Porsche - Porsche Cars North America is an example of a company that uses psychographics to divide up its consumers. Porsche sells cars costing between.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Part 1 Marketing Dynamics
Advertisements

Fashion Marketing Basics
No. 31 Hair and Beauty By Taylor Allen Period 2.
Chapter 18 Pricing Policies McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Customer-Driven Marketing Strategy Creating Value for Target Customers
Marius Zechner Dominik Backs Lili Nottrott Pia Freitag
5 P’s.
The Main Idea To ensure success, entrepreneurs need to understand the industry and the market.   They should define areas of analysis and conduct effective.
Fashion Merchandising A
12-1. Business in a Changing World McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 12 Customer-Driven.
Global Marketing Management A European Perspective
Marketing. What is Marketing? You already know a lot about marketing Marketing isn’t as easy as you might think –Cons Markets are always changing Competition.
ENTREPRENEURSHIP I. Business owners are excited about people’s similarities. Why? Grouping is how marketers discover the best ways to match products with.
Marketing 334 Consumer Behavior
© 2005 Prentice Hall7-1 Chapter 7 Segmentation, Targeting, and Positioning.
1 Chapter 7 Segmentation, Targeting, and Positioning.
Market Analysis The Sports Company. November 18, 1998The Sports Company2 Introduction Analysis of past, present and future sales Student Name.
2.09 Sports II. ROI ROI is short for “Return On Investment” This means that you want to make as much profit as possible There are many ways to do so,
STANDARD 1 OBJECTIVE 1 Students will understand the concept of market & market identification.
1 Films. 2 Company Background BMW = Bavarian Motor Works Founded in 1916 Originally an aircraft engine manufacturer Produced first automobile in 1929.
Marketing CH. 4 Notes.
Glencoe Entrepreneurship: Building a Business Doing Market Research SECTION SECTION 6.1 Chapter 6 Market Analysis Defining Areas of Analysis The entrepreneur.
Essentials of Marketing Research
Market Segmentation This Lecture has been adapted by:
Super Nintendo Entertainment System ( SNES) By: Stephanie Wallace and Tyrell Lynch.
Entrepreneurs Characteristics and Contributions 1.
2003 Marketing Communications Campaign Mazda Protégé5 Racquel Smith Olivier Wasilewski Chung Chun KaoNeha Sharma.
ME2024 Zhu Chu Sébastien Crespin Guillaume Favreau Xiaojia Hu Liang Huang Bo Peng Thursday 9 th December.
Shortages and Surpluses. Businesses have to figure out what price to charge consumers Also, they have to try to figure out how much of their product the.
Target Audience and Persuasive Media Strategies. Target Audience Every piece of media has an intended target audience – everyone has different interests.
Chapter 11 Marketing Process and Consumer Behavior: Selected topics Prepared By Mostafa Kamel.
Objectives Be able to define the three steps of target marketing: market segmentation, target marketing, and market positioning. Understand the major.
The Engine That Runs The Economy.  A consumer is anyone who buys or uses products  Consumer Economics is the study of the role consumers play in an.
DECA Idea Challenge Sessions. What if...
Chapter Five The Consumer Audience. Prentice Hall, © Consumer behavior can be best described as: a) How individuals or groups select, purchase,
Segmentation, Targeting, and Positioning
Market Analysis Glencoe Entrepreneurship: Building a Business Doing Market Research Industry and Market Analysis 6.1 Section 6.2 Section 6 6.
G11 presentation on BMW company supervised by miss: Reda
Doing Market Research Unit 2. Market Analysis  Industry – is a collection of businesses that are categorized by a specific business activity  Within.
Business in a Changing World McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 12 Customer-Driven Marketing.
1 Marketing Part 1: Adapted by John Bell from presentation by Jan Zimmerman Author, Web Marketing for Dummies Watermelon Mountain Web Marketing
Marketing Strategy & Consumer Behavior Unit 4. Planning a Marketing Strategy  A plan that identifies how a company expects to achieve its goals is known.
JA Our Region Name Title Company. Session 1 Am I an Entrepreneur? 1.
Journal Make a list of all extended family members (aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents) and where they live as well as their ages, occupations (if applicable),
Micro-business Labelling in Australia Presented by: Michael Trigwell, Taverner Research Date: 08 February 2011 Presented by: Michael Trigwell & Justin.
Target Market - Review What is a market? ◦ People who share similar needs and wants and have the ability to purchase a given product are a market What.
An Industry is... A group of businesses that share similar business activities. Example: Sporting goods, clothing, travel, fashion.
Marketing September 16, Notes - Marketing Mix Marketing Mix Activity.
Standard 2 Fashion Marketing. Student will understand the basics of fashion marketing. Objective 1: Define Marketing Terms Objective 2: Describe the 4.
(I) Chapter One: Marketing Concepts Lecturer: Dr. Mazen Rohmi.
MARKETING MIX.
Entrepreneurship Unit 2.1
Going Global: Segmentation, Targeting, & Positioning
Entrepreneurship Unit 2.1
Fashion Marketing: INFO Required!
Entrepreneurship Unit 2.1
12 Self-Concept and Lifestyle CHAPTER McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Maximize ROI for Promotional Events
Eagle Challenge Learning Target: Describe market segmentation methods used to identify target market How to protect intellectual property. Standard OE3.
Eagle Challenge Logo Quiz Slogan Quiz Learning Target.
Indicator 1.04 – Employ marketing information to develop a marketing plan Part II.
Eagle Challenge Logo Quiz Slogan Quiz Learning Target
12 CHAPTER SELF-CONCEPT AND LIFESTYLE 12-1.
Fashion Marketing: INFO Required!
Indicator 1.04 – Employ marketing information to develop a marketing plan Part II.
FMA 601 Foreign Market Analysis
Eagle Challenge.
Maximize ROI for Promotional Events
TNT-Company 42A Owners of Company 43A
Ms. Alexander Entrepreneurship
Presentation transcript:

Porsche - Porsche Cars North America is an example of a company that uses psychographics to divide up its consumers. Porsche sells cars costing between $40 and $82 thousand to a demographically homogenous group, consisting of 40-something male college graduates earning over $200,000 per year. Even with this information, Porsche’s sales were slipping. They hired a team of anthropologists to figure out the psychographic composition of their consumers. What they found surprised them. They had been marketing to the wrong people in the wrong ways. After gathering psychographic information on their consumers and implementing marketing plans tailored to these specific segments, they ended a seven-year slump and sales rose 48% (Taylor, 1995). The automotive industry, in general, attempted to divide its consumers into four psychographic segments: participants, functionalists, ego show-offs, and do-it-yourselfers (Mitchell, 1994). Porsche consumers were divided into five segments according to their psychographic characteristics (Taylor, 1995). These groups included: ·        Top Guns: Driven, ambitious. Power and control matter. Want to be noticed. ·        Elitists: Old money. A car is just a car, no matter how expensive. ·        Proud: Ownership an end in itself earned by hard work, no need to be noticed. ·        Bon Vivants: Worldly jet setters and thrill seekers. Car heightens the excitement in their already passionate lives ·        Fantasists: Their car is an escape, uninterested in impressing others, may feel a little guilty about owning a Porsche (Taylor, 1995). “The refinement of raw automotive power – The new 911 Turbo.” This Porsche advertisement might appeal to the “bon vivants” psychographic group. The Porsche is being sold because of the fact that it is fast and exciting. This would most appeal to thrill seeking, passionate, people. It would also appeal to the “ego show-offs” or “Top Guns” who want to be noticed and admired. “Sports do not build character. They reveal it. Competition challenges us to reach deep inside and push ourselves past previous limits towards new, higher achievements. We discover something about strength, perseverance of the human spirit and the importance of choosing the right equipment. Which is why you choose Porsche.”   This second Porsche advertisement positions the Porsche and the Porsche owner as being stylish, sporty, and hip. This advertisement would most appeal to the driven and ambitious, or the “Top Guns.” They want to be noticed, as the bright yellow car would indicate, but also have other interests. This advertisement might also appeal to the “bon vivants” psychographic segment or “participants” because of the excitement and love for life the ad depicts. Taylor, A. (1995). Porsche slices up its buyers. Fortune, 131, 24.

When every month you are trying to sell 500 exotic sports cars that cost between $40,000 and $82,000 apiece, you have to really know your customers. Porsche Cars North America hired a team of anthropologists to find out who its owners were and how Porsche could better sell to them. The demographics of the Porsche owner are utterly predictable: a 40-something male college graduate earning over $200,000 per year. The psychographics, however, were of more interest. Porsche owners were categorized into five rather unusual -- and not necessarily all that flattering -- personality types (see box). Richard Ford, Porsche's vice president of sales and marketing, found the results astonishing. Said he: "We were selling to people whose profiles were diametrically opposed. You wouldn't want to tell an elitist how good he looks in the car or how fast he could go." Besides refining its marketing as a result of the study, Porsche has cut its prices, launched a new ad campaign, and introduced a successful redesign of its classic rear-engine coupe, the 911. (See photo for the hot new 1995 Cabriolet version -- a $72,400 trophy.) After a seven-year slump, Porsche's U.S. sales rose 48% in 1994, as of the end of November. A TAXONOMY OF PORSCHE BUYERS % OF ALL TYPE OWNERS DESCRIPTION Top Guns 27% Driven, ambitious types. Power and control matter. They expect to be noticed. Elitists 24% Old-money blue bloods. A car is just a car, no matter how expensive. It is not an extension of personality. Proud 23% Ownership is an end in itself. Patrons Their car is a trophy earned for hard work, and who cares if anyone sees them in it? Bon 17% Worldly jet setters and Vivants thrill seekers. Their car heightens the excitement in their already passionate lives. Fantasists 9% Walter Mitty types. Their car is an escape. Not only are they uninterested in impressing others with it, they also feel a little guilty about owning one. PHOTO: Bon vivants go for the Cabriolet.

Ex/Taxonomy of Porsche Buyers Top Guns 27% Elitists 24% Proud Patrons 23% BonVivants 17% Fantasists 9% Driven, ambitious. Power & control important. Expect to be noticed. Old-money blue-bloods. Car is just a car. Not extension of personality. Ownership is end in itself. Trophy for hard work. Jet setter, thrill-seeker. Car heightens excitement in passionate life. Car is escape. Uninterested in impressing others. Feel somewhat guilty owning it.