Lecture 2: Segmentation, Targeting, & Positioning Flashcards

1
Q

Segmentation

A

The act of slicing up the total market.

Segments refer to groups of people.

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2
Q

Groups (i.e, segments): Preliminary Questions

A

1) Which group of customers would you cater to, which segment?

2) Which value drivers should you emphasize in the minds of customers in your chosen group/segment?

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3
Q

Step 1: Creating the Segmentation Table

A

Customer analysis:

1) Who are the groups of customers?

2) What key value drivers are they sensitive to?

3) What are the segment sizes and growth rates? “

Competitor analysis:

1) Who are your competitors in each segment?

2) What are their market shares within each segment?

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4
Q

Step 2: Targeting a Segment to Serve

A

Company analysis:

1) What are your company’s competencies and constraints (e.g., costs, technology)?

2)Can your company match the value drivers of a segment?

Customer analysis:
1) Which segment has the largest size and highest growth rate?

Competitor analysis:
1) How many competitors? How strong are they?
2) Can you do better than, or at least as well as, the competitors in matching the value drivers of a segment?

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5
Q

Step 3: Positioning statement

A

Given the target segment you’ve chosen, which value drivers should you emphasize in the customers’ minds?

1) Customer analysis: what are your consumers value drivers ? value drivers that matter to the customers

2) Company analysis: Can your company satisfy those value drivers?

3)competitor analysis: Value drivers that positively differentiate you from your competitors

You need to be clear and convincing about why consumers should buy your product. Your product is a function of your value drivers.

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6
Q

Why do we need Segmentation?

A

Consumers differ in their sensitivities to value drivers: Value drivers may even be contradictory across segments.

Company’s core competencies and constraints: I may be unable to satisfy all customers. No company is good at everything, a company excels at some things. You want to efficiently use your limited resources.

Competitors already have products that satisfy specific groups of customers: It’s hard to come up with one product that provides value to all customers better than my segment-specific competitors do.

Why do we identify different groups of customers? Why do we not ignore differences and do mass marketing?

  • Limited resources.
  • Customers have varying needs.
  • Wasteful, spending resources on consumers who will never purchase the product.
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7
Q

Segmentation Effects

A

If you only satisfy value drivers 1 to 3, they might consider your product, but if you failed to satisfy the other value drivers 4-6 and your competitor can satisfy 1-6 then your competitor’s product will be chosen over yours. Do not ignore value drivers 4-6 just because the sensitivity varies between segments.

Note: Mass marketing rarely works.

A customer might not be convinced to buy your product if you satisfy the first three value drivers but not the following three.

You can afford not to do segmentation, but you aren’t maximizing the value you can create and the profit you can gain.

If there are lots of competitors, each competitor tries to find their niche of consumers they can uniquely serve. Therefore, you create smaller sub-segments from the already established segments.

However, what happens when you have further and further and further slicing and dicing (“super segmentation”)? What may be some problems with having numerous options? or Customization?

  • Costs for the company: customization creates a new product every time, cannot mass produce, and lose out on economy of scale).
  • Customers’ lack of expertise: can give them information and recommendation (that is an additional cost for the company)
  • Paradox of choice: even if they don’t lack the expertise, they may lack the motivation or energy. Too much choice, too many things to compare and so you walk away. Give people lots of options (the thought is that it would increase the probability of a consumer picking something) but the numerosity also makes it harder to choose.

Takeaway: Always do segmentation even if there are no competitors, but not too much segmentation so as to oversaturate choice and customization.

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8
Q

How to Segment the Market

A

At the end of the segmentation stage (i.e., before we come to the targeting stage), what kinds of information do we need to know?

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9
Q

First Kind of Information

A

First kind of information (comes from consumer analysis):
- For each segment, identify the relevant sensitivities to value drivers and how the sensitivities differ across segments.

E.g., SUV market (different groups of people whose sensitivity differs to value drivers, young people want a rugged image, older people want luxury and comfort.)

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10
Q

Second Kind of Information

A

Second kind of information (comes from consumer analysis): size and growth rate of each segment.

if it’s a bigger segment, you can reach more people. A growing segment is also promising for investing.

