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Helpful Tips and Hints Paraphrase information identified in external and scholarly resources. Limit direct quotes to no more than 15\% of the total word count for ALL responses. Words used in the references DO NOT APPLY towards the word count requirement. Avoid using anthropomorphism (giving human attributes to non-human entities). Rather than “According to the text...” or “The textbook states…”, use the authors’ last names. The textbook does not do anything, the authors of the textbook provide the information. Use articles published within the last 5 - 7 years. Complete section = 1500 words (combined word count for all responses) Complete section = 4 external AND scholarly resources. The textbook is considered a scholarly resource. Use of Google ScholarUnit 3 Questions Effective marketing requires an understanding of the prospective buyers’ buying process (i.e., purchase decision process). Choose a recent purchase decision you made to use as an example. Distinguish the stages of the buying process and explain the key issues of each stage as they relate to your experience. Buyers experience many situational influences during the buying process. Using the same experience you chose for Question 1, analyze the types of situational influences you experienced and explain how those factors affected your buying process and ultimate purchase decision. Marketers use several segmentation categories and various variables within each category when segmenting prospective markets. Thinking about the buying experience you described in Questions 1 and 2, which segmentation categories and variables may have been relevant for the marketing organization’s segmentation? Identify the specific categories and variables and construct a target audience profile (one that may approximate how that organization described you and others in your segment). Of the segmentation categories (i.e., segmentation bases), compare their relative value for marketing organizations. Which do you believe to be most valuable for marketers now and in the future? Explain. Consumer advocates criticize marketers’ reliance on segmentation because segmentation analyses utilize personal data and represent an abuse of personal privacy. Considering both your concerns as an individual and the value of this data for marketing, where do you stand on this issue? Discuss your position and propose guidelines marketers could use to benefit from segmentation analyses while protecting and respecting consumer privacy.
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Customers,
Segmentation, and
Target Marketing
CHAPTER
5
C
A
L
INTRODUCTION
V
In this chapter, we begin our discussion of marketingEstrategy by examining customers, segments, and target markets. In Chapter 1, we referred to a market as a collection of buyers and sellers. Now, we focus our R
attention on the buyers who
collectively make up the major portion of most markets.
T From this perspective, we
concern ourselves with markets as individuals, institutions, or groups of individuals
or institutions that have similar needs that can be met, by a particular product offering. As we shall see, firms can attempt to reach all buyers in a market, smaller groups
or segments of the market, or even specific buyers on an individual level. Whether
the firm aims for the entire market or smaller market T
segments, the goal of marketing strategy is to identify specific customer needs, then
Edesign a marketing program
that can satisfy those needs. To do this effectively, the firm must have a comprehenR
sive understanding of its current and potential customers, including their motivaR
tions, behaviors, needs, and wants.
The ability to determine in-depth information about customers is a fairly recent
E
phenomenon in marketing. Fifty years ago, for example, technology and marketing
N were unable to fully underknow-how were less sophisticated. Marketers of the day
stand customers’ needs and wants, much less make fine
C distinctions among smaller
segments of the total market. Marketers tended to offer products that came in only
E is critical to the success of
one variety, flavor, or style. Today, market segmentation
most firms. Segmentation allows marketers to more precisely define and understand
customer needs, and gives them the ability to tailor products to better suit those
needs. As discussed in Beyond the Pages 5.1, the level1of detailed information available about customers today has changed the way firms
8 do business. However, the
use of such information raises concerns about consumer privacy. Still, without segmentation we would not enjoy the incredible variety5of products available today.
Consider the number of choices we have in categories
9 such as soft drinks, cereals,
packaged goods, automobiles, and clothing. In many respects, segmentation has
T
improved our standard of living. Customers now expect firms to delve into their
needs and wants, and to tailor products accordingly.SThis fact makes market segmentation a vital part of marketing strategy. Until a firm has chosen and analyzed a
target market, it cannot make effective decisions regarding other elements of the
marketing strategy.
In this chapter, we examine issues associated with buyer behavior in both consumer and business markets. We also discuss traditional and individualized
approaches to market segmentation, the criteria for successful market segmentation,
and specific target marketing strategies. The potential combinations of target
119
9781337669078, Marketing Strategy: Text and Cases, Seventh Edition, O.C. Ferrell - © Cengage Learning.
