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Customer-Driven Marketing Strategy - Coggle Diagram
Customer-Driven Marketing Strategy
Customer Driven Marketing Strategy
Differentiation
Differentiating the market offering to create superior customer value.
Positioning
Arranging for a market offering to occupy a clear, distinctive, and desirable place relative to competing products in the minds of target consumers.
Market Targeting
The process of evaluating each market segment's attractiveness and selecting one or more segments to enter.
Market Segmentation
Dividing a market into smaller segments with distinct needs, characteristics, or behavior that might require separate marketing strategies or mixes.
Market Segmentation
Psychographic segmentation
Dividing a market into different segments based on social class, lifestyle, or personality characteristics.
Behavioral segmentation
Dividing a market into segments based on consumer knowledge, attitudes, uses, or responses to a product.
Income segmentation
Dividing a market into different income segments.
Occasion segmentation
Dividing the market into segments according to occasions when buyers get the idea to buy, actually make their purchase, or use the purchased item.
Gender segmentation
Dividing a market into different segments based on gender.
Benefit segmentation
Dividing the market into segments according to the different benefits that consumers seek from the product.
Age and life-cycle segmentation
Dividing a market into different age and life-cycle groups.
Intermarket segmentation
Forming segments of consumers who have similar needs and buying behavior even though they are located in different countries.
Demographic segmentation
Dividing the market into segments based on variables such as age, gender, family size, family life cycle, income, occupation, education, religion, race, generation, and nationality.
Geographic segmentation
Dividing a market into different geographical units, such as nations, states, regions, counties, cities, or even neighborhoods.
Differentiation and Positioning
Competitive advantage
An advantage over competitors gained by offering greater customer value, either by having lower prices or providing more benefits that justify higher prices.
Value proposition
The full positioning of a brand—the full mix of benefits on which it is positioned.
Product position
The way the product is defined by consumers on important attributes—the place the product occupies in consumers’ minds relative to competing products.
Positioning statement
A statement that summarizes company or brand positioning. It takes this form: To (target segment and need) our (brand) is (concept) that (point of difference).
Marketing Targeting
Differentiated (segmented) marketing
A market-coverage strategy in which a firm decides to target several market segments and designs separate offers for each.
Micromarketing
Tailoring products and marketing programs to the needs and wants of specific individuals and local customer segments; It includes local marketing and individual marketing.
Undifferentiated (mass) marketing
A market-coverage strategy in which a firm decides to ignore market segment differences and go after the whole market with one offer.
Concentrated (niche) marketing
A market-coverage strategy in which a firm goes after a large share of one or a few segments or niches.
Target market
A set of buyers sharing common needs or characteristics that the company decides to serve.
Local marketing
Tailoring brands and promotions to the needs and wants of local customer segments—cities, neighborhoods, and even specific stores.
Individual marketing
Tailoring products and marketing programs to the needs and preferences of individual customers—also called one-to- one marketing, customized marketing, and markets-of-one marketing.