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11
Q

Third Kind of Information

A

Third kind of information (comes from competitor analysis): competitors in each segment, what they are offering, their market share.

Who are your competitors trying to reach the same people? What products are your competitors offering?

Try to get a sense of the relative intensity of competition within each segment.

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12
Q

Fourth Kind of Information

A

Fourth kind of information (comes from consumer analysis): Profiles or descriptor variables of consumers in each segment

Demographics/lifestyle: age, income, gender, ethnicity, occupation, life stage (married, single, family, empty nesters), etc.

Geographics: urban, suburban, rural, state, etc.

Note: Demographics and geographic are related but are not the same given that the same type of people are scattered across the country

Create a profile for these segments to describe them.

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13
Q

Segmentation table

A

Create a segmentation table by putting all four kinds of information together. The table tells you what consumers/people care about, what their profiles are, who your competitors are, and the size and growth rate of the segment.

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14
Q

What’s the fundamental criterion for segmentation (identifying different groups of people in the market)?

A

The most fundamental criterion is that the sensitivities to the key value drivers have to be different between segments.

if all the segments you’ve identified prefer the exact same product that you are offering, then you have failed to segment the market. You haven’t really figured out how groups of people differ in their sensitivities to value drivers relevant to your product.

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15
Q

How to do Segmentation

A

There is a simple way that is
most commonly used, especially in small- and medium-sized companies.

And there is a Rigorous way
that is better but much more expensive. It is also only used for product categories where the product life cycle is longer because if the product lifecycle is very short and you’re spending a year or more to use this rigorous way to do segmentation, by the time you’re done your product is outdated already.

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16
Q

How to segment: The Simple Way

A

Example: The Toothpaste Market

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17
Q

Simple Way: Step 1

A

Define the following:
Value drivers of customers in general for the product market.

Example: Toothpaste market

Value Driver Variables:
- Flavor
- Product Appearance
- Brightness of teeth
- Decay prevention
- Price
- Fresh breath
- Cavity protection

Descriptor variables (e.g., demographic/geographic) for profiling customers:

  • Age (children, teens, older people)
  • Gender
  • Life stage (family, single)

Why were these variables chosen? These variables are strongly correlated with consumers’ sensitivity to the value drivers.

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18
Q

Simple Way: Step 2

A

A crucial assumption: A customer’s descriptor variables are strongly correlated with his/her sensitivity to the value drivers i.e., customers with the same (vs. different) descriptor variables will have similar (vs. different) sensitivities to the value drivers

How do I know that this assumption holds? Market Research

If and only if the assumption is true. Then we can group customers based on their descriptor variables to form segments such that within each segment, the customers’ descriptor variables are similar => their sensitivities to value drivers are similar.

Between segments, their descriptor variables are different => their sensitivities to value drivers are different.

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19
Q

Simple Way: Step 3

A

Group people based on descriptor variables to get four segments.

The fundamental criterion is satisfied (sensitivity to value drivers have to be different between segments): Sensitivities to value drivers differ between segments (because sensitivities correlate with the descriptor variables used to create the segments)

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20
Q

Step 3: Stability of the Correlation

A

The stability of the correlation between descriptor variables and sensitivities to value drivers is an important factor to consider. If it’s constantly changing, then you can’t rely on the assumptions you make.

The simple way is more prone to errors when you’re using it in a market where these correlations fluctuate and change rapidly.

Why did I use the toothpaste market as an example? Why didn’t I use the smartphone market? the laptop market?

The latter two markets involve lots of changes. People’s preferences are constantly changing over time, and they are changing very quickly, unlike toothpaste, where the sensitivities to the value drivers tend to be pretty stable across decades. The same correlation patterns tend to hold across time.

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21
Q

Simple Way: Step 3 Benchmark

A

What information do we have so far:
- Value drivers of each segment
- How value drivers differ across segments
- Profiling using descriptor variables

in other words, so far we have 4 segments and their descriptive variables

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22
Q

Simple Way: Step 4

A

Now we need to get competitors in each segment. Consider which competitors cater to the value drivers within each segment.

How do you get this kind of information?

A crude way to do it is to go to, e.g., Walmart and look at the product packaging because if your competitors are catering to certain value drivers, they’re going to promote these value drivers on their product packaging. Will also promote these value drivers in their advertising, so you look at what they are doing.

