Don’t
Segment Markets — “Hire” the Product
James T. Berger, Managing Editor
March 2007
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The conventional wisdom is to segment markets by such
things as demographics, psychographics, geographics, benefit/usage,
buyer behavior dynamics and so forth. Now Harvard Prof. Clayton
Christensen and a team of academic and real world marketing practitioners
has come up with a novel approach focused on “hiring”
the product to perform a specific task. They call this new paradigm
— segmenting by job.
The new theory is crystallized
in an article called “Finding the Right Job for Your Product”
and is published in the Spring 2007 MIT SLOAN MANAGEMENT REVIEW.
Christensen’s co-authors include Scott B. Anthony, president
of Watertown (MA)-based Innosight LLC, an innovation consulting
company; Gerald Berstell, a Chicago-based customer-case researcher
who owns a full-service market research firm focused on revitalizing
declining established products and re-launching failed new products,
and Denise Nitterhouse, an associate professor of accountancy and
management information systems at Chicago’s DePaul University.
Christensen and his team write that product and customer
characteristics are “poor indicators of customer behavior,
because from the customer’s perspective, that is not how the
markets are structured.” They write that a purchase decision
doesn’t necessarily conform to “average” customer
characteristics. “Rather, customers just find themselves needing
to get jobs done…and “hire” products or services
to do that job.”
“Most of the ‘home runs’
of marketing history were hit by marketers who saw the world this
way,” they write. “The ‘strike-outs’ of
marketing history, by contrast, generally have been a result of
focusing on developing products with better features and functions
or of attempting to decipher what the average customer in the demographic
wants.”
Milkshake Example
They use, as an example, an observable analysis of
people who buy milkshakes at fast-food restaurants. Research showed
that an inordinate number of shakes were sold in the early morning.
Why? Customer consumed them in their cars on the way to work. The
reason: these customers had long, boring commutes. Although they
weren’t interested in breakfast, they wanted to buy something
that would stave off their 10 a.m. hunger pangs. Moreover, they
found that milkshakes did that job better than gooey bagels or donuts.
They were also interested in something that would last 20 minutes.
Once the marketers understood the “job,”
it was easy to make improvements — like make the shake even
thicker and swirl in little fruit chunks. Going further, they could
dispense the shakes from machines in the front of the fast-food
store using swipe cards. This saves the user the time of waiting
in line.
“Understanding the job and improving
the product on dimensions of experience so that it does the job
better would cause the company’s milkshakes to gain share
against the real competition — not just competing chains’
milkshakes, but donuts, bagels, bananas and boredom,” they
write. “This would grow the category.”
More Benefits of Segmenting by Job
Another benefit of segmenting by job, according to
the Christensen group, is that it helps companies escape the traditional
“positioning paradigm.” They write: “The problem
with the positioning paradigm is that even when marketers find open
spaces into which unique products can be slotted, customers often
don’t value the differentiation and competitors find it easy
to copy….When a company begins to view market structure by
job, however, it can break away from the traditional treadmill of
positioning and differentiate itself on the dimensions of performance
that are salient to jobs that customers need to get done.”
Another aspect of their theory is that sometimes
the job a customer needs done is “aspirational.” They
define this as “the need to feel a certain way — perhaps
macho, pampered or prestigious — arises in many of our lives
on occasion. In such situations it is often the brand itself more
than the functional dimensions of the product, that does the job.
When we find ourselves needing to do one of these jobs, we can hire
a branded product — Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Virgin and so on
— the very purpose of which is to provide such experiences.”
Finding the Job
In trying to figure the job that needs to be done,
the authors again shun the traditional process of deciphering data
bases. Instead they advocate customer observation. “It requires
watching, participating, writing and thinking. It entails knowing
where to look, what to look for, how to look for it and how to interpret
what you find.”
The essence of the theory is “The problem with
focusing on customer needs is that a customer needs different things
at different times. The job is a more stable focus because it exists
independently from the customer.”
_______
Author
James T. Berger, Managing Editor of The Wiglaf
Journal, specializes in both finance and marketing and has spent
a number in both the investor relations field as well as an account
manager and officer at several Chicago advertising agencies.
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