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Week 4, "Market Segmenting, Targeting, and Positioning" was derived from Principles of Marketing, which was adapted by the Saylor Foundation under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license without attribution as requested by the work's original creator or licensee. © 2015, The


Saylor Foundation.


1


Week 4 Market Segmenting, Targeting, and Positioning


Suppose you've created a great new offering you hope will become a hot seller. Before you quit


your day job to market it, you'll need to ask yourself, "Who's going to buy my product?" and "Will


there be enough of these people to make it worth my while?"


Certain people will be more interested in what you have to offer than others. Not everyone needs


homeowners' insurance, not everyone needs physical therapy services, and not everyone needs


the latest and greatest cell phone. Among those that do, some will buy a few, and a few will buy


many. In other words, in terms of your potential buyers, not all of them are "created equal." Some


customers are more equal than others, however. A number of people might be interested in your


product if it's priced right. Other people might be interested if they simply are aware of the fact


that your product exists.


Your goal is to figure out who these people are. To do this, you will need to divide them into


different categories. The process of breaking down all consumers into groups of potential buyers


with similar characteristics is called market segmentation. The key question to ask yourself


when segmenting markets: What groups of buyers are similar enough that the same product or


service will appeal to all of them? (Barringer & Ireland, 2010). After all, your marketing budget is


likely to be limited. You need to focus on those people you truly have a shot at selling to and


tailoring your offering toward them.


Once market segments are identified, the next step is to identify which of those segments, if any,


the company wants to pursue with its limited resources and consistency with its mission. This is


called target marketing. A company may decide not to target market, in which case it is mass


marketing. But mass marketing is rare.


4.1 Targeted Marketing vs. Mass Marketing


LEARNING OBJECTIVES


1. Distinguish between targeted marketing and mass marketing and explain what led to the rise of each. 2. Describe how targeted marketing can benefit firms. 3. Explain why companies differentiate among their customers.


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Choosing select groups of people and organizations to sell to is called targeted marketing,


or differentiated marketing. It is a relatively new phenomenon. Mass marketing,


or undifferentiated marketing, came first. It evolved along with mass production and involves


selling the same product to everybody. You didn't need to conduct any market research to know


that a household could use an electric washing machine. Build it and they will come. You can


think of mass marketing as a shotgun approach: you blast out as many marketing messages as


possible on every medium available as often as you can afford (Spellings Jr., 2009). (By contrast,


targeted marketing is more like shooting a rifle; you take careful aim at one type of customer with


your message.)


Automaker Henry Ford was very successful at both mass production and mass marketing. Ford


pioneered the modern-day assembly line early in the twentieth century, which helped him cost-


effectively pump out huge numbers of identical Model T automobiles. They came in only one


color: black. "Any customer can have a car painted any color he wants, so long as it is black," Ford


used to joke. He also advertised in every major newspaper and persuaded all kinds of publications


to carry stories about the new, inexpensive cars. By 1918, half of all cars on America's roads were


Model Ts (Ford, 1922).


Figure 4.1


You could forget about buying a custom Model T from Ford in the early 1900s. The good news?


The price was right.


Source: Unknown. Wikimedia Commons. In the public domain.


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Then Alfred P. Sloan, the head of General Motors (GM), appeared on the scene. Sloan began to


segment consumers in the automobile market—to divide them by the prices they wanted to pay


and the different cars they wanted to buy. His efforts were successful, and in the 1950s, GM


overtook Ford in the as the nation's top automaker (Manzanedo, 2005). (You might be interested


to know that before GM declared bankruptcy in 2009, it was widely believed the automaker


actually had too many car models. Apparently, "old habits die hard," as the saying goes.)


