ibahrine 3 marcom targeting
TRANSCRIPT
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The Fundamental Marcom Decisions#1 Targeting
3
Dr. Mohammed IbahrineAL AKHAWAYN UNIVERSITY in IFRANE
SCHOOL OF HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCESCOMMUNICATIONS STUDIES PROGRAM
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1. Discuss the importance of targeting marketing communications to specific consumer groups and realize that the targeting decision is the initial and most fundamental of all marcom decisions
2. Understand the role of behaviorgraphics in targeting consumer groups
3. Describe the nature of psychographic targeting and the VALS system
Objectives
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1. Explain the meaning of geodemographics and understand the role for this form of targeting
2. Recognize that any single characteristic of consumers—whether their age, ethnicity, or income level—likely is not a sufficient basis alone for sophisticated marcom targeting
Objectives
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Targeting Customers and Prospects
• Targeting specific audiences can be considered the starting point for all marcom decisions
Targeting allows marketing communicators to
1. Deliver their messages more precisely
2. Prevent wasted coverage to people falling outside the targeted audiences
4–5
Targeting Customers and Prospects
Behaviorgraphics
Demographics
Psychographics
Geodemographics
Measureable ConsumerCharacteristics
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Consumer Characteristics
Psychographics
Demographics
Geodemographics
Behaviorgraphics
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Consumer Characteristics
• Characteristics that singularly or in combination influence
What people consume
How they respond to marketing communications
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Consumer Characteristics
• Note that "graphics," the suffix for each of these consumer characteristics, is a term that refers to measurable characteristics of target audiences
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Consumer Characteristics
• The prefix to each type of targeting represents
• how the audience is measured
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Consumer Characteristics
• Specifically, behaviorgraphic represents information about the audience's behavior
In terms of
Past purchase behavior Online search activity in a particular product
category or set of related categories
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Consumer Characteristics
Psychographics captures aspects of consumers' psychological makeup and lifestyles including their
AttitudesValuesMotivations
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Consumer Characteristics
• Captures aspects of consumers’ psychological make-ups and lifestyles including their attitudes, values, and motivations as they relate to buying behavior in a particular product category
The Market Segmentation Process
1. Identify people with shared needs and characteristics
The Market Segmentation Process
2. Aggregate these groups into market segments according to their mutual interest in the product’s utility
1. Identify people with shared needs and characteristics
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Consumer Characteristics
• Demographics reflect measurable population characteristics such as
Gender AgeEducationIncomeEthnicity
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Consumer Characteristics
• Marcom practitioners are mainly concerned with:
the age structure of the population the changing household composition of the society. (ethnic population developments)
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Consumer Characteristics
• Geodemographics is a conjunction of geography and demography
• Geodemographics is based on the premise that consumers who reside within geographic clusters such as Zip Code Areas and neighborhoods also share demographic and lifestyle similarities
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Behaviorgraphic Targeting
• Based on how people behave (with respect to a particular product category or class of related products) rather than in terms of their attitude and lifestyles, their age, income, or ethnicity, or where they live
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Behaviorgraphic Targeting
• The best predictor of one’s future behavior is his or her past behavior
4–20
Classification of Four General Targeting Characteristics
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Online Behavioral Targeting
• Audience Management Systems track Internet users’ surfing behavior in order to target them with specific advertisements
• In the context of online behavior targeting, Web surfers are increasingly more likely to be served with ads for products that are most relevant to their interests
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Privacy Concerns
• Technological advances in marketing bring with them increased ability to serve consumers but also at the risk of invading privacy
• This advantage comes at the expense that companies have access to our Internet search behavior without our approval or knowledge
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Privacy Concerns
• What's the harm?
• Big Brother is watching you!
5-24
Definition
•SegmentingDividing the market into groups
of people who have similar characteristics in certain key product-related areas
5-25
Definition
•TargetingIdentifying the group that might
be the most profitable audience (most likely prospects) and the most likely to respond to marketing communications messages
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U.S: VALS segmentation
• The U.S: VALS segmentation scheme places American adult consumers into one of eight segments based on psychological characteristics that are related to purchase behavior and several key demographics
• The horizontal dimension in this figure represents individuals' primary motivations, whether in terms of their pursuit of ideals, their need for achievement, or drive to self-express
• The vertical dimension reflects individuals' resources as based on their educational accomplishment, income levels, health, energy, and consumerism
U.S: VALS segmentationPsychographic segmentation: VALS
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U.S: VALS segmentation
• VALS places U.S. adult consumers into one of eight segments based on their responses to the VALS questionares
• The main dimensions of the segmentation framework are
Primary motivation (the horizontal dimension)
Resource (the vertical dimension).
