C-40: Kriti Badhwar
                              C-41: Rohit Paudel
                           C-42: Tanmaye Gupta
                         C-43: Angelique Thakur
                              C-44: Rohan Vohra


IDENTIFYING MARKET SEGMENTS AND
TARGETS
SEGMENT
  MARKETING



Identify the
  needs of                                          Address
                                  Fine-tune
consumers       Offer better                     consumers‟        Flexible
                                 marketing
 by groups     design, price,                        needs          market
                                strategy and
then direct    communicate                          without     offerings to
                                activities to
 marketing      and deliver                     forcing them    all members
                                  compete
 efforts to     product or                        to look for        of a
                                   against
  make a         service.                         items that      segment
                                    rivals.
   larger                                        they desire.
  impact.
Lufthansa Airlines




    First Class
Business Class
Economy Class
LOCAL MARKETING

 The strategy and actions that communicate to
  your customers in a manner, and with a
  message, that is relevant and meaningful
  based upon localized differences.
 Also called “Grassroots Marketing”

 The key dimensions of Local
  Marketing are: Segmentation, Media and
  Messaging
NICHE MARKETING
 Focus on a small segment of people
 unique and similar needs

 Highly customised

 Opposite of mass marketing

 Market research imperative
BANKING SECTOR

   Investment products
   Home loans
   Vehicle finance
   Financial planning
   Personal loans
   Private Banking



    Source: http://www.siliconindia.com/finance/news/13-Best-Banks-of-India-nid-
                                     134523.html
BEST AMONG THE REST
BEST AMONG THE REST
HDFC: Best Retail bank; private sector
Standard Chartered Bank: Best SME finacing;
 foreign banking
Allahabad Bank: Most consistent performer in
 Priority Sector Lending
State Bank Of India: Technology Adoption -
 Public Sector


Source: http://www.siliconindia.com/finance/news/13-Best-Banks-of-India-nid-
                                 134523.html
FAIRNESS CREAMS
    MARKET
MEN’S GROOMING PRODUCTS: THE NEW
EMERGING MARKET IN INDIA- A CASE STUDY ON
EMAMI FAIR & HANDSOME
-CHANDRA KANT SHARMA




          Source: Indian Journal Of Marketing
1/16/2013




FAIRNESS CRAZE

   Market size : ₹ 800 crore
   Market growth rate : 15- 20 % y-o-y
   Leading players:
       HUL‟s fair & lovely: 76%
       Calvin care‟s fairever: 15%
   Males constitute 20% of the sale of fairness creams
   The Indian male took an average of 20 minutes vs the
    Indian female‟s 18 minutes!
   25-30% of fairness products purchased and used by men
   They saw a lucrative opportunity. Decided to delve deeper
    into this „fairness craze‟


                    Source: Indian Journal Of Marketing
SEGMENTATION & POSITIONING
                • Positioned as a fairness
                 Region: South
                  cream that can make men
                 Rural/Urban:attractive to
                  handsome and Urban
                  girls
                 Age: 15-35 years
                • 5 power fairness system:
                 Gender: Male peptide
                  – Double strength
                       complex
                   –   Sunguard
                   –   Stress buster
                   –   Anti- bacplus
                   –   Herbo cool
                • Get fair in four weeks
GEOGRAPHICAL SEGMENTATION


           Division of the market into different
        geographichal units viz; regions, countries
                 ,cities or neighbourhood



        Consumer‟s taste , habits and preferences




        Flexibility of the product to go national from
                            domestic
PROBABILITY

The probable chance of a good / bad investment
   in food depending on taste , preference and
              location of consumer
NEED VS REQUIREMENTS

Depending upon climatic conditions and other
 factors too the need and requirements are
 derived
CASE: LIFEBUOY VS NIRMA

Lifebuoy‟s first step in India without deep study of Indian
market led to obstacles in growth which ultimately led to
diversified geographical location with a greater innovation in
PLC too


