Increase profit opportunities with STP

Segmentation, targeting, and positioning (STP), the process that can help you identify and evaluate opportunities to increase sales and profits. Defining and understanding the vision or objectives of the company’s marketing strategy and the mission of the company are key factors before starting the STP process. Using a SWOT analysis, companies can find their mission. A SWOT analysis consists of the company’s strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. Once the company mission is defined, we can go through the STP process.

Steps 1-5 STP process

Let’s dig deeper into what this process means.

  1. Segmentation

    Segmentation breaks customers into groups or market segments. A market segment includes consumers who respond similarly to an organization’s marketing efforts. Each segment will have similar needs, wants, and characteristics. This makes it possible to gear your product or service specifically for them. Developing descriptions of the different segments helps an organization better understand the customers in each market segment. One organization’s product or service can have multiple segments.

    Companies can choose to break their customers down into segments through:

    • Geographic segmentation: organizes customers into groups on the basis of where they live
    • Demographic segmentation: groups consumers according to easily measured, objective characteristics such as age, gender, income, and education
    • Psychographic segmentation: how consumers describe themselves – how they spend their times and money, what activities they pursue, and their attitudes and opinions about the world in which they live
    • Benefit segmentation: groups consumers on the basis of the benefits they derive from products or services
    • Behavioral segmentation: divides customers into groups based on how they use the product or service
  2. Targeting

    This gets even more specific than your market segments. After a company has identified the various market segments for its product/service it then evaluates each segment’s attractiveness and decides which ones to pursue. This narrower focus is called a target market and it’s where the company will spend most of its marketing budget.

    Companies use the following target markets:
    • Undifferentiated targeting strategy, or mass marketing: when everyone might be considered a potential user of its product
    • Differentiated targeting strategy: target several market segments with a different offering for each
    • Concentrated targeting strategy: selecting a single, primary target market and focuses all its energies on providing a product to fit that market’s needs
    • Micromarketing or one-to-one marketing: tailoring a product or service to suit an individual customer’s want or needs
  3. Positioning

    A company must now decide how it wants to position itself within each market. This market positioning involves defining the marketing mix variables so that target customers have a clear, distinctive, desirable understanding of what the product does or represents in comparison with competing products. The positioning strategy helps communicate the firm’s or product’s value proposition, which communicates the customer benefits to be received from a product or service and thus provides reasons to purchase.

Here are some real-world examples of using STP to identify and evaluate opportunities for increasing sales and profits.

STP example graphic

Information gathered from Grewal, Dhruv, and Michael Levy. Marketing. 5th ed., McGraw Hill Education, 2017.

 

Email Marketing Strategies

Email Marketing Strategies

Email marketing has a two times higher ROI than cold calling, networking or trade shows [MarketingSherpa]. Therefore, emails are an essential part of any marketing strategy. When a business wants to communicate something about its brand or sell its products, email marketing is one of the most cost-effective ways to do so.

80% of business professionals believe that email marketing increases customer retention [Emarsys]. So, what goes into an effective email marketing campaign? The first thing to note is effort. Without effort, your emails will fall into the bottomless spam folder. With a little effort, you’ll be part of that 80% saying your email marketing helped increase customer retention.

Here are some simple but effective strategies:

  1. Catchy subject line

    People are bombarded with thousands of emails from everything imaginable. What would make them want to open your email? You must grab their attention and keep it long enough for them to want to go open the message.

  2. Be brief and to the point

    Cut right to the point. Again, you want your message to catch their attention and lead them to the main message page. Focus on the point of the email and make sure no matter who is viewing the email the message will be understand right away.

  3. Send relevant content

    If not all your subscribers share the same demographics or interest create groups of recipients to narrow the focus to them. Make the emails personalized, if subscribers are not receiving content they find relevant they will stop engaging.

  4. Mix up your content

    Don’t send the same type of emails all the time. Highlight what your company offers but also share your expertise, your brand values, tip and insights, trends, share information that lets them know more about your brand and community. Not all information has to be created by you either, find topics relevant to your brand, and share top stories and insights from leading professionals.

  5. Follow a Schedule

    If you are sending out a newsletter stick to a schedule. Send out emails the same day(s) around the same time each week, this will allow subscribers to learn your schedule and know when to expect your emails. Also, make sure you aren’t overdoing it. Depending on your target audience don’t overwhelm them with the number of emails you send out.

  6. Use graphics

    Always use engaging content and attractive graphics. These graphics help to attract subscribers’ attention to increase their chances of engagement. Do not, however, rely too much on these graphics to deliver your message. Many emails are set to hide graphics by default.

  7. Occasional offers

    Offer discounts, bonuses, coupons on special occasions from anniversaries, birthdays, and holidays to national donut day (whatever national day/week/month applies to you). Make offers that will gain conversion rate.

  8. Mobile Friendly

    With today’s fast-track world, lots of emails are opened on a mobile device. Mobile opens accounted for 46 percent of all email opens [Litmus] That means your email needs to be optimized for mobile. Without optimizing for mobile readability, graphics and buttons could come across completely wrong. Make subscribers experience pleasant.

Today, there are 3.9 billion daily email users and that number is only expected to rise [Statista]. Start taking advantage of this large market segment with email marketing.