All Rights Reserved. No distribution allowed without express authorization. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-240
120
Chapter 5 • Customers, Segmentation, and Target Marketing
BEYOND THE PAGES 5.1
Companies Learn Our Secrets Through
Data Mining1
Consider a world where what you eat, read,
wear, listen to, watch, buy, and do can be
reduced to a mathematical formula. Every
move you make is tracked with such a level of
specificity that your entire life can be captured
in a computer model. Sound far-fetched? It’s not.
Today, the combination of computer science,
mathematics, and business is changing our
view of consumers and their behavior. The ability to track consumer behavior has never been
more advanced than it is today. The new
insights gained from the mathematical modeling
of consumer behavior is creating new avenues
for business, allowing marketers to develop
one-to-one relationships with consumers, and
causing a fair amount of anxiety. It is also causing a sharp increase in the hiring of math graduates from our nation’s universities.
Through advanced math, computer modeling, and data mining, businesses have been
able to track consumer attitudes and behaviors
for some time. The difference today is the
unprecedented access to data made available
via the Internet and other technologies. Over
the past 10 years, a sizable portion of the consuming public has moved its work, play, conversation, and shopping online. These integrated
networks collect vast amounts of data and
store our lives in databases that can be connected in ways that allow us to capture a more
complete picture of consumer behavior. For
example, researchers at companies like Facebook, Yahoo!, Google, and Amazon are developing mathematical models of customers. These
firms are also working with other companies
and government agencies to develop models
that can predict voting behavior, how patients
respond to disease intervention, or which
employee is best suited for a job assignment.
For example, Target’s data mining expertise
raised a few eyebrows when the New York
Times uncovered that the retailer was able to
tell when a customer was pregnant or about to
deliver. Target’s statisticians are able to tie millions of purchases together to reveal patterns in
their data. One of their insights: When women
become pregnant, they buy a lot of supplements
such as calcium, magnesium, and zinc. When
their delivery date is close, pregnant women
tend to buy a lot of scent-free products, large
bags of cotton balls, hand sanitizer, and washcloths. Target uses this information to target
ads and coupons to the right consumers. Data
mining results like these are one of the reasons
for Target’s incredible growth from $44 billion in
revenue in 2002 to roughly $72.5 billion in 2013.
Retailers are not the only companies that
C use data mining. The advertising and media
are perhaps the most affected by this
A industries
shift. As mass audience advertising has declined,
L marketers have been looking for ways to target
more directly. Google is a pioneer in
V customers
this effort because the company has amassed an
E unfathomable amount of data on what custoR mers do online. Other companies now provide
data mining solutions. In research conducted
T with SPSS, for example, Italian carmaker Fiat
, was able to improve customer relations and
increase customer retention by 6 to 7 percent.
Microsoft uses its own analytical techniques to
T study the productivity of its workforce. Furthermore, Harrah’s Entertainment (a major player in
E the casino industry) has increased their annual
R growth rate by using computer models to predict which customers will respond to the comR pany’s targeted advertising and promotional
E offers.
Of course, all of this sophistication comes at
N a price.
The ability of companies to track custoC mers and model their behavior raises a number
privacy concerns. Although most companies
E of
take great pains to protect individual consumer
identities and their private information, major
1 issues often arise. For example, that same data
warehouse Target uses to reach its customers
8 was hacked in late 2013. The hackers stole per5 sonal information and credit card numbers for
over 70 million Target customers. Major pro9 blems like this are still relatively rare; however,
T the continuing erosion of consumer privacy is
likely to continue. A key question for marketers
S is at what point will consumers say enough is
enough? How far can firms push the boundaries
of data collection and analysis before consumers mount a backlash?
9781337669078, Marketing Strategy: Text and Cases, Seventh Edition, O.C. Ferrell - © Cengage Learning.
All Rights Reserved. No distribution allowed without express authorization. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-240
Chapter 5 • Customers, Segmentation, and Target Marketing
markets and marketing programs are essentially limitless. Choosing the right target
market from among many possible alternatives is one of the key tests in developing a
good marketing strategy.
