Marketing Management
1. In a perfect world, a marketer wants to understand the target market as much as possible. Typically, only knowing one type of information about the target market is necessitated by data deficiency in the other areas.
Demographic information has the most obvious use cases, such as when the product is designed specifically for a target group, and would be relatively useless for others. An example of this might be if you are selling something that is specifically targeted at seniors – you want to know that seniors are buying, but also where and how to reach them. Products that target specific ethnic groups are another good example – if you import an unusual spice from West Africa that nobody else knows what to do with, the ideal scenario is to target an area with a lot of West African people. Another use case would be products like alcohol that have age restrictions. You have to market alcoholic beverages, typically, in a way that specifically does not appeal to minors.
Geographic segmentation's normal use case is for a small business. Where it would be awkward or onerous to sell outside of a certain geography, a business would want to ensure basic geographic targeting to avoid attracting customers it could not serve.
Psychographic targeting refers to targeting based on people's lifestyles and behaviors. There are some products where lifestyle-based marketing is most effective. This can be a means to differentiate a product in a field where there is otherwise not much differentiation. Psychographic targeting...
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