Segmenting Business Markets and Estimating Segment Demands: Course: B2B Marketing (MKT 505)
Segmenting Business Markets and Estimating Segment Demands: Course: B2B Marketing (MKT 505)
• Measurability
• Accessibility
• Substantiality
• Responsiveness
1. Measurability
1. Large enough
2. Unique enough
3. Financially independent enough
4. Reachable enough
1. Undershot customers –
Existing solutions fail to meet their needs, resulting in:
a. a purchase of new product versions
b. at steady or increasing prices.
3. Non-Consuming Customers –
Customers who lack resources, skills or ability to benefit from existing
solutions.
Missed Opportunities
Examples:
Computer industry – Mainframes vs. PCs
Printing Industry – Print shops vs. office printers
Consumer vs. Business Profiling
Customer Type
Macro-
segmentation Customer Size
Product Use
Business
Markets
Purchasing Criteria
Purchasing Strategy
Micro-
segmentation Importance
Personal
Characteristics
Macro-Level Bases
Criteria include:
Value in use can vary from one customer application, or one market
segment to another.
Purchasing Situation
New task buy vs. straight rebuy vs. modified rebuy demands different
marketing strategies.
Customer Type
Macro-
segmentation Customer Size
Product Use
Business
Markets
Purchasing Criteria
Purchasing Strategy
Micro-
segmentation Importance
Personal
Characteristics
Selected Micro-Level Bases of Segmentation
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Key Criteria
1. Quality
2. Delivery
3. Service
4. Supplier’s Reputation
5. Price (all other things being equal)
Price vs. Service
1. Innovation-focused customers
2. Customers in fast-growing markets
3. Customers in highly competitive markets
1. Innovation-Focused Customers
Committed to being the first in the market with new products
and technologies
Is it worthwhile?
Segmentation Model
42
Affected Stakeholders
1. Easy to understand
2. Easy to apply
It’s good for new products or for situations that are not well
suited for quantitative analysis.
Copyright © 2007 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved.
Quantitative Methods: Time Series
Although some variables are highly correlated, they may not have a
genuine cause/effect relationship.
Again, there is a need for much data, however some data may not be
available.
Regression analysis uses past data and may not be relevant to rapidly
changing events, thus invalidating past relationships.
Quantitative: Which Method?
Research suggests that strategists should choose a forecast
method that is based on the market’s “underlying behavior” rather
than on a “time horizon”