Consumer Behavior and Marketing Strategy
The study of consumers helps firms and organizations improve their marketing
strategies by understanding issues such as how
The psychology of how consumers think, feel, reason, and select between
different alternatives (e.g., brands, products);
The psychology of how the consumer is influenced by his or her environment
(e.g., culture, family, signs, media);
The behavior of consumers while shopping or making other marketing
decisions;
Limitations in consumer knowledge or information processing abilities
influence decisions and marketing outcome;
How consumer motivation and decision strategies differ between products
that differ in their level of importance or interest that they entail for the
consumer; and
How marketers can adapt and improve their marketing campaigns and
marketing strategies to more effectively reach the consumer.
Segmentation
Although the text makes references to segmentation, this issue is not discussed
explicitly in much detail. However, segmentation is important in consumer analysis
because understanding the consumer will allow us segment the market more
meaningfully.
Segmentation basically involves dividing consumers into groups such that members
of a group (1) are as similar as possible to members of that same group but (2) differ
as much as possible from members other segments. This enables us then to "treat"
each segment differently—e.g., by:
1 Providing different products (e.g., some consumers like cola taste, while
others prefer lime)
2 Offering different prices (some consumers will take the cheapest product
available, while others will pay for desired features)
3 Distributing the products where they are likely to be bought by the targeted
segment.
In order for a segment structure to be useful:
1 Each segment must have an identity—i.e., it must contain members that can
be described in some way (e.g., price sensitive) that behave differently from
another segment.
2 Each segment must engage in systematic behaviors (e.g., a price sensitive
segment should consistently prefer the low price item rather than randomly
switching between high and low priced brands).
Each segment must offer marketing mix efficiency potential—i.e., it must be
profitable to serve. For example, a large segment may be profitable even though the
competition it attracts tends to keep prices down. A smaller segment may be
profitable if, for example, it is price insensitive or can be targeted efficiently (e.g., if its
members consistently subscribe to one magazine where all the company’s
advertising can be put). Some segments are not cost effective. For example, a small
group of consumers would love to have a no-sports news channel (similar to CNN),
but we are just too small a group to profitable.