airline identified seven market segments ,
its staff was too small to develop separate marketing programs for each
segment.
suppliers.
responding to the statement “Name the first company that comes to mind in this
industry.”
responding to the statement “Name the company from which you would prefer to buy
the product
• Product variability
e.g.: undifferentiated marketing is more suited for uniform products as grapefruit or steel. While
products that can vary in design , such as cameras and automobiles are more suited to
differentiation or concentration.
• Product life-cycle stage
e.g.: In the introductory stage , it is practical to launch only one version and use undifferentiated or
concentration while in the mature stage , differentiated marketing begins to make more sense.
• Market variability
e.g.: If most buyers have the same tastes , buy the same amounts, and react the same way to
marketing efforts , undifferentiated marketing is appropriate.
• 1. Announcing category benefits—To reassure consumers that a brand will deliver on the fundamental
reason for using a category, marketers frequently use benefits to announce category membership. Thus,
industrial tools might claim to have durability, and antacids might announce their efficacy. A brownie mix might
attain membership in the baked desserts category by claiming the benefit of great taste and support this claim by
including high-quality ingredients (performance) or by showing users delighting in its consumption (imagery).
• 2. Comparing to exemplars—Well-known, noteworthy brands in a category can also help a brand specify its
category membership.
• 3. Relying on the product descriptor—The product descriptor that follows the brand name is often a concise
brand as telling a narrative or story. Companies like the richness and imagination they can derive from
thinking of the story behind a product or service. Five elements of narrative branding:
• (1) the brand story in terms of words and metaphors, (2) the consumer journey or the way consumers
engage with the brand over time and touch points where they come into contact with it, (3) the visual
language or expression for the brand, (4) the manner in which the narrative is expressed experientially or
the brand engages the senses, and (5) the role the brand plays in the lives of consumers. Also, Cultural
Branding usually done in products that are related to culture such as Ramadan festival in Egypt.