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When working with clients, we often
help identify new business market gaps
to launch into as well as existing
markets to exploit using a segmentation
model based on multiple variables
including, but not limited to, the
client's core competence, competitive
position, corporate financial
capabilities, market demand, business
assets, and risk tolerance.
- Are looking to open a new office
in another city?
- Should you sell overseas?
- Will prospects in London, Las
Vegas and Chicago buy your offering
based on the same marketing
characteristics?
- Should you increase your
offering's price?
- Should you set up a channel
partner program to expand?
These are all relevant business
growth questions that CEO's ask on a
regular basis.
When trying to expand, it is
important to know the best practices
needed to grow your business. To answer
these questions, consider enrolling in
one of our
coaching programs.
Segmentation marketing is one key
business driver to understand how to
maximize top line revenue growth.

Provided to Paul DiModica by
eMarketer.com under contract.
To answer these questions correctly,
management teams must understand the
basis for business growth.
Two types of segmentation marketing
methods are:
- Geo-marketing
segmentation
- Spatial marketing
segmentation
Geo-Marketing Segmentation
When building your business growth
plan, there are different marketing
propositions that must be developed for
the geography that you market to.
Prospects are not rigid, stone-like
clones of each other. They have unique
value identification demands based on
the geography they live in. Prospects in
London, Tokyo, Boston, Chicago and LA
all have different drivers that make
them acquire. Do southern people in the
U.S. buy different from people in the
midwest?
Geo-marketing is the subsegmenting of
these unique buyer variables around the
traditional 4 P's of marketing -- Price,
Promotion, Position and Product.
Geo-marketing can:
- Subsegment for you geographic
opportunities within larger
geographies (Atlanta within Georgia)
- Help identify new markets to
enter
- Refine sales and marketing
budget allocation
- Personalize your marketing
messages

Provided to Paul DiModica by
eMarketer.com under contract.
Spatial Marketing
Segmentation
Spatial marketing goes even further
than geo-marketing by helping you
analyze not just the geography of where
your targeted prospects live, but also
the intersection of buyer value based on
your offering's distribution
capabilities, competitors, buyer
lifestyle, communication capabilities,
buyer financing capabilities and even
weather, all within the same buying
zones. When creating your value forward
marketing programs, remember to build
value uniquely, not globally, based on
the spatial buying characteristics of
the prospect you are trying to sell
(i.e., well-to-do retiree buyers in a
waterfront community may perceive value
for the same offering differently than
prospects who live in a midwest farming
community).
Spatial marketing can help you:
- Forecast demand
- Profile your customers
- Minimize marketing investment
mistakes
- Increase customer satisfaction
levels by understanding the
demographic flow of complaints (who
complains and why)
Use spatial and geo-marketing
segmentation methods as business tools
to increase the return on investment of
your marketing programs and as a
foundation to make premeditated business
decisions based on logic, not
emotion.

Provided to Paul DiModica by
eMarketer.com under contract.
“If you
want to be a big company tomorrow, you
have to invest and start acting like one
today.”
Thomas J. Watson, Jr., Founder
IBM |
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