Sheba is an Australian rideshare company that is for and by women. It offers its services to women passengers, driven by women drivers, so that both can feel safe and secure. The company’s key customers are: women drivers and women passengers (single or moms/moms with children). The target market of this report is women drivers, because they will serve as the backbone of the company’s growth. Sheba is positioned to grow because it offers a safe, secure and comfortable rideshare experience that is designed just for women.
2.1. Target Market and Positioning Statement.
Target Market:
Women: professional, non-professional; married, non-married; with and without kids; ages 21+ for drivers
Positioning Statement:
Sheba provides Women (21+) with an opportunity to drive for a company that caters solely to them and their needs. Women drivers will pick up and drop off Moms on the go, single women, and women who want to feel safe and comfortable knowing that they are in good hands when they take a rideshare. It is Sheba’s goal to provide all women with a safe and affordable option in the rideshare economy: thus Sheba is a unique drive service like no other—for and by women that focuses on getting there safe, without worry!
2.2. Marketing Strategy Recommendations.
The extended marketing mix consists of a combination of elements that a firm will use to enhance its ability to appeal to its target market, meet that target’s needs and ensure the fulfillment of that target’s expectations. Every element of the extended marketing mix is related to one another, and the elements that make up the extended marketing mix consist of the following: 1) Product—the good or service offered to the consumer; 2) Price—the cost to the consumer for the good or service; 3) Place—where the consumer obtains the product; 4) Promotion—the manner in which the consumer is targeted and convinced to purchase the product; 5) People—the individuals involved in the transaction when the consumer obtains the product; 6) Process—the methods used to deliver the product to the consumer; and 7) Physical—the environment experienced by the consumer during or throughout the process. The three extended marketing mix elements that will be covered in this marketing plan are: Promotion, Place, and Product.
As Johnson (2014) notes, “effective marketing depends on building and maintaining relationships” (p. 251). With this in mind it should be considered that the target market is going to be one that is connected to the Web—one that is tech-savvy and able to use a mobile phone...
Reference List.
Bernhardt, J.M., Mays, D. and Hall, A.K., 2012. Social marketing at the right place and right
time with new media. Journal of Social Marketing, 2(2), pp.130-137.
Correa, T., Hinsley, A.W. and De Zuniga, H.G., 2010. Who interacts on the Web?: The
intersection of users’ personality and social media use. Computers in Human Behavior, 26(2), pp.247-253.
Downes, L. and Mui, C., 1998. Unleashing the killer app: digital strategies for market. Harvard
Business School Press, Cambridge, MA.
Perrin, A., 2015. Social media usage. Pew Research Center.
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