5.2.1 Dimensions used to segment markets
A marketer can either choose to market to a mass undifferentiated market or it can divide the market into smaller, more homogeneous parts or segments. Often the potential buyers of a product share similar characteristics, needs or behaviours. Once identified, targeting that buyer segment is a more effective and efficient use of marketing effort.
In Kotler et al. (2004), we look at the geographic, demographic, psychographic and behavioural factors that determine the market opportunity for various products.
Two of the most important factors to influence market opportunity are the size of population and its distribution over a geographical area. Understanding these two factors is fundamental to understanding the potential market. The market for port handling services is largely derived from geographical concentrations of population. The latter's buying power for consumer goods in turn affects the demand for industrial goods, and both types of goods pass through ports and terminals.
Analysing demographic factors is a form of fine-tuning the analysis of the market potential. Not everybody in a geographic area needs or wants a particular product category. Youth, for example, buy products that middle-aged or senior citizens would not. Men may be larger consumers of a product than women. Certain products are needed by consumers only at certain stages of their family life-cycle. A study of the demography of a population allows the marketer to identify its potential consumption.
The basis of segmentation could be any one of the factors that influence purchase behaviour. These include:
- type of problem-solving (routine response, limited, extensive)
- geographics (country, region or city)
- demographics (age, sex, marital status)
- usage rate (heavy user, brand loyal)
- benefit sought (convenience, economy, luxury).
It may be quite evident to you that freight-forwarding firms do segment on the basis of industrial versus consumer clients, sometimes assigning separate sales staff to each segment. They also segment markets geographically, and service certain areas better than others.
They tend to have different levels of service depending on the benefit sought: for example, they can offer speed of delivery, cheap rates or special handling, depending on the requirements that have been determined for a particular client.
Turn now to the next reading to find out more about the dimensions used to segment the consumer and business markets and a services perspective to segmentation.
In your text
Kotler et al. (2004) Chapter 10, pp. 345-358, 'Bases for segmenting consumer markets', 'Bases for segmenting business markets', 'Segmenting international markets' and 'Segmenting the Australian market'.