Location-Based Marketing. Gérard Cliquet

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fatigue as consumers become increasingly eager to personalize the service and the products that go with it. The orientation towards “glocalization”, a process already mentioned above, is now effective at McDonald's (Crawford 2015), including in their desire to attract so-called “ethnic” customers: we understand the importance of spatial marketing based on geodemographics, GIS (Geographic Information System) and micromarketing in order to identify these targets and define an appropriate advertising strategy (Puzakova et al. 2015).

      1.2.3.3. The fields of spatial marketing

      Once these dilemmas have been established, the content of spatial marketing is presented according to the usual areas of marketing:

       – the buyer’s behavior (consumer in B2C, business to consumer, or business in B2B, business to business), this book focusing on the consumer;

       – marketing research concerning market studies in the broadest sense;

       – strategic marketing and marketing management.

      Introducing space in these areas involves many changes, sometimes even upheavals, because it is now a question of thinking and acting differently.

      1.2.3.3.1. The consumer’s spatial behavior

      A few articles have been able to advance knowledge in this area. Work based on reference dependence theory (Tversky and Kahneman 1991; Tversky and Simonson 1993) has led to a better understanding of consumer shopping trips (Brooks et al. 2004; Brewer 2007) (see Chapter 2).

      Older work has been carried out on the basis of gravity and/or spatial interaction models (Reilly 1931; Huff 1964; Nakanishi and Cooper 1974).

      Increased consumer mobility, their ability to use so-called mobile technologies (smartphones and tablets) and changes in retail offers, physical or virtual stores on the Internet, are accelerating ubiquitous purchasing processes. This evolution makes gravity-based models less efficient even if they are far from useless, if only in the definition of certain geofencing applications, that is, the determination of the attraction or trading area. This technique is described as an extreme form of marketing location and is increasingly used to send promotional offers in the form of coupons to consumers who are either in the store or near the point of sale using SMS on their smartphone (Mattioli and Bustillo 2012). In other words, the issue here is how far away should current or potential customers of promotional offers be alerted, on their smartphone or tablet, when they pass “near” the store or more generally on opportunities that may interest them. Chapter 5 will deal with geofencing.

      Consumers are increasingly capable of mobility without it increasing overall: retailers and traders must adapt to it (Vizard 2013). Sometimes it is quite easy. For example, a distributor near the Massachusetts-New Hampshire border found that residents of New Hampshire may not pay the vehicle taxes required in Massachusetts (Banos et al. 2015). He therefore placed an order with a company specializing in geofencing to include all potential customers in New Hampshire in his database. But this is again a gravity-type attraction (Reilly 1931; Huff 1964; Cliquet 1988).

      1.2.3.3.2. Spatial marketing studies

      The introduction of space in marketing studies implies taking distance into account. Just because we regularly talk about the digital economy, which no longer has a border, does not mean that there is no longer any distance or that everything has been globalized, thus eliminating any local specificity. On the contrary, we are witnessing a real resurgence of the local.

      On a more methodological level, distance is a complex variable. A distinction is made between geographical distance and temporal distance: the law of gravity of retail trade uses geographical distance when Huff’s model favors temporal distance. However, the geographical distance is difficult to manipulate. Purely metric distance is only rarely considered, especially in the behavior of out-of-store consumers. Since they travel with their vehicles, or by public transport, the temporal distance (Brunner and Mason 1968) is preferred by researchers and analysts. But it is no more satisfactory, because consumers, like all decision-makers, make their decisions not according to reality, but according to their perception of it. This can probably be partly attributed to bounded rationality (Simon 1955). Under these conditions, the perceived distance should be preferred despite methodological problems (Cliquet 1990, 1995).

      With regard to internationalization, companies are not immune to problems related to culture, among other things. The so-called Uppsala model (Johanson and Wiedersheim-Paul 1975) underlines the influence of psychological distance to explain the difficulties of export companies. This psychological distance is broken down into geographical, economic, cultural and institutional distances (see Chapter 2).

      1.2.3.3.3. Strategy and spatial marketing

      This problem of spatial coverage of point of sale networks does not only affect retailing. It is also of interest to manufacturers; some of them have found that traditional media no longer allow contact with the consumer as effectively as before. As the American firm Procter & Gamble has found, individuals now have technical possibilities to bypass advertising on their TV sets or to avoid spam in their mailboxes (Arzoumanian 2005). However, points of sale are now a safer medium: in 2005, Procter & Gamble observed that in the United States, 100,000,000 customers visited Walmart stores every week, 22,000,000

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