4.2.2
Segmentation
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Market Segmentation
Market segmentation is the process of dividing potential customers into different groups based on characteristics like age, gender, income and much more. Businesses use market segmentation for a variety of reasons:

Choosing market mix
- When choosing the product, geographic, promotional and price segmentation can help a business to understand its customers’ needs and wants.
- For example, Next provides clothing aimed at infants and toddlers using its Next Kids range.

Choosing promotion
- Advertising in a newspaper probably is not the best way to target teenage girls, but a teenage magazine like Bliss might be.
- Segmenting a market can give businesses ideas about how best to promote their products.

Market mapping
- Market mapping is a process to identify a gap in the market by looking at what competitors offer.
Methods of Market Segmentation
Customers can be segmented based on lots of different variables:

Gender
- Some products are aimed primarily at either males or females.
- Boohoo.com is an online fashion retailer that primarily targets females. Advertising to lots of males may not be the most effective strategy.

Age
- Products can be aimed at a specific age range.
- A business is unlikely to advertise mobility scooters to people under 40.

Location
- Customers’ wants and needs often change based upon where they live or where they are born.
- There are many supermarkets focusing on Polish food on some high streets in the UK.
- It makes more sense for these supermarkets to locate where there are lots of Polish families living.

Income
- Certain products (luxury products) need to be aimed at people who earn a certain amount of money.
- For example, high-end kitchens (priced at £20,000) are more likely to be effective advertising in magazines like Ideal Home or the Sunday Times because these magazines tend to have readerships with high incomes.
1Business Organisation & Environment
1.1Introduction to Business Management
1.2Types of Organisation
1.3Organisational Objectives
1.4Stakeholders
1.5External Environment
1.6Growth & Evolution
1.7HL Only: Organisational Planning Tools
2Human Resource Management
2.1Functions & Evolution of Human Resource Management
2.2Organisational Structure
2.3Leadership & Management
2.4Motivation
2.5Organisational (Corporate) Culture
2.6HL Only: Industrial/Employee Relations
3Finance & Accounts
3.1Sources of Finance
3.2Costs & Revenues
3.3Break-Even Analysis
3.4Profitability & Liquidity Ratio Analysis
3.6HL Only: Investment Appraisal
3.7HL Only: Budgets
4Marketing
4.1The Role of Marketing
4.2Marketing Planning
4.3Market Research
4.4The 4 Ps
4.4.1Product Decisions4.4.2Pricing Decisions & Price Skimming4.4.3Pricing Decisions & Price Penetration4.4.4End of Topic Test - Pricing & Competition4.4.5Promotional Decisions4.4.6Promotional Decisions 24.4.7Promotional Decisions 34.4.8Digital Marketing4.4.9Evaluating Digital Marketing4.4.10Case Study - The Marketing Mix & Promotion4.4.11Place & Distribution
4.5HL Only: The Extended Marketing Mix
4.6HL Only: International Marketing
4.7E-Commerce
5Operations Management
5.1The Role of Operations Management
5.2Production Methods
5.3HL Only: Lean Prodution & Quality Management
5.4HL Only: Production Planning
5.5HL Only: Research & Development
Jump to other topics
1Business Organisation & Environment
1.1Introduction to Business Management
1.2Types of Organisation
1.3Organisational Objectives
1.4Stakeholders
1.5External Environment
1.6Growth & Evolution
1.7HL Only: Organisational Planning Tools
2Human Resource Management
2.1Functions & Evolution of Human Resource Management
2.2Organisational Structure
2.3Leadership & Management
2.4Motivation
2.5Organisational (Corporate) Culture
2.6HL Only: Industrial/Employee Relations
3Finance & Accounts
3.1Sources of Finance
3.2Costs & Revenues
3.3Break-Even Analysis
3.4Profitability & Liquidity Ratio Analysis
3.6HL Only: Investment Appraisal
3.7HL Only: Budgets
4Marketing
4.1The Role of Marketing
4.2Marketing Planning
4.3Market Research
4.4The 4 Ps
4.4.1Product Decisions4.4.2Pricing Decisions & Price Skimming4.4.3Pricing Decisions & Price Penetration4.4.4End of Topic Test - Pricing & Competition4.4.5Promotional Decisions4.4.6Promotional Decisions 24.4.7Promotional Decisions 34.4.8Digital Marketing4.4.9Evaluating Digital Marketing4.4.10Case Study - The Marketing Mix & Promotion4.4.11Place & Distribution
4.5HL Only: The Extended Marketing Mix
4.6HL Only: International Marketing
4.7E-Commerce
5Operations Management
5.1The Role of Operations Management
5.2Production Methods
5.3HL Only: Lean Prodution & Quality Management
5.4HL Only: Production Planning
5.5HL Only: Research & Development
Practice questions on Segmentation
Can you answer these? Test yourself with free interactive practice on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.
- 1
- 2Reasons businesses use market segmentation:Fill in the list
- 3Features of market segmentation:True / false
- 4
- 5
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