Another slightly better way is to approach the people in each segment and ask them what products they have been using and why they use them. That gives you the market share of each of your competitors within each segment.

Example: If you ask 50 people, you can get a percentage of people using colgate, using crest, etc.

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23
Q

Simple Way: Step 5

A

Now we need to get
-Size & growth rate of each segment

How do you get this kind of information?
Know the profiles/descriptor variables for each segment
Go to the publicly available census data,

e.g., for segment 1
number of children <13 -> segment size

5-year trend of number of children <13 -> growth rate

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24
Q

Simple Way: Disadvantages

A
  • Useful only if descriptors strongly correlate with sensitivities to value drivers (crucial assumption for the simple way to work). If it turns out age, gender, and life stage have zero correlation with sensitivities to value drivers, then just because you can group people into different segments, it doesn’t mean that you’ve done anything that is useful for the purpose of segmentation. If they’re very weak correlations, then you know this simple way is far from satisfying.
  • Hard to do if sensitivities to value drivers are constantly changing
  • Hard to do for new product categories because you don’t know what are the segments out there, and what people’s sensitivities to the value drivers are. Using the simple way, you wouldn’t be able to find out.
  • Ignoring future competitors by relying only on past information.

So: a bit simplistic, but still way better than not doing anything. Not doing anything means assuming that you don’t need to do segmentation. You can just cater to the entire market out there. And that is a bad way to invest your resources because you’re not focusing on who are the people who are actually most likely to buy your product.

Key conclusion: despite all its disadvantages, it is still better than doing nothing at all.

25
Q

How to segment: The rigorous Way

A

The end goal of performing segmentation is to figure out people’s sensitivities to value drivers.

V: the value that a potential customer ascribes to your product. If they find your product valuable, V is higher in terms of its numerical value.

W: Weight.

You want to figure out all the values and their weight in this equation for each individual potential customer.

For each individual, their W1 will be different from another individual’s W1.

Example: Laptop

First value driver: How portable is the laptop? Some consumers may care a lot about a laptop’s portability, so their W (weight) would be higher than someone who doesn’t really care about portability.

Second value driver: The laptop’s colour? The same consumer who cares about portability may not care for the laptop’s colour, so the weight ascribed to the second value driver may be low.

26
Q

Rigorous Way: Step 1

A

3 products or simulations of the product where only one value driver varies between the products.

Example:

You give the individual three laptops, which are the same size, colour, and weight. The only thing that varies is the resolution of the laptop screen between the three products.

You ask the individual to rank the three products.

Repeat the process with the second value driver varying only, etc.

Note: First you will ask the individual what laptops do they usually use or used before to gain information about your competitors and descriptor variables: age, gender, socioeconomic status, where they live, etc.

27
Q

Rigorous Way: Step 2

A

Continue the process in step one until you have a good representation of the population you care about.

28
Q

Rigorous Way: Step 3

A

Cluster analysis (e.g., showing 3 VDs below)

How many segments:
- Similar w’s within each segment
- Different w’s between segments

Segment size:
- Correlations between w’s and products used (correlations between people’s weight and the people’s sensitivities to value drivers and the product they use.)

  • Market share of competitors withineach segment (because now that you’ve grouped people into different segments, you know what products they use within that segment, and so you can figure out the market share.)

Cluster analysis:
Plot the three value drivers on a three-dimensional space, and by doing so, you can figure out how many segments there are such that they have similar Weights within each segment. You can then see how many segments there are and how big each segment is.

Example:

A cluster analysis might illustrate that only a small percentage of people care about the colour of the laptop. So of the 2000 people, only 150 people care about the colour -> that would represent one segment.

29
Q

Rigorous Way: Advantages & Disadvantages

A

Advantages:
- Not making any assumptions. Not relying on past data to make assumptions about the present.
- Taken care of some drawbacks of the simple way.
- We’re actually doing the work to figure out how what descriptive variables are related to what kind of valid drivers (provides the
actual data).

