Marketing Management - Market Segmentation
Marketing Management - Market Segmentation
Marketing Management - Market Segmentation
ALAN COBER
Segmentation (final) 6/17/99 2:25 PM Page 7
M A R K E T I N G 7
A segmentation
you can
act on
John Forsyth, Sunil Gupta, Sudeep Haldar,
Anil Kaul, and Keith Kettle
John Forsyth is a principal in McKinsey’s Stamford office; Sunil Gupta is a professor at the
Columbia Business School; Sudeep Haldar is a consultant in the Chicago office; Anil Kaul
is an alumnus of the Chicago office; and Keith Kettle is senior vice president of The M/A/R/C
Group. Copyright © 1999 McKinsey & Company. All rights reserved.
Segmentation (final) 6/17/99 2:25 PM Page 8
8 T H E M c K I N S E Y Q U A R T E R LY 1 9 9 9 N U M B E R 3
The basic difficulty is that value-based segments generally don’t fit neatly
into demographic ones. Many companies therefore start with the simpler
task of identifying differences based on demography or on the different
attributes of different companies. Companies in consumer markets, for
example, typically divide their customers into baby boomers, generation
Xers, and so forth. Likewise, many companies that sell to other businesses
1
It has become fashionable to suggest that customer-relationship marketing, the interactive
character of the Internet, and the ability of today’s computers to collect, process, and
retrieve detailed information about huge numbers of customers have moved business toward
segment-of-one marketing and away from marketing by traditional segmentation. But we
think it unlikely that this kind of “mass customization”—for example, custom-fitted Levi’s
jeans—will replace segmentation as the basis of strategic decision making. First, designing
products and services for individual customers probably won’t be cost effective anytime
soon. Second, even if companies have sufficiently large databases to customize services
for their current customers, they rarely have enough information to do so for their com-
petitors’ customers or for nonusers. The information revolution thus will probably strengthen
the tendency of companies to use information about thousands or millions of customers
by organizing them into segments.
Segmentation (final) 6/17/99 2:25 PM Page 9
A S E G M E N TAT I O N Y O U C A N A C T O N 9
Targeting
Sometimes a segmentation strategy works even if you can’t identify who
is in which segment.
In the early 1990s, price wars at the pump threatened the profitability
of oil companies. To turn the situation around, Mobil Oil queried 2,000
customers in a segmentation study revealing that only 20 percent of gaso-
line buyers were price shoppers,
who spent an average of $700
annually, while customers in other Segmentation schemes
segments spent as much as $1,200. based on demographics or
Although Mobil could not distin- company characteristics are
guish price-sensitive shoppers from not extremely actionable
price-insensitive ones, the news
that 80 percent of its customers
were price-insensitive, heavier users shifted the company’s focus away
from pricing. As a result, Mobil reaped an extra $118 million a year
in earnings from an additional two cents a gallon on its gas—a major
accomplishment.2
2
Wall Street Journal, January 30, 1995.
Segmentation (final) 6/17/99 2:25 PM Page 10
10 T H E M c K I N S E Y Q U A R T E R LY 1 9 9 9 N U M B E R 3
Self-selection
The basic idea of self-selection is to reverse the roles of a company and
its customers: instead of trying to find, say, price-sensitive people, the com-
pany figures out what segments it wants to reach and gives the consumers in
them ways of finding it.
Similarly, airlines often have lower airfares for people willing to include
Saturday night stays in their trips. These companies realize that consumers
in the price-sensitive segment will sacrifice flexibility for low cost but may
not know who these customers are.
EXHIBIT 1
Sniffing a discount, however, these
Segmentation through product design people come looking for the airline.