psychological segments

(noun)

Segmentation of markets based on psychological influences, such as personality, lifestyle choices, and attitudinal variables.

Related Terms

  • geographic segments
  • demographic segmentation

Examples of psychological segments in the following topics:

  • Determining Segmentation Variable(s)

    • Markets can be segmented primarily according to geographic, demographic, usage, and psychological segments--or a combination of the above.
    • Segmentation should recognize psychological as well as demographic influences.
    • For example, Phillip Morris has segmented the market for cigarette brands by appealing psychologically to consumers in the following way:
    • If people with similar attitudes can be isolated, they represent an important psychological segment.
    • People with similar physical and psychological characteristics may be similarly motivated.
  • Marketing Data Types

    • As you might expect, demographic segmentation variables are amongst the most popular bases for segmenting customer groups.
    • Psychographics is the science of using psychology and demographics to better understand consumers.
    • Although industrial market segmentation is quite different from consumer market segmentation, both have similar objectives.
    • The process of segmentation is distinct from positioning (designing an appropriate marketing mix for each segment).
    • Segmentation according to occasions.
  • Stimulating Demand

    • The field of psychology defines motive as the inner drive or pressure to take action to satisfy a need.
    • The sources of this arousal may be internal (such as hunger); environmental (viewing a McDonald's advertisement); or psychological (thoughts about food, which can cause hunger).
    • For the most part, the research in motivation involves benefit segmentation and patronage motives.
    • Benefit segmentation may include consumer labels such as price-conscious, convenience-oriented, service-oriented, or other motivation features.
    • Discuss the psychological factors that drive consumer demand, and how they play into marketing segmentation
  • Circadian Rhythms

    • Segmented sleep, also known as interrupted or divided sleep, is a multiphasic sleep pattern in which two or more periods of sleep are punctuated by periods of wakefulness.
    • Roger Ekirch, a historian who has researched segmented sleep extensively, argues that segmented sleep was the dominant form of human sleep before the Industrial Revolution.
    • Ekirch suggests that it is due to the modern use of electric lighting (computers, cell phones, office lights) that most modern humans do not practice segmented sleep.
    • In one experiment on segmented sleep, researchers had eight healthy men confined to a room for fourteen hours of darkness every day for a month.
    • Together, these results imply that segmented sleep is indeed our natural sleep rhythm.
  • Selecting Target Markets

    • Mass marketing - Mass marketing is a market coverage strategy in which a firm decides to ignore market segment differences and go after the whole market with one offer.
    • Differentiated marketing - A differentiated marketing strategy is one where the company decides to provide separate offerings to each different market segment that it targets.
    • Each segment is targeted uniquely as the company provides unique benefits to different segments.
    • Concentrated marketing - Concentrated marketing is a strategy which targets very defined and specific segments of the consumer population.
    • Niche marketing is the process of finding market segments that are small but potentially profitable nonetheless.
  • The Importance of Market Segmentation

    • Market segmentation allows for a better allocation of a firm's finite resources.
    • Market segmentation can be defined in terms of the STP acronym, meaning Segment, Target and Position.
    • While there may be theoretically 'ideal' market segments, in reality, every organization engaged in a market will develop different ways of imagining market segments, and create product differentiation strategies to exploit these segments.
    • To increase marketing efficiency by directing effort specifically toward the designated segment in a manner consistent with that segment's characteristics
    • Rather, one or more target markets (segments) must be selected.
  • New Concept

  • Developing a Market Segmentation

    • This allows them to focus all of their efforts on a single segment.
    • There are two major segmentation strategies followed by marketing organizations: a concentration strategy and a multi-segment strategy.
    • This strategy is advantageous because it enables the organization to analyze the needs and wants of only one segment and then focus all its efforts on that segment.
    • In the multi-segment strategy, a company focuses its marketing efforts on two or more distinct market segments.
    • Markets could also be segmented by usage rates.
  • Evaluating Market Segments

    • Segmentation involves classifying people into homogeneous groupings and determining which of these segments are viable target markets.
    • Rather, one or more target markets (segments) must be selected.
    • Thus, market segmentation is a twofold process that includes:
    • An ideal market segment meets all of the following criteria:
    • The other segmentation strategy is a multisegment strategy.
  • Careers in Psychology

    • Psychology is a very broad field, and there are many career options available for graduating students of psychology.
    • Clinical psychology involves the study and application of psychology for the purpose of understanding, preventing, and treating psychologically based dysfunction.
    • Forensic psychology is concerned with the application of psychological methods and principles to legal questions and issues.
    • Careers in health settings can vary widely and include health psychology (sometimes called health-and-wellness psychology), occupational-health psychology, and medical psychology.
    • Neuroimaging has been helpful in many areas of psychology, particularly in the subfield of biological psychology.
Subjects
  • Accounting
  • Algebra
  • Art History
  • Biology
  • Business
  • Calculus
  • Chemistry
  • Communications
  • Economics
  • Finance
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Microbiology
  • Physics
  • Physiology
  • Political Science
  • Psychology
  • Sociology
  • Statistics
  • U.S. History
  • World History
  • Writing

Except where noted, content and user contributions on this site are licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 with attribution required.