Disadvantages:
- Laborious and expensive, so only doable if you’ve time and resources (e.g., Coca-Cola)
- Why expensive?
1. you have to pay people to come to try your products and need a representative sample, cannot use a convenient sample where you ask your friends and family to try the products.
2. Create the product prototypes
3. Sometimes, you have actually to manufacture the product cannot do a simulation.

Note: The difference between simple rigorous is the quality of the information, the validity, and the reliability of the information in this table. Just because you’ve now created a table the simple way doesn’t mean that the table is capturing reality as precisely in the most nuanced way that you could have.

The more rigorous your processes, the better the quality of information in your table.

30
Q

Targeting

A

The act of choosing one (or more) slices. Choosing which segment(s) you are going to target and invest your resources in.

Full market coverage: targeting all segments.

  • In theory, you could do full market coverage, a segmentation exercise does not mean you can’t target all segments.

Consider which segments are price sensitive when dealing with high price products.

31
Q

Types of Targeting

A

Single-Segment concentration: you offer one product, targeting one segment.

Selective Specialization concentration: Each product is designed in a particular way to cater to the specific needs of each segment.

Product Specialization: Create variations of one product (in this example, P2) to satisfy all the needs of all segments.

Market Specialization: create different products to serve only this particular segment.

32
Q

Criteria for targeting: Customers

A

First, matching exercise (e.g., Land Rover) based on consumer analysis:

  • Do the value drivers in a segment match my company’s core competencies and constraints?
  • Eliminate segments where the match is bad (families cannot be served well).
  • Keep segments where the match is good (YCAA, OT).
  • Can have multiple segments that are a good match. You can then refine the targeting of these potential segments by considering things like segment size, growth rate, and intensity of competition.
33
Q

Criteria for targeting: Customers & Competitors

A

Then refine the targeting of these potential segments (they are not the first consideration, rather you do the matching exercise first, then refine):
- Segment size
- Growth rate

The intensity of present competition:
- Number of competitors (e.g., several for OT)
- Loyalty enjoyed by competitors (e.g., Jeep for YCAA)
- Extent of differentiation: Does my product match the value drivers better than the existing competitors do?

just because the market is big doesn’t mean you have a valid proposition, have to convince consumers you have a good match with what they are looking for before considering segment size and growth rate.

You should not just go to a big market and invest because it’s a big market. You need to match first.

34
Q

Criteria for targeting: Customers & Competitors

A

Competitor analysis:
Present competition
Future competition: anticipate who the competitors are likely to be in the future. Can you anticipate the products they will be good at making.

Note: A relatively small number of competitors in a segment does not mean you should invest all your resources in that segment. It could be that the one competitor is extremely tough to beat.

The more important question is whether your product matches the value drivers better than the existing competitors do.

Company analysis: Cannibalization.
- Offer a product that serves a particular segment but that runs the risk of cannibalization.
Cannibalization means that you are eating up the sales of your own company, you are eating up the market share of your own company in another product category.

35
Q

Matching Exercise

A

Match the value drivers of each segment with the core competencies/constraints of the firm.

Purpose: to eliminate all those segments where the match is bad or inferior and to identify the potential segments where the match is good or superior.

Elimination Exercise: Segments with a bad match are eliminated, and segments with a good match remain as potential target segments.

36
Q

Targeting: Additional Criteria based on Consumer Analysis

A

Comparing sizes and growth rates of the remaining potential segments.

Compare the sizes and growth rates of the remaining potential target segments to assess which target segment is better.

The greater the size and growth rate of a segment, the more attractive it is.

37
Q

Targeting: Additional Criteria based on Competitor Analysis: Present Competition (1)

A
  1. Comparing the number of competitors in the remaining potential target segments: Compare the number of present competitors in the remaining potential target segments to assess which target segment is better. The greater the number of competitors in a segment, the greater the intensity of present competition in that segment, and consequently, the less attractive that segment is to target.
38
Q

Targeting: Additional Criteria based on Competitor Analysis: Present Competition (2)

A
  1. Comparing the extent of loyalty enjoyed by the competitors in the remaining potential target segments: Compare the extent of consumer loyalty enjoyed by competitors in the remaining potential target segments. The greater the loyalty enjoyed by a competitor in a given segment, the more difficult it is to take market share away from that competitor, and consequently, the less attractive that segment is to target.

