Title: Market Segmentation, Target Marketing, and Positioning
1GRAHAM HOOLEY NIGEL F. PIERCY BRIGETTE
NICOULAUD
2
Strategic marketing planning
2- Strategy is the matching of the activities of an
organisation to the environment in which it
operates and to its own resource capabilities - Johnson and scholes (1988)
3Introduction
- Companys capabilities are matched to the market
environment in which it operates not for today
but in foreseeable future - Strategic planning attempts to answer three basic
questions - What is the business doing now?
- What is happening in the environment?
- What should the business be doing?
4Figure 2.1
Strategic fit
Market needs conditions
Strategy adapted to the needs and requirements of
the market
Organizational resources suited to the markets in
which it operates
Marketing strategy
Organizational resources
Organizational resources needed for
implementation of the strategy
5Defining the business purpose or mission
- Requires asking fundamental questions
- What business are we in?
- What businesses do we want to be in?
- Who is our major competitor?
- What markets are we in?
6Mission formulation and statement
- The strategic intent or vision of where
organization want to be in foreseeable future - The values of the organization should be spelled
out to guide operations - Articulate distinctive competencies
- Market definition, in terms of customer targets
- Finally, it should spell out where organization
intends to be positioned in marketplace
7Figure 2.2
Components of mission
Strategic intent Vision of what you want to be
Market definition Customer targets
Company values Guiding principles
Mission Objectives and strategy
Competitive positioning Differential advantage
Distinctive competencies Core skills
8The marketing strategy process
- Three main levels
- Establishment of a core strategy
- Assessment of companies capabilities (strengths
and weaknesses relative to competition
opportunities and threats posed by the
environment) - The creation of the companys competitive
positioning - competitive edge in serving customers better
than competition is defines - The implementation of the strategy
- Department putting strategy into action is created
9Figure 2.3
The marketing strategy process
Business purpose
Core strategy
Environment analysis
Company analysis
Competitive positioning
Market target
Competitive advantage
Implementation
Control
Organization
Marketing mix
10Establishing the core strategy
11Analysis of organizational resources
- Creation of long list of resources and many
weaknesses that an organization has at its
disposal - They may stem from
- Skills of the workforce in assembling products
- Skills of management in planning
- RD department in new product ideas
- Distinctive competencies may lie in image, market
presence or its after sales services (exploitable)
12Drukers seven types of businesses
13Drukers seven types of businesses
- Todays breadwinners
- products earning healthy profits now
- Tomorrows breadwinners
- Expected to take breadwinning role in the future
- Yesterdays breadwinners
- Supported the company in the past
- Developments
- Recently developed that may have some future
14Drukers seven types of businesses
- Sleepers
- Have been around for sometime but failed to
establish themselves in their markets - Investments in managerial ego
- Have strong product champions among influential
managers - Failures
- Failed to play a significant role in the
companys portfolio
15Figure 2.4
Product types in the portfolio
Tomorrow's breadwinners
Developments Sleepers Ego trips
High
Market attractiveness
Life Cycle
Death Cycle
Low
Failures Yesterdays breadwinners
Todays breadwinners
Low
High
Business strength
16Portfolio planning
- Diversified organizations need to find methods
for assessing the balance of business in its
portfolio - Development of business strategies and allocation
of resources (both managerial and financial) - Analyzing portfolio balance
17Figure 2.5
Balancing the business portfolio
Long-run corporate health requires a balance of
Products that generates cash now
Other that use cash now but promise to generate
cash in the future
18Figure 2.6
Unbalanced, present-focused business portfolio
A great present but what about the future?
Other that use cash now but promise to generate
cash in the future
Products that generates cash now
19Figure 2.7
Unbalanced, future-focused business portfolio
Future prospects good but who pays todays bills?
Products that generates cash now
Other that use cash now but promise to generate
cash in the future
20Analysis of the markets served
- Opportunities and threats facing the company
- Stem from two main areas
- The customers (both current and potential) and
competitors ( again both current and potential) - Most markets consist of heterogeneous customers
(varying needs and demands)
21Figure 2.8
SWOT Analysis
Internal
External
Strengths What are we god at relative to
competitors?
