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5.4 Market positioning

Now that you have considered the various segmentation dimensions to analyse a market, and have finished applying the market targeting process to decide which segment(s) you propose to target with your product, what you need to decide is just how you are going to go about that. Another way of phrasing this is to say that you need to decide how to position your product in the market segment in order to meet the needs and wants of your customers.

The way a product is seen by consumers is by its positioning . It is as if all of us carry maps in our minds for each product category. So, when we think of cars, we think of Volvos as safe, Jaguars as luxurious, Holdens as being hardy and Suzukis as inexpensive. What we are doing is reflecting the positioning of the products adopted by their respective marketers.

Needless to say, products can also be repositioned. Honda cars, for example, have been repositioned away from the other economical Japanese cars and closer to the European luxury cars. However, whatever positioning is attempted, it must have credibility in the consumer's experience. A positioning on reliability will not succeed if, for example, the brand of car has a track record for needing frequent repairs.

Consider this

Consider for instance, how ports around the world or even around Australia position themselves. If you thought of efficiency, which ports come to mind? What opportunities does that suggest to other ports? What will it take for them to reposition themselves?

Your text in the next readings will provide you with more detail on positioning and the use of perceptual mapping as well as giving you an international perspective on segmenting and targeting. The reading also includes an item on positioning concepts and issues and their relationship with advertising by some of the marketing gurus in this field (Trout and Ries) whose work forms the basis of modern day approaches to positioning. The article by King (1998) is useful as it applies the issue of re-positioning P&O Cruises away from the Fairstar 'funship' image.

In your text

Kotler et al. (2004) Chapter 10, pp. 363-373, 'Market positioning'.

Reading 5.3

Trout, J. and Ries, A. 1979, 'The positioning era: A view ten years later', Advertising Age , 16 July, reprinted in Enis, B. M. and Cox, K. K. 1995, Marketing Classics. A Selection of Influential Articles , Allyn and Bacon, Boston , pp. 244-250.

Reading 5.4

Lloyd, S. 2000, 'P&O leaves the 'funship' behind', 18 August, p. 56.

Activity 5.3

Now that you have studied this chapter, see if you can apply some of the concepts to the Norwegian Cruise Line (NCL) article described in your reading by answering the following questions.

  1. Which segments does this line cater?
  2. Which target marketing strategy does NCL use?
  3. How do you think NCL forecasts the potential for the various segments to which it markets?
  4. What sort of positioning has NCL adopted in the cruise market?

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