Example: in the Young Childless Affluent Adults segment, there was only one competitor (Jeep), but it was a well-entrenched competitor with a strong loyal following, rendering this segment unattractive to target.

39
Q

Targeting: Additional Criteria based on Competitor Analysis: Present Competition (3)

A
  1. Extent to which you can differentiate yourself from the competitors: Compare the extent to which we could differentiate our product from the present competitors in the remaining potential target segments.

The more you can positively differentiate yourself from the competitors in a given segment (i.e., the extent to which you can do better than the competitors in terms of delivering value on some of the key value drivers), the more attractive that segment is to target.

For instance, in the Young Childless Affluent Adults segment, the reliability of Discovery was better than Jeep, whereas in the Older Traditionalists segment, the road control of Range Rover was better than the competitors.

40
Q

How important is it to differentiate your product vis-à-vis the competitors? Consequences of being undifferentiated

A
  1. Price competition: this occurs if the price is an important value driver in a segment.

For instance, in the low-end automobile market (where the price is an important value driver), the extent of differentiation is low, resulting in intense price competition. This results in lower profit margins for the manufacturers.

  1. Advertising/Image competition occurs if the image is an important value driver in a segment. This is typically the case for luxury/exclusive products, where consumers are more image-sensitive and less price-sensitive.

For instance, in the high-end automobile market, the extent of differentiation is low, but we do not see the competitors engaging in price competition (since the consumers are not price-sensitive). Instead, we see that the competitors engage in an advertising/image competition, and the manufacturers spend a lot of money to build differentiated images through advertising.

Note: If a firm can successfully survive a price or an advertising/image competition, then it is not as important for the firm to be differentiated.

41
Q

What kinds of firms can successfully survive a price or an advertising/image competition?

A
  1. For a firm to successfully survive a price competition, it needs to have a cost advantage
    (through economies of scale/scope) vis-à-vis its competitors. Companies that do not have a cost advantage are hurt most severely by price competition. Thus, if the price is an important value driver for consumers, and if the firm does not have a cost advantage, it is crucial to differentiate its product from competitors.
  2. Similarly, a firm needs to have enough financial resources to succeed in an advertising/image competition (since image-building through advertising is an expensive activity). Thus, if the image is an important value driver, and if the firm does not have deep pockets, it is crucial to differentiate its product from competitors.
42
Q

Targeting: Additional Criteria based on Competitor Analysis: Future Competition

A

Factors based on future competition (as criteria for targeting).

The attractiveness of a segment decreases if both of the following conditions hold true:

  1. It is easy for competitors to enter that segment in the future (e.g., entry barriers are low).
  2. We will not be able to effectively compete with competitors if they do enter that segment in the future.
43
Q

The ability to effectively compete with future competitors depends on two sources.

A

First, does our firm have the technological capability to differentiate our product vis-à-vis further possible future competitors? That is, are our capabilities/constraints such that we can do a better job than the future competitors in satisfying the value drivers of consumers in that segment?

Second, even if our firm is not able to further differentiate our product vis-à-vis, possible future competitors, does it have enough financial resources to effectively play the advertising competition (if the image is an important value driver for that segment) or enough cost advantage to withstand the price competition (if the price is an important value driver for that segment)?

44
Q

When is Future Competition an Important Factor?

A

We only consider future competition as an important factor in the targeting decision (1) if the probability of competitive entry in the future is high (which depends on the entry barriers in that segment) and (2) if we will not be able to effectively compete with competitors as they enter that segment in the future.

An example of this can be seen in the Land Rover North America mini-case. Entry barriers are low in the Young Childless Affluent Adults segment, and future entrants, such as Japanese SUVs have much better reliability than both Jeep and Land Rover. Land Rover North America has neither the technological capability to manufacture vehicles with better reliability than the Japanese nor the cost advantage or financial resources to engage in price or competition with the Japanese. Therefore, as far as future competition is concerned, the Young Childless Affluent Adults segment is not so attractive to target.

45
Q

Targeting: Additional Criteria based on Company Analysis

A

In the company analysis, we need to consider one important criterion: cannibalization.