Opportunities What changes are creating new
options for us?
Good points
Threats What emerging dangers must we avoid or
counter?
Weaknesses What are we bad at relative to
competitors?
Danger points
22Figure 2.9
SWOT strategic implications
Opportunities
Threats
Exploit existing strengths in areas of opportunity
Use existing strengths to counter threats
Strengths
Build new strengths to counter threats
Build new strengths first to take advantage of
opportunities
weaknesses
23Core strategy
- Define the key factors of success
- Company sets its marketing objectives
- Objectives should be both long and short term
- Core strategy varies at different stages of
product life cycle - Expand the market (achieved in early growth
stages of lifecycle) or to increase share of
existing market (pursued during late
growth/maturity stages
24Expand the market
- Market expansion can be achieved through
attraction of new users to the product or service - Through geographic expansion of the companys
operations (both domestically and internationally)
25Figure 2.10
Strategic focus
Improve performance
Increase sales
Improve productivity
Expand market
Increase share.
Expand market
Increase share.
New uses New users Increasing use
frequently New products
Increase price Add value Change product mix
Capital costs Fixed costs Variable costs
Win share Acquire share Create alliances
26Increase share
- Main routes to increasing share include
- Winning competitors, customers
- Merging with (or acquiring) the competitors
- Entering into strategic alliances with
competitors, suppliers and/or distributors - Increasing usage rate may be viable approach to
expanding the market for some products
27Improving profitability
- Through improving margins
- Increasing price, reducing cost or both
- Removing poorly performing products and
concentrating on more financially viable
28Creating the competitive positioning
- Statement of companys market targets
- Where the company will compete and differential
advantage - How the company will compete
- Market targets
- Select those targets most suited to utilizing
companys strengths and minimizing vulnerability
due to weaknesses
29Market targets
- Market will generally be more attractive if the
following hold - It is large
- It is growing
- Contribution margins are high
- Competitive intensity and rivalry are low
- There are high entry and low exit barriers
- The market is not vulnerable to uncontrollable
events
30Differential advantage
31Cost leadership
- Company seek to obtain a cost structure
significantly below than that of competitor - Through construction of efficient scale
economies, cost minimization in RD, service,
sales force, advertising etc
32Figure 2.11
Routes to competitive advantage
High
Competitive advantage
Competitive disadvantage
Valued uniqueness
Stuck in the middle
Low
Low
High
Relative delivered cost
33Differentiation
- Something that is seen as a unique in the market
- Companys strengths and skills are used to
differentiate the companys offerings than
competitors - Differentiation can be achieved through design,
style, product or service features, price, image
etc
34Differentiation and cost leadership
- Both could be pursued simultaneously (Fulmer and
Goodwin, 1988) - Cost leadership may be impossible to sustain due
to competitor imitation - Cost leadership requires minimal spending on RD,
product improvement and image creation
35Implementation
- Task of marketing management is to implement
those decisions through marketing effort - Three basic elements of implementation
- Marketing mix, organization and control
36Marketing mix
- Each of the element of the mix should be designed
to add up to the positioning required - Where elements of the mix do not pull in the same
direction but contradict each other, the
positioning achieved will be confused and
confusing to customers
37Organization
- How the marketing effort and the marketing
department are organized will have effect on how
well the strategy can be can be carried through - Required manpower and financial resources to be
made available
38Control
- Monitor and control the effort
- Performance can be monitored in two ways
- Market performance (sales, market share, customer
attitude and loyalty and changes in them over
time) - Financial performance ( monitoring of product
contribution relative to the resources employed
to achieve it)
39Amber reports the most important marketing
metrics used by companies
40Marketing metrics
- Relative perceived quality
- Loyalty/retention
- Total no of customers
- Customer satisfaction
- Relative price (market share/volume)
- Perceived quality/esteem
- Complaints (level of dissatisfaction)
- Awareness and distribution/availability