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Descriptions of the VALS types:
• Descriptions of the VALS types:
Innovators Thinkers Achievers Experiencers Believers StriversMakers Survivors
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Descriptions of the VALS types:
• Innovators
Innovators are successful, sophisticated, take-charge people with high self-esteem
Because they have such abundant resources, they exhibit all three primary motivations in varying degrees
They are change leaders and are the most receptive to new ideas and technologies
Innovators are very active consumers, and their purchases reflect cultivated tastes for upscale, niche products and services
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Descriptions of the VALS types:
• Thinkers
Thinkers are motivated by idealsThey are mature, satisfied, comfortable , and
reflective people who value order, knowledge, and responsibility
They tend to be well educated and actively seek out information in the decision-making process
They are well-informed about world and national events and are alert to opportunities to broaden their knowledge
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Descriptions of the VALS types:
• Believers
Like Thinkers, Believers are motivated by idealsThey are conservative, conventional people with
concrete beliefs based on traditional, established codes: family, religion, community, and the nation
Many Believers express moral codes that are deeply rooted and literally interpreted
They follow established routines, organized in large part around home, family, community, and social or religious organizations to which they belong
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Descriptions of the VALS types:
• Achievers
Motivated by the desire for achievementAchievers have goal-oriented lifestyles and a deep
commitment to career and familyTheir social lives reflect this focus and are structured
around family, their place of worship, and workAchievers live conventional lives, are politically
conservative, and respect authority and the status quo They value consensus, predictability, and stability over
risk, intimacy, and self-discovery
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Descriptions of the VALS types:
• Strivers
Strivers are trendy and fun loving. Because they are motivated by achievement, Strivers are concerned about the opinions and approval of others
Money defines success for Strivers, who don't have enough of it to meet their desires
They favor stylish products that emulate the purchases of people with greater material wealth
Many see themselves as having a job rather than a career, and a lack of skills and focus often prevents them from moving ahead
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Descriptions of the VALS types:
• Experiencers
Experiencers are motivated by self-expression
As young, enthusiastic, and impulsive consumers, Experiencers quickly become enthusiastic about new possibilities but are equally quick to cool
They seek variety and excitement, savoring the new, the offbeat, and the risky
Their energy finds an outlet in exercise, sports, outdoor recreation, and social activities
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Descriptions of the VALS types:
• Makers
Like Experiencers, Makers are motivated by self-expressionThey express themselves and experience the world by working
on it-building a house, raising children, fixing a car, or canning vegetables-and have enough skill and energy to carry out their projects successfully
Makers are practical people who have constructive skills and value self-sufficiency
They live within a traditional context of family, practical work, and physical recreation and have little interest in what lies outside that context
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Descriptions of the VALS types:
• Survivors
Survivors live narrowly focused livesWith few resources with which to cope, they often
believe that the world is changing too quicklyThey are comfortable with the familiar and are primarily
concerned with safety and securityBecause they must focus on meeting needs rather than
fulfilling desires, Survivors do not show a strong primary motivation
Descriptions of the VALS types:
InnovatorsInnovators Successful, sophisticated, take-charge, with high self-esteem
ThinkersThinkersMature, satisfied, comfortable, and reflective; valuing order, knowledge, and responsibility and motivated by ideals
BelieversBelieversConservative, conventional with concrete beliefs based on traditional, established codes: family, religion, community, and the nation; motivated by ideals
AchieversAchieversMotivated by the desire for achievement; have goal-oriented lifestyles and a deep commitment to career and family
Descriptions of the VALS types:
StriversStrivers Trendy and fun loving. Motivated by achievement out of concern about the opinions and approval of others
ExperiencersExperiencersMotivated by self-expression; are young, enthusiastic, and impulsive consumers; quickly become enthusiastic about new possibilities but are equally quick to cool.
MakersMakersMotivated by self-expression; express themselves and experience the world by working on it and have enough skill and energy to carry out their projects successfully
SurvivorsSurvivorsLive narrowly focused lives; with few resources with which to cope, often believe that the world is changing too quickly; are comfortable with the familiar and are primarily concerned with safety and security
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Geodemographic
• Hence, knowing where people live also provides some information regarding their general marketplace behaviors
• Several companies have developed services that delineate geographical areas into common groups, or clusters, wherein reside people with similar demographie and lifestyle characteristics
• Geodemographic clustering systems have been developed in many countries other than the United States, including Canada, most countries in Western Europe, some African countries, Australia, and Japan
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Geodemographic: PRIZMNE 1/1
• PRIZMNE is an acronym in which PRIZM stands for Potential Rating Index by Zip Markets and NE represents the "new evolution" of Claritas' original segmentation system
• The PRIZMNE classification system delineates every neighborhood in the United States into one of 66 clusters based on an analysis of neighborhoods‚ demographic characteristics
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Geodemographic: PRIZMNE 1/2
• These characteristics include variables such as educational attainment, race/ ethnicity, predominant age range, occupational achievement, and type of housing (e.g., owned versus rented)
• Sophisticated statistical analysis of these demographic characteristics has enabled Claritas to identify 66 groups, or clusters, of neighborhoods that share similar demographie profiles
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Benefit segmentation
• Focuses on the advantages consumes receive from the product rather than the characteristics of consumers themselves
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USAGE Segmentation
• The final type of consumer segmentation is based on costumer usage or purchases
• The goal of usage segmentation is to provide the highest level of service to a firm best customers while promoting the company to casual or light users
• Usage segmentation is also designed to maximize sales to all user groups
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The Changing Age Structure
• The U.S. population is aging relentlessly.
Median Age:
1970 1980 1990 2000
28 30 33 36
4–47
Population of the United States by Age Group, as of 2006
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Demographic Targeting
• Children and Teenagers• Preschoolers. Preschool-• Elementary-school-age children• Tweens• Teenagers• Young Adults• Middle-Aged and Mature Consumers• Middle-aged• Mature Consumers
Market SegmentationDemographic segmentation: Heavy usage patterns of various age groups