This criterion needs to be considered if your firm already has an older product in one of the potential target segments, in which case you would need to measure the cannibalization rate or percentage.

46
Q

Targeting: Additional Criteria based on Company Analysis: Cannibalization

A

The fraction of unit sales of the company’s new product that are derived from the sales of the company’s older products.

The greater the cannibalization rate, the smaller the increase in the company’s total profits (which includes profits from both the older and the new products), and consequently, the lower the attractiveness of that segment.

For instance, consider the case where Land Rover already has an older vehicle (Land Rover Hunter) in the Young Childless Affluent Adults segment. If introducing the new vehicle (Discovery) is going to take lots of sales away from the old one (Hunter)—i.e., cannibalization rate is high—then the Young Childless Affluent Adults segment is not so attractive to target.

47
Q

Calculating the net annual cannibalized profit (from introducing a new product) for a manufacturer?

A

The net annual cannibalized profit is the net profit from introducing the new product after accounting for the losses or costs that stem from the cannibalization of the older products.

REVIEW: NOTE ON TARGETING FOR FORMULA

48
Q

Positioning

A

The act of giving your product some image to people in the chosen slice.

When positioning, you must emphasize the value drivers, your target segment cares about and the value drivers you do better on than your competitors.

49
Q

Criteria for Positioning

A

Which value drivers do we need to emphasize in the minds of customers in the target segment (e.g., YCAA) for our potential product (e.g., Discovery)?

Answering this question gives us the positioning of our product.

At the bare minimum, positioning should include considerations around quality and price. Are you going for the high equality, high price positioning (e.g., apple) or high-quality, low price? low quality and low price (e.g., dollarama).

Note: it is a potential product because you don’t have the actual product yet at this stage. STP happens before you actually have the product, and the goal of STP is to figure out what kind of product you want to make.

So you want to figure out what value drivers you want to emphasize in designing your potential product, designing your advertising or promotion campaign, setting the price point and so on.

50
Q

Positioning for YCAA segment

A

Two criteria. What are they?

(1) From Consumer Analysis: Emphasize value drivers that are important to customers in target segment: in this case,
-Sportiness
-Reliability

(2) From Competitor Analysis: Emphasize value drivers that differentiate you from the present competition in the target segment (Jeep): in this case,
Reliability (value drivers you do better on).

51
Q

Further Criteria for Positioning

A

“Rule of two”: Companies often focus on one or two value drivers when they’re trying to position their product or brand.

Even if there are a large number of value drivers, e.g., 100, the company will focus on no more than two value drivers.

Example of focusing on only two of the product’s value drivers:
- Honda: reliability, safety
- Mercedes: exclusivity, safety
- BMW: Ultimate driving machine

Why this “rule of two”? Salience.
-If your product category involves lots of value drivers and you talk about all of them, then consumers are often left with a very diffused understanding of what your product is about.

The rule of two helps you stay focused, so there’s a very salient kind of brand image and identity, a position that you’re offering people.

The “rule of two” also increases memorability. People who understand your product are more likely to remember your brand because of the clear distinctive positioning.

Note: This “rule of two” often has a limiting effect on new products, especially when the new product offers a lot of features, but none of the features can justify the high price point.

52
Q

“Rule of two”: DVRS Example

A

Came out ~2000: New Product at the time.

Various benefits:
- Better quality than VCR (existing product), easier to program than VCR, and no need for cassettes because everything’s in the box
you can rewind, fast-forward, slow-play the last half hour of TV
- Ceate your own personalized network, so the DVR automatically records shows that you like and shows close to what you like; over time, it develops a good sense of your preferences
- It can skip the ads
- Early DVRs on the market: Microsoft Ultimate TV and ReplayTV.

How did they position themselves?

Ultimate tv Microsoft positioned itself on all the benefits mentioned above. Ignored the rule of two because they were selling it at a high price, so to justify the price, they talked about all the features. No distinctive positioning and had low sales. The value drivers did not stand out.

Replaytv Microsoft positioned itself on only two value drivers, the same price point. It sold more but still had low sales because pitching only two value drivers did not make the high price justifiable for consumers.

