Email Marketing Essentials

This lesson introduces the crucial marketing concepts of segmentation and targeting. You'll learn how to divide your market into meaningful groups and then select the most promising ones to focus your marketing efforts on, ensuring you reach the right audience.

Learning Objectives

  • Define market segmentation and its benefits.
  • Identify different segmentation variables (demographic, geographic, psychographic, behavioral).
  • Explain the process of market targeting and its importance.
  • Differentiate between various targeting strategies (undifferentiated, differentiated, concentrated).

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Lesson Content

What is Market Segmentation?

Market segmentation is the process of dividing a broad consumer market into sub-groups of consumers (also known as segments) based on shared characteristics. These characteristics can be anything that helps you understand the needs and behaviors of your customers. Why do we do this? Because not everyone is the same! Different groups have different needs and want different things. By dividing your market, you can create more effective marketing messages and tailor your products or services to meet the specific needs of each segment. Think of it like this: a clothing retailer wouldn't advertise the same styles to teenagers and senior citizens. They'd use different ads and even offer different clothing lines entirely.

Segmentation Variables: How to Divide Your Market

There are several ways to segment a market. Here are the most common variables:

  • Demographic Segmentation: This uses characteristics like age, gender, income, education, occupation, family size, and ethnicity. Example: Targeting families with young children with family-sized cereal boxes.
  • Geographic Segmentation: This divides the market based on location – country, region, city, or even neighborhood. Example: A snowmobile company focusing its advertising in areas with heavy snowfall.
  • Psychographic Segmentation: This considers lifestyle, values, attitudes, interests, and personality traits. Example: Selling organic food products to people who value healthy living and sustainability.
  • Behavioral Segmentation: This groups consumers based on their actions, such as purchase frequency, usage rate, brand loyalty, and benefits sought. Example: Offering loyalty programs to frequent buyers of coffee.

Market Targeting: Choosing Your Audience

Once you've segmented your market, you need to choose which segments you'll focus on. This is market targeting. You evaluate each segment based on factors like size, growth potential, profitability, and accessibility. You might choose to target one segment, multiple segments, or even the entire market, depending on your business goals and resources. For example, a luxury car manufacturer will not target the mass market, they will focus on a specific segment with higher income.

Targeting Strategies: How to Reach Your Chosen Segments

Here are three main targeting strategies:

  • Undifferentiated (Mass Marketing): This involves targeting the entire market with the same marketing mix. It assumes everyone wants the same thing. Example: Historically, early advertising for basic products like salt often used an undifferentiated approach.
  • Differentiated (Segmented Marketing): This involves targeting multiple segments with different marketing mixes tailored to each. Example: A clothing company offering separate lines for men, women, and children.
  • Concentrated (Niche Marketing): This involves targeting a single segment with a highly specialized marketing mix. Example: A company selling custom-made wedding dresses, targeting only the wedding dress market.
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