Nirma being the Indian brand made its fine mark in all the
locations irrespective of the major chunks/ big players who
were the fine players , and Nirma being the newly introduced
one , a deep and thorough study of every factor depending on
requirements , needs , hygiene and all other basic factors
DEMOGRAPHIC SEGMENTATION

    • Most commonly used and
      easily identifiable


    • Variables help in dividing into
      specific customer groups


    • Helps in MASS MARKETING
DEMOGRAPHIC VARIABLES

      Age and Life-Cycle Stage
      Life Stage
      Gender
      Income
      Generation
      Social Class
Age and Life-Cycle Stage
CONSUMER WANTS AND
ABILITIES CHANGE WITH AGE
                    Babies




         Old Age               Children




                    Youth &
                   Teenagers
Life Stage
Marriage
buying a house
 starting a family
retirement
Gender
                                                     Campaign for Real
                                                     Beauty




Product Positioning
                      New Product Category



                                             “aims to change the status quo and
                                             offer in its place a broader, healthier,
                                             more democratic view of beauty”
Income




“VALUE FOR MONEY”   “FORTUNE AT THE
                    BOTTOM OF THE
                    PYRAMID”

                         “Sachet Marketing”
Generation
COHORT EFFECT IS A TENDENCY AMONG MEMBERS OF A GENERATION TO BE INFLUENCED
AND DRAWN TOGETHER BY SIGNIFICANT EVENTS OCCURRING DURING THEIR KEY
FORMATIVE YEARS
   Disney KidSense 2007
Social Class
      Caste       Income
      System      Level

     Socio      Education
     Economic   Occupation
     Factors
PSYCHOGRAPHIC SEGMENTATION
Psychographic
                Segmentation



Lifestyle and
                Social Status   Personality
    values
LIFESTYLE AND VALUES
               • Introduced vegetarian burgers in the Indian
                 market keeping in mind the sentiments and
                 the values of the purely vegetarian Indian
                 families
               • Also McDonalds did not introduce their most
                 famous beef burger “Big Mac” because it
                 might hurt the sentiments of the customers in
                 the Indian market.
               • McDonald's understand that tastes vary
                 around the globe.
               • But instead of simply duplicating local
                 favourites, we take what's familiar and put a
                 McDonald's twist on it.
               • You can order up a Quiche de Queijo (cheese
                 quiche) in Brazil, Red Bean Pie in Hong Kong
                 (where red beans are commonly used in
                 desserts), and traditional Caldo Verde soup
                 (made with cabbage, kale, onion, potato and
                 chorizo) in Portugal.
SOCIAL STATUS
  Datawind‟s
                Amazon‟s Kindle
  Ubislate 7+                     Apple‟s Ipad
                     Fire
PERSONALITY




   • “Made like a Gun”. The ultimate comfort bike in India.
   • Loyal customers but very less market share due to outdated
     technology.
   • Senior managers at Eicher Motors faced a tough choice. For
     that they wanted to modernise the bikes to appeal to a wider
     customer base. But existing customers wanted their Bullets
     just the way they had always been.
CONT.
THE PROBLEM
Despite the bikes' fan following, the motorcycle division was bleeding

THE WAY OUT
Appealing to a wider base, making the products more reliable

THE CHALLENGE
Modernising the bikes without taking away their unique identity

THE SUCCESS
Modern technology used, but vintage look retained; improved management
practices
BEHAVIORAL SEGMENTATION
Behavioral
           Segmentation



Benefits     Occasion     Usage
BENEFITS



            Kills germs
            100% protection everyday




           Keeps your hands soft and
           clean
OCCASION
USAGE
        Customers can be segmented on
        the basis of usage status- heavy
        users, light users & non-users of a
        product category.
        The profiling of heavy users allows
        this group to receive most
        marketing attention (particularly
        promotion      efforts)  on      the
        assumption that brand loyalty
        among these people will pay
        heavy dividends.
THANK YOU

Segmentation and targeting final ppt

  • 1.
    C-40: Kriti Badhwar C-41: Rohit Paudel C-42: Tanmaye Gupta C-43: Angelique Thakur C-44: Rohan Vohra IDENTIFYING MARKET SEGMENTS AND TARGETS
  • 2.
    SEGMENT MARKETING Identifythe needs of Address Fine-tune consumers Offer better consumers‟ Flexible marketing by groups design, price, needs market strategy and then direct communicate without offerings to activities to marketing and deliver forcing them all members compete efforts to product or to look for of a against make a service. items that segment rivals. larger they desire. impact.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • 6.
    LOCAL MARKETING  Thestrategy and actions that communicate to your customers in a manner, and with a message, that is relevant and meaningful based upon localized differences.  Also called “Grassroots Marketing”  The key dimensions of Local Marketing are: Segmentation, Media and Messaging
  • 10.
    NICHE MARKETING  Focuson a small segment of people  unique and similar needs  Highly customised  Opposite of mass marketing  Market research imperative
  • 11.
    BANKING SECTOR  Investment products  Home loans  Vehicle finance  Financial planning  Personal loans  Private Banking Source: http://www.siliconindia.com/finance/news/13-Best-Banks-of-India-nid- 134523.html
  • 12.
    BEST AMONG THEREST BEST AMONG THE REST HDFC: Best Retail bank; private sector Standard Chartered Bank: Best SME finacing; foreign banking Allahabad Bank: Most consistent performer in Priority Sector Lending State Bank Of India: Technology Adoption - Public Sector Source: http://www.siliconindia.com/finance/news/13-Best-Banks-of-India-nid- 134523.html
  • 13.
  • 14.
    MEN’S GROOMING PRODUCTS:THE NEW EMERGING MARKET IN INDIA- A CASE STUDY ON EMAMI FAIR & HANDSOME -CHANDRA KANT SHARMA Source: Indian Journal Of Marketing
  • 15.
    1/16/2013 FAIRNESS CRAZE  Market size : ₹ 800 crore  Market growth rate : 15- 20 % y-o-y  Leading players:  HUL‟s fair & lovely: 76%  Calvin care‟s fairever: 15%  Males constitute 20% of the sale of fairness creams  The Indian male took an average of 20 minutes vs the Indian female‟s 18 minutes!  25-30% of fairness products purchased and used by men  They saw a lucrative opportunity. Decided to delve deeper into this „fairness craze‟ Source: Indian Journal Of Marketing
  • 16.
    SEGMENTATION & POSITIONING • Positioned as a fairness  Region: South cream that can make men  Rural/Urban:attractive to handsome and Urban girls  Age: 15-35 years • 5 power fairness system:  Gender: Male peptide – Double strength complex – Sunguard – Stress buster – Anti- bacplus – Herbo cool • Get fair in four weeks
  • 17.
    GEOGRAPHICAL SEGMENTATION Division of the market into different geographichal units viz; regions, countries ,cities or neighbourhood Consumer‟s taste , habits and preferences Flexibility of the product to go national from domestic
  • 18.
    PROBABILITY The probable chanceof a good / bad investment in food depending on taste , preference and location of consumer
  • 19.
    NEED VS REQUIREMENTS Dependingupon climatic conditions and other factors too the need and requirements are derived
  • 20.
    CASE: LIFEBUOY VSNIRMA Lifebuoy‟s first step in India without deep study of Indian market led to obstacles in growth which ultimately led to diversified geographical location with a greater innovation in PLC too Nirma being the Indian brand made its fine mark in all the locations irrespective of the major chunks/ big players who were the fine players , and Nirma being the newly introduced one , a deep and thorough study of every factor depending on requirements , needs , hygiene and all other basic factors
  • 22.
    DEMOGRAPHIC SEGMENTATION • Most commonly used and easily identifiable • Variables help in dividing into specific customer groups • Helps in MASS MARKETING
  • 23.
    DEMOGRAPHIC VARIABLES Age and Life-Cycle Stage Life Stage Gender Income Generation Social Class
  • 24.
    Age and Life-CycleStage CONSUMER WANTS AND ABILITIES CHANGE WITH AGE Babies Old Age Children Youth & Teenagers
  • 25.
    Life Stage Marriage buying ahouse  starting a family retirement
  • 26.