BUYER BEHAVIOR IN CONSUMER MARKETS
Trying to understand the buyer behavior of consumers is a very trying and challenging task. The behavior of consumers is often irrational and unpredictable. Consumers often say one thing but do another. Still, the effort spent trying to understand
consumers is valuable because it can provide needed insight on how to design products and marketing programs that better meet consumer needs and wants. One of
the most recent trends in learning about customers is the rising use of ethnography, a
qualitative research technique designed to understand cultural phenomena such as
C Computer maker Lenovo,
communication, shared meanings, and personal interests.
for example, has used ethnographic research to learn
Amore about how families in
India use consumer electronics. One interesting finding is that the family social cenL serves the same social functer in Indian homes is the parents’ bedroom. The kitchen
tion in American homes. Lenovo uses this type of information
to develop consumer
V
electronics that better fit differing family lifestyles in India and the United States.
E have been scouring social
With the continuing growth of the Internet, marketers
media such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram to gain
R cultural insights about consumers. One of the most useful of these sites is Pinterest, where people can “pin”
T
anything that interests them. Pinterest’s phenomenal growth (up 111 percent in
2014) and its open nature make it a treasure trove of, information about American
culture. Marketers see Pinterest as a great way to showcase brands, especially
among women (42 percent of all women online use Pinterest). The number of male
users has also been growing—up 73 percent in 2014.2 T
In this section, we look at key issues with respect to
E buyer behavior in consumer
markets. Here, we examine the consumer buying process and the factors that alter
R see, successful marketing
the ways consumers buy goods and services. As we will
strategy depends on a clear understanding of customers
R with respect to who they
are, what they need, what they prefer, and why they buy. Although this understandE it also impacts the pricing clearly has relevance for designing the product offering,
ing, distribution, and promotion decisions in the marketing
N program.
The Consumer Buying Process
C
E
The consumer buying process shown in Exhibit 5.1 depicts five stages of activities
that consumers may go through in buying goods and services. The process begins
1 the stages of information
with the recognition of a need, and then passes through
search, evaluation of alternatives, purchase decision,8and postpurchase evaluation.
A marketer’s interest in the buying process can go well beyond these stages to
5 product disposal after coninclude actual consumption behaviors, product uses, and
sumption. As we consider each stage of the buying process,
9 it is important to keep a
few key issues in mind.
T of activities that may occur
First, the buying process depicts the possible range
in making purchase decisions. Consumers, however,Sdo not always follow these
stages in sequence and may even skip stages en route to making a purchase. For
example, impulse purchases, such as buying a pack of chewing gum or a newspaper,
do not involve lengthy search or evaluation activities. On the other hand, complex
purchases like buying a home are often quite lengthy as they incorporate every
stage of the buying process. Likewise, consumers who are loyal to a product or
brand will skip some stages and are most likely to simply purchase the same product
they bought last time. Consequently, marketers have a difficult time promoting brand
9781337669078, Marketing Strategy: Text and Cases, Seventh Edition, O.C. Ferrell - © Cengage Learning.
All Rights Reserved. No distribution allowed without express authorization. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-240
121
122
Chapter 5 • Customers, Segmentation, and Target Marketing
EXHIBIT 5.1
The Consumer Buying Process.
Stages
Key Issues
Need Recognition
•
•
•
•
•
Information Search
•
Evaluation of Alternatives
•
•
•
•
•
Purchase Decision
•
Postpurchase Evaluation
•
•
Consumer needs and wants are not the same.
An understanding of consumer wants is essential for market segmentation and the development
of the marketing program.
Marketers must create the appropriate stimuli to foster need recognition.
Consumers trust internal and personal sources of information more than external sources.
The amount of time, effort, and expense dedicated to the search for information depends on
(1) the degree of risk involved in the purchase, (2) the amount of experience the consumer has
with the product category, and (3) the actual cost of the search in terms of time and money.
Consumers narrow their potential choices to an evoked set of suitable alternatives that may
C
meet their needs.
A into wants for specific products or brands.
Consumers translate their needs
Consumers evaluate productsL
as bundles of attributes that have varying abilities to satisfy their
needs.
V
Marketers must ensure that their product is in the evoked set of potential alternatives.
Marketers must take steps toE
understand consumers’ choice criteria and the importance they
place on specific product attributes.
R
A consumer’s purchase intention
T and the actual act of buying are distinct concepts. Several
factors may prevent the actual purchase from taking place.
,
Marketers must ensure that their product is available and offer solutions that increase
possession utility.
Postpurchase evaluation is theTconnection between the buying process and the development of
long-term customer relationships.
E
Marketers must closely followR
consumers’ responses (delight, satisfaction, dissatisfaction,
cognitive dissonance) to monitor the product’s performance and its ability to meet customers’
R
expectations.
E
N
C
switching because they must convince
these customers to break tradition and take a
look at what different productsEhave to offer.
Second, the buying process often involves a parallel sequence of activities associated with finding the most suitable merchant of the product in question. That is,
while consumers consider which
1 product to buy, they also consider where they
might buy it. In the case of name brand products, this selection process may focus
8
on the product’s price and availability
at different stores or online merchants. A specific model of Sony television,5for example, is often available from many different
retailers and may even be available at Sony’s website. Conversely, in the case of
9
private-label merchandise, the choices of product and merchant are made simultaneously. If a customer is interested
T only in Gap brand clothing, then that customer
must purchase the clothing from a Gap store or the Gap website.
S
Third, the choice of a suitable merchant may actually take precedence over the
choice of a specific product. In some cases, customers are so loyal to a particular
merchant that they will not consider looking elsewhere. For example, many older
consumers are fiercely loyal to American car manufacturers. These customers will
limit their product selection to a single brand or dealership, greatly limiting their
range of potential product choices. In other cases, customers might be loyal to a particular merchant because they hold that merchant’s credit card or are a member of
its frequent-user customer program. Finally, some merchants become so well known
9781337669078, Marketing Strategy: Text and Cases, Seventh Edition, O.C. Ferrell - © Cengage Learning.
All Rights Reserved. No distribution allowed without express authorization. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-240
C
A
L
V
E
R they rarely go through each
When consumers purchase products like candy or gum on impulse,
stage of the buying process.
T
,
David R. Frazier Photolibrary, Inc. / Alamy
Chapter 5 • Customers, Segmentation, and Target Marketing
for certain products that customers just naturally execute their buying process with
those merchants. Sears, for example, is well known for
T its selection of name-brand
appliances and tools. For many customers, Sears is the natural place to go when
E
they are in the market for a new refrigerator, washer, or wrenches.
R
R
The buying process begins when consumers recognize that they have an unmet need.
E
This occurs when consumers realize that there is a discrepancy between their existing level of satisfaction and their desired level of satisfaction.
Consumers can recogN
nize needs in a variety of settings and situations. Some needs have their basis in
C
internal stimuli, such as hunger, thirst, and fatigue. Other needs have their basis in
Einteracting with salespeople,
external stimuli, such as advertising, window shopping,
Need Recognition
or talking with friends and family. External stimuli can also arouse internal
responses, such as the hunger you might feel when watching an advertisement for
1
Pizza Hut.
Typically, we think of needs as necessities, particularly
with respect to the
8
necessities of life (food, water, clothing, safety, shelter, health, or love). However,
5 perspective on what conthis definition is limited because everyone has a different
stitutes a need. For example, many people would argue
9 that they need a car when
their real need is for transportation. Their need for a car is really a “want” for a car.
T wants. A need occurs when
This is where we draw the distinction between needs and
an individual’s current level of satisfaction does not equal
S their desired level of satisfaction. A want is a consumer’s desire for a specific product that will satisfy the need.
Hence, people need transportation, but they choose to fulfill that need with a car,
rather than with alternative products like motorcycles, bicycles, public transportation, a taxi, or a horse.
The distinction between needs and wants is not simply academic. In any marketing effort, the firm must always understand the basic needs fulfilled by their
products. For example, people do not need drills; they need to make holes or
9781337669078, Marketing Strategy: Text and Cases, Seventh Edition, O.C. Ferrell - © Cengage Learning.
All Rights Reserved. No distribution allowed without express authorization. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-240
123
124
Chapter 5 • Customers, Segmentation, and Target Marketing
drive screws. Similarly, they do not need lawnmowers; they need shorter, wellmanicured grass. Understanding these basic needs allows the firm to segment markets and create marketing programs that can translate consumer needs into wants
for their specific products. An important part of this effort involves creating the
appropriate stimuli that will foster need recognition among consumers. The idea is
to build on the basic need and convince potential consumers to want your product
because it will fulfill their needs better than any competing product.
It is also important to understand that wants are not the same thing as demand.
Demand occurs only when the consumer’s ability and willingness to purchase a specific product backs up their want for the product. Many customers want a luxury
yacht, for example, but only a few are able and willing to buy one. In some cases, consumers may actually need a product, but not want it. So-called “unsought products”
like life insurance, cemetery plots, long-term health insurance, and continuing education are good examples. In these cases, the marketer must first educate consumers on
C
the need for the product, and then convince consumers to want their products over
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