Eventually, DVRs succeeded simply because the cost of manufacturing changed. Cos† went down, so the product was able to be sold at a lower price point and was incorporated through subscription offers, letting consumers test out the product and understand what exactly is actually being offered by the DVR. New technology = people don’t understand, therefore its important to give them an opportunity to try out it and experience its benefits.

53
Q

Exceptions to the “rule of two”

A

Example: Aquafresh
- Emphasized many value drivers
-white teeth, gum protection, fights bad breath,

Why did it work?
- The three product benefits were familiar to people. The product’s benefits were understandable unlike with DVR’s.
- Aquafresh created a distinctive logo, where the toothpaste had three colours. Each colour corresponded to one of the benefits to emphasize the saliency and memorability of the product. Built the three colours into the product itself.

54
Q

Positioning: Perceived Contradiction

A

Companies will also select value drivers based on if they work together. If there is a perceived contradiction between two of the value drivers, one might be omitted in the product’s positioning.

Example: Scope mouthwash worried about perceived contradiction if it advertised good taste and reduced gum disease as their value drivers.

The perceived assumption is that great taste is often associated with not being healthy. Bad taste is associated with being healthy.

It doesn’t matter that there’s actually no contradiction. What matters is that in positioning. You’re trying to speak to customers’ minds, so you have to use the assumption to your advantage. You don’t want to challenge or go against the consumer’s perception. Instead, you want to follow their assumptions.

That’s why Buckley’s advertising works: “it tastes awful, but it works.” People believe that healthy things taste bad but are also good for you since they are healthy.

55
Q

Positioning: Summary of all criteria

A

Value drivers to emphasize in the minds of customers should be:
1. Important to the target segment
2. Better than the competitors’ products
3. Positiniong is Communicable: rule of two, easily understood, focused, salient, memorable (to convey the idea of your product)
4. Believable: no perceived contradictions

Note: The company owed Dove and Axe two brands and created two perceived contradictions and caused backlash Dove touched on ethical values and messages of inner beauty and non-objectifying of women. Axe, on the other hand, objectified women, caused a huge upset for its hypocrisy. Within the same branding, minimize the perceived contradictions between the products.

56
Q

Tools for Positioning: Competition

A

How would you define “competition” (in business)? Other ways in which people can solve the problem/need that you solve for them. Fulfilling the same value drivers.

Companies with overlapping value drivers with your value drivers are your competitor, even if not in the same industry.

Intuition: Anything that can take away the need for your product.

E.g., Who are Honda Civic’s competitors? if other things can get the person from point A to point B (Honda’s value).
- Nissan Leaf (Other cares)
- TTC, public transit
- biking, walking
- Uber and Lyft
-Working remotely

E.g., who are FedEx’s competitors?
- Other courier companies [UPS, Purolator]
- Other mail-carrying companies [US Post]
- Other means of physical distribution [railroads, shipping]
- Other means of communication [Skype, DropBox, iTunes

E.g., who are Disneyland’s competitors?
-Theme parks
-Other forms of entertainment
-Netflix
- Destinations

E.g., who are Amazon’s competitors?
-bookstores (at first)
-Now retailers of everything, so they compete with all retailers.

57
Q

Marketing Myopia: Changing consumer needs and changing competitors.

A

Companies that have a successful product (profitable) are at risk of market myopia. Temptation is to focus narrowly on a successful product. You lose sight of the customer’s needs (their value drivers and how those value drivers change over time) and changing competitors.

First risk: No longer relevant for the consumer’s needs.

A second risk: The landscape of competition might change. When technology changes, new competitors from other industries can enter your market and take your market share. The competitor’s core competencies can eat away at your company’s market share.

Example: Blackberry. The keyboard on a blackberry was a means to the end of interacting with the device. You beat your competitor when you come up with a better way to satisfy that value driver in a different and better way, in this case, the iPhone. When the iPhone was introduced, Steve Jobs understood what customers wanted and knew how to beat his competitors.

Know who you are competing against, otherwise, you lose opportunities and risk losing market share.

58
Q

Key Takeaways

A

Why segment? Because different segments have different sensitivities to value drivers and different competitors

How to segment? Simple way and rigorous way

An attractive market is “matched,” “matched+”, substantial, growing, and affluent (high WTP)
Think of the three C’s: