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IMPLEMENTING MARKET SEGMENTATION
Piercy and Morgan (1993) attempted to catalogue the sources of implementation failure
with
segmentation-based strategies, and these issues provide a further screening device
for evaluating the suitability of a segmentation model generated through market research.
Issues to assess include the following:
●
Organisation structure: companies tend to organise into functional departments and sub-
units
of one kind or another, depending on their task allocation and how they deal with
the outside world. A customer-benefits approach to establishing market targets may cut
across these internal divisions – they may not ‘fit’ with the
jurisdiction of departments
or regional organisations for sales and marketing. Segment targets that fall between
departments and regions may be neglected and lack ‘ownership’, and the strategies built
around them will fail. We need to map carefully how segment targets will match the
internal organisation structure.
●
Internal politics: Young (1996) argues that strategic segmentation
is essentially a cross-
functional activity, requiring expertise and involvement by many functional specialists.
If functions cannot collaborate or work together because people are vying for power and
withholding
their knowledge and expertise, the segmentation strategy is likely to fail.
If our segmentation-based strategy relies on internal collaboration and cooperation, we
need to be sure this can be achieved, or the strategy will fail.
●
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