Benefits of Segmenting and Targeting Markets The story of General Motors raises an important point, which is that segmenting and targeting


markets doesn't necessarily mean "skinnying down" the number of your customers. In fact, it can


help you enlarge your customer base by giving you information with which to successfully adjust


some component of your offering—the offering itself, its price, the way you service and market it,


and so on. More specifically, the process can help you do the following:


• Avoid head-on competition with other firms trying to capture the same customers


• Develop new offerings and expand profitable brands and product lines


• Remarket older, less-profitable products and brands


• Identify early adopters


• Redistribute money and sales efforts to focus on your most profitable customers


• Retain "at-risk" customers in danger of defecting to your competitors


The trend today is toward more precise, targeted marketing. Figuring out "who's who" in terms of


your customers involves some detective work, though—often market research. A variety of tools


and research techniques can be used to segment markets. Government agencies, such as the US


Census Bureau, collect and report vast amounts of population information and economic data


that can reveal changing consumption trends.


Technology is also making it easier for even small companies and entrepreneurs to gather


information about potential customers. For example, the online game company GamePUMA.com


originally believed its target market consisted of US customers. But when the firm looked more


closely at who was downloading games from its website, they were people from all over the globe.


The great product idea you had? As we explained in Week 3, "Consumer Behavior: How People


Make Buying Decisions," companies are now using the Internet to track people's web browsing


patterns and segment them into groups that can be marketed to. Even small businesses are able


to do this cost-effectively now because they don't need their own software and programs. They


4


can simply sign up online for products like Google's AdSense and AdWords programs. You can


locate potential customers by looking at blog sites and discussion forums on the web. Big-


boards.com has thousands of discussion forums you can mine to find potential customers. Do you


have a blog? Go to BlogPoll.com, and you can embed a survey in your blog to see what people


think of your idea. If you have a website, you can download an application onto your iPhone that


will give you up-to-the-minute information and statistics on your site's visitors.


Getting a read on potential target markets doesn't have to involve technology, though. Your own


experience and talking to would-be buyers is an important part of the puzzle. Go where you think


would-be buyers go—restaurants, malls, gyms, subways, grocery stores, day care centers, and


offices. Ask questions: What do buyers do during the day? What do they talk about? What


products or services do you see them using? Are they having an enjoyable experience when using


those products, or are they frustrated?


Figure 4.2


The Healthy Choice line of frozen dinners was launched by a heart attack victim.


Source: Photo by Ken. (2008). Flickr. Used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license.


Healthy Choice frozen dinners were conceived as a result of questioning potential customers. The


food-maker ConAgra launched the dinners in the late 1980s after its CEO, Charlie Harper,


suffered a heart attack. One day a colleague complimented Harper on his wife's tasty low-fat


turkey stew. That's when Harper realized there were people like him who wanted healthy


convenience foods, so he began talking to them about what they wanted. Two years after the


Healthy Choice line was launched, it controlled 10 percent of the frozen-dinner market (Birchall


[b.], 2009).


5


Segmenting and Targeting a Firm's Current Customers Finding and attracting new customers is generally more difficult than retaining your current


customers. People are creatures of habit. Think about how much time and energy you spend when


you switch your business from one firm to another—even when you're buying something as


simple as a haircut. If you aren't happy with your hair and want to find a new hairdresser, you


first have to talk to people with haircuts you like or read reviews of salons. Once you decide to go


to a particular salon, you have to look it up on the Internet or your GPS device and hope you don't


get lost. When you get to the salon, you explain to the new hairdresser how you want your hair cut


and hope he or she gets it right. You might also have to navigate different methods of payment.


Perhaps the new salon won't accept your American Express card or won't let you put the tip on


your card. However, once you have learned how the new salon operates, doing business with it


gets much easier.


The same is true for firms when it comes to finding new customers. Finding customers, getting to


know them, and figuring out what they really want is a difficult process—one that's fraught with


trial and error. That's why it's so important to get to know and form relationships with your


current customers. Broadly speaking, your goal is to do as much business with each one of them


as possible.


The economic downturn of the first decade in the 2000s drove home the point of making the most


of one's current customers. During the downturn, new customers were hard to find, and firms'


advertising and marketing budgets were cut. Expensive, untargeted, shotgun-like marketing


campaigns that would probably produce spotty results were out of the question. Consequently,


many organizations chose to focus their selling efforts on current customers in hopes of retaining


their loyalty once the downturn was over (Birchall [a.], 2009).