    Gender Campaign for Real Beauty Product Positioning New Product Category “aims to change the status quo and offer in its place a broader, healthier, more democratic view of beauty”
  • 27.
    Income “VALUE FOR MONEY” “FORTUNE AT THE BOTTOM OF THE PYRAMID” “Sachet Marketing”
  • 28.
    Generation COHORT EFFECT ISA TENDENCY AMONG MEMBERS OF A GENERATION TO BE INFLUENCED AND DRAWN TOGETHER BY SIGNIFICANT EVENTS OCCURRING DURING THEIR KEY FORMATIVE YEARS Disney KidSense 2007
  • 29.
    Social Class Caste Income System Level Socio Education Economic Occupation Factors
  • 30.
  • 31.
    Psychographic Segmentation Lifestyle and Social Status Personality values
  • 32.
    LIFESTYLE AND VALUES • Introduced vegetarian burgers in the Indian market keeping in mind the sentiments and the values of the purely vegetarian Indian families • Also McDonalds did not introduce their most famous beef burger “Big Mac” because it might hurt the sentiments of the customers in the Indian market. • McDonald's understand that tastes vary around the globe. • But instead of simply duplicating local favourites, we take what's familiar and put a McDonald's twist on it. • You can order up a Quiche de Queijo (cheese quiche) in Brazil, Red Bean Pie in Hong Kong (where red beans are commonly used in desserts), and traditional Caldo Verde soup (made with cabbage, kale, onion, potato and chorizo) in Portugal.
  • 33.
    SOCIAL STATUS Datawind‟s Amazon‟s Kindle Ubislate 7+ Apple‟s Ipad Fire
  • 34.
    PERSONALITY • “Made like a Gun”. The ultimate comfort bike in India. • Loyal customers but very less market share due to outdated technology. • Senior managers at Eicher Motors faced a tough choice. For that they wanted to modernise the bikes to appeal to a wider customer base. But existing customers wanted their Bullets just the way they had always been.
  • 35.
    CONT. THE PROBLEM Despite thebikes' fan following, the motorcycle division was bleeding THE WAY OUT Appealing to a wider base, making the products more reliable THE CHALLENGE Modernising the bikes without taking away their unique identity THE SUCCESS Modern technology used, but vintage look retained; improved management practices
  • 36.
  • 37.
    Behavioral Segmentation Benefits Occasion Usage
  • 38.
    BENEFITS Kills germs 100% protection everyday Keeps your hands soft and clean
  • 39.
  • 40.
    USAGE Customers can be segmented on the basis of usage status- heavy users, light users & non-users of a product category. The profiling of heavy users allows this group to receive most marketing attention (particularly promotion efforts) on the assumption that brand loyalty among these people will pay heavy dividends.
  • 41.

Editor's Notes

  • #7 The key dimensions of Local Marketing are: Segmentation, Media and Messaging. Segmentation refers to how one group of customers is differentiated from another. Media refers to the form of communication to be used – local advertising, POP signage, coupons, direct marketing, etc. Messaging is what you say and how you say it in a manner that compels the targeted customers to act.The success of any Local Marketing initiative depends on these elements working together, yet the sequence by which each is developed plays a key role in the initiative’s long-term effectiveness. Segmentation comes first, followed by Media selection, and then Messaging. A fourth dimension, Measurement, is essential to drive the growth and evolution of the Local Marketing effort.Segmentation identifies “who” you are targeting.Media selection determines “how” you will deliver your message.Messaging establishes “what” you are communicating.Measurement collects data that can be used to guide future cycles of the program.Local Marketing programs can be initiated without complex segmentation and messaging, while using a single media type. However, these programs should be designed to support a more sophisticated, data-driven messaging system that will evolve over time.Too many companies are failing in their Local Marketing initiatives because they start with mass-marketing tools and processes but can’t support further segmentation as the need becomes apparent. Local Marketing is not an event or a campaign, but instead should be a continual and evolving process.