Target market

36,024 views 27 slides May 07, 2015
Slide 1
Slide 1 of 27
Slide 1
1
Slide 2
2
Slide 3
3
Slide 4
4
Slide 5
5
Slide 6
6
Slide 7
7
Slide 8
8
Slide 9
9
Slide 10
10
Slide 11
11
Slide 12
12
Slide 13
13
Slide 14
14
Slide 15
15
Slide 16
16
Slide 17
17
Slide 18
18
Slide 19
19
Slide 20
20
Slide 21
21
Slide 22
22
Slide 23
23
Slide 24
24
Slide 25
25
Slide 26
26
Slide 27
27

About This Presentation

Target market


Slide Content

1 Target Market Framed by: Mr.Moumni Souhail Realised by : Kaoutar Ihssane Mariem Oubair

Introduction Definition of target market Types of market segmentation Demographic segmentation Geographic segmentation Psychographic segmentation Behavioural segmentation Target Market Strategies Exemples Conclusion 2 Plan :

3 Introduction

Definition : T arget market is a business term meaning the market segment to which a particular good or service is marketed. It is mainly defined by age, gender, geography, socio-economic grouping, or any other combination of demographics . 4

Target market is defined in terms of : Demographic segmentation Geographic segmentation Psychographic segmentation Behavioural segmentation 5

Demographic segmentation : T he demographic segmentation divides customers into segments based on demographic values such as age, gender, family size, family life cycle, occupation, education, religion, generation, social class and nationality. 6

Age and life-cycle segmentation : T he consumer’s needs and wants change with age. Therefore some companies use age and life-cycle segmentation, where age and the life-cycle determine the marketing approach. 7

Gender segmentation : G ender segmentation is used to differentiate the needs and wants between men and women due to the fact that men and women have different attitudes toward a product. 8

Income segmentation : I ncome segmentation divides the market into different income groups. It is used in automobiles, clothing, cosmetics, and travel. 9

Generation segmentation : E ach generation is influenced by the times in which they grow up for example the music, the movies, politics and other significant events characteristic of that period. 10

Social Class segmentation S ocial class segmentation divides the customers according to their preferences in cars, clothing, home furnishings, leisure activities, reading habits. 11

Geographic segmentation T he geographic segmentation divides customers into segments based on geographical areas such as nations, states, regions, countries, cities. 12

Psychographic segmentation T he psychological variables derive from two principal types of customer: personality profiles and lifestyle profiles. 13

Behavioural segmentation B ehavioural segmentation is based on the customers’ attitude toward, use of, or response to a product. 14

Technographic Segmentation: T his type of segmentation differentiates people based on technology they use. With technology becoming such an ingrained part of our lives, technographic segmentation becomes all the more important. 15

Analyzing our Product and Service: W rite out a list of each feature of your product or service. Next to each feature, list the benefits they provide (and the benefits of those benefits). 16

Decisions involved in targeting, including strategy : which segments to targeting . how many products to offer. which products to offer in which segments. 17

Targeting strategy decisions are influenced by: Market maturity . Diversity of buyers' needs and preferences. Strength of the competition . The volume of sales required for profitability. 18

Concentrated strategy (Single-segment strategy). One market segment (not the entire market). A single-segment approach often is the strategy of choice for smaller companies with limited resources. 19 Target Market Strategies

Differentiated strategy (Selective specialization or multiple-segment strategy) : Different marketing mixes are offered to different segments. The product it self may or may not be different - in many cases only the promotional message or distribution channels vary. 20

Product specialization. The firm specializes in a particular product and tailors it to different market segments. 21

Exemples Desert Coolers : If your company is selling desert coolers, it is obvious that the target market will be extremely in hot regions of the world and not the cold ones. 22

Baby Products : Marketers selling baby products have to segment their market in terms of age group, but they also have to consider pyschographic segmentation, because sales will depend on the lifestyle of the parents. If the parents have a lavish lifestyle, they will agree to spend money on expensive baby products. 23

Cosmetics: Cosmetics are gender-based, exclusively for men or women, thus, segmentation based on gender will have to be done. However, just dividing the market on the basis of gender is not enough. Lifestyles of men and women come into play, because cosmetics come in all ranges and thus depending on the cost of the product, it will require psychographic and behavioral segmentation. 24

Results of wrong targeting strategy Ineffective augmentation and targeting led to wrong product offers, inappropriate marketing appeals wrong pricing No firm can offer single product to satisfy all the segment. 25

Conclusion 26

27
Tags