This is the situation in which the adventure-based travel firm Backroads found itself in 2009. The


California-based company increased its revenues by creating a personalized marketing campaign


for people who had done business with Backroads in the past. The firm looked at information


such as customers' past purchases, the seasons in which they took their trips, the levels of activity


associated with them, and whether or not the customers tended to vacation with children. The


company then created three relevant trip suggestions for each customer based on the information.


The information was sent to customers via postcards and e-mails with links to customized web


pages reminding them of the trips they had previously booked with Backroads and suggesting


new ones. "In terms of past customers, it was like off-the-charts better [than past campaigns],"


says Massimo Prioreschi, the vice president of Backroads' sales and marketing group


(MarketingSherpa, 2009).


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In addition to studying buying patterns, firms also try to know their customers by surveying them


or hiring marketing research firms to do so. Firms also use loyalty programs to find out about


their customers. For example, if you sign up to become a frequent flier with a certain airline, the


airline will likely ask to you a number of questions about your likes and dislikes. This information


will then be entered into a customer relationship management (CRM) system, and you might be


e-mailed special deals based on the routes you tend to fly. British Airways goes so far as to track


the magazines its most elite fliers like to read so the publications are available on its planes.


Many firms—even small ones—are using Facebook to develop closer relationships with their


customers. At Hansen Cakes, a Beverly Hills (California) bakery, employee Suzi Finer posts "cake


updates" and photos of the goodies she's working on to the company's Facebook page. Along with


information about the cakes, Finer extends special offers to customers and mixes in any gossip


about Hollywood celebrities she's spotted in the area. After Hansen Cakes launched its Facebook


page, the bakery's sales shot up 15–20 percent. "And that's during the recession," noted Finer


(Graham, 2009). Twitter is another way companies are keeping in touch with their customers and


boosting their revenues. For example, when the homemaking maven Martha Stewart schedules a


book signing, she tweets her followers, and voilà—many of them show up at the bookstore she's


appearing at to buy copies. Finding ways to interact with customers that they enjoy—whether it's


meeting or "tweeting" them, or putting on events and tradeshows they want to attend—is the key


to forming relationships with them.


Remember what you learned in Week 2, "Customer Satisfaction, Loyalty, Empowerment , and


Management": not all customers are created equal, including your current customers. Some


customers are highly profitable, and others aren't. Still others will actually end up costing your


company money to serve. Consequently, you will want to interact with some more than others.


Believe it or not, some firms deliberately "untarget" unprofitable customers. That's what Best Buy


did. In 2004, Best Buy got a lot of attention (not all good) when it was discovered the company


had categorized its buyers into "personas," or types of buyers, and created customized sales


approaches for each. For example, an upper-middle-class woman was referred to as a "Jill." A


young urban man was referred to as a "Buzz." And pesky, bargain-hunting customers that Best


Buy couldn't make much of a profit from? They were referred to as "devils" and taken off the


company's mailing lists (Marco, 2009).


The knife cuts both ways, though. Not all firms are equal in the minds of consumers, who will


choose to do business with some companies rather than others. To consumers, market


segmentation means: meet my needs—give me what I want (Market Segmentation, 2009).


7


"Steps in One-to-One Marketing" outlines the steps companies can take to target their best


customers, form close, personal relationships with them, and give them what they want—a


process called one-to-one marketing. In terms of our shotgun vs. rifle approach, you can think


of one-to-one marketing as a rifle approach, but with an added advantage: now you have a scope


on your rifle.


One-to-one marketing is an idea proposed by Don Peppers and Martha Rogers in their 1994


book The One to One Future. The book described what life would be like after mass marketing.


We would all be able to get exactly what we want from sellers, and our relationships with them


would be collaborative, rather than adversarial. Are we there yet? Not quite. But it does seem to


be the direction the trend toward highly targeted marketing is leading.


Steps in One-to-One Marketing 1. Establish short-term measures to evaluate your efforts. Determine how you will


measure your effort. For example, will you use higher customer satisfaction ratings, increased


revenues earned per customer, number of products sold to customers, transaction costs, or


another measure?


2. Identify your customers. Gather all the information you can about your current customers,


including their buying patterns, likes, and dislikes. When conducting business with them,


include an "opt in" question that allows you to legally gather and use their phone numbers and


e-mail addresses so you can remain in contact with them.


3. Differentiate among your customers. Determine who your best customers are in terms of


what they spend and will spend in the future (their customer lifetime value), and how easy or


difficult they are to serve. Identify and target customers that spend only small amounts with


you but large amounts with your competitors.


4. Interact with your customers, targeting your best ones. Find ways and mediums in


which to talk to customers about topics they're interested in and enjoy. Spend the bulk of your


resources interacting with your best (high-value) customers. Minimize the time and money you


spend on low-value customers with low growth potential.


5. Customize your products and marketing messages to meet their needs. Try to


customize your marketing messages and products in order to give your customers exactly what


they want—whether it's the product itself, its packaging, delivery, or the services associated


with it (Harler, 2008; Peppers & Rogers, 1999; Peppers, Rogers, & Dorf, 1999).


8


4 . 1 K E Y T A K E A W A Y


Choosing select groups of people to sell to is called targeted marketing, or differentiated marketing. Mass marketing, or undifferentiated marketing, involves selling the same product to everyone. The trend today is toward more precise, targeted marketing. Finding and attracting new customers is generally far more difficult than retaining one's current customers, which is why organizations try to interact with and form relationships with their current customers. The goal of firms is to do as much business with their best customers as possible. Forming close, personal relationships with customers and giving them exactly what they want is a process called one-to-one marketing. It is the opposite of mass marketing.


4.2 How Markets Are Segmented


LEARNING OBJECTIVES


1. Understand and outline the ways in which markets are segmented. 2. Explain why marketers use some segmentation bases vs. others.


We will learn more about business markets and how they are segmented in Week 8. Now, we will


focus on consumer markets and how they can be segmented. In Week 3, "Consumer Behavior:


How People Make Buying Decisions," we mentioned that certain factors drive consumers to buy


certain things. Many of the same factors can also be used to segment customers. A firm will often


use multiple segmentation bases, or criteria to classify buyers, to get a fuller picture of its


customers and create real value for them. Each variable adds a layer of information about those


buyers until you have a profile of a market segment.


There are all kinds of characteristics you can use to segment a market. You might not immediately


think of some of them. What about the physical sizes of people? "Big-and-tall" stores cater to the


segment of population that's larger-sized. What about people with wide or narrow feet, or people


with medical conditions, certain hobbies, or different sexual orientations? Next, we'll look at some


of the more common characteristics market researchers look at when segmenting buyers.


Types of Segmentation Bases Table 4.1, "Common Ways of Segmenting Buyers," shows some of the different types of buyer


characteristics used to segment markets. Notice that the characteristics fall into one of four


segmentation categories: behavioral, demographic, geographic, or psychographic. We'll discuss


each of these categories in a moment. For now, you can get a rough idea of what the categories


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consist of by looking at them in terms of how marketing professionals might answer the following


questions:


• Behavioral segmentation. What benefits do customers want, and how do they use our


product?


• Demographic segmentation. How do the ages, races, and ethnic backgrounds of our


customers affect what they buy?


• Geographic segmentation. Where are our customers located, and how can we reach


them? What products do they buy based on their locations?


• Psychographic segmentation. What do our customers think about and value? How


do they live their lives?


Table 4.1 Common Ways of Segmenting Buyers


By Behavior By Demographics By Geography By Psychographics


• Benefits sought from the product • How often the product is used


(usage rate) • Usage situation (daily use,


holiday use, etc.) • Buyer's status and loyalty to


product (nonuser, potential user, first-time users, regular user)


• Age/generation • Income • Gender • Family life cycle • Ethnicity • Family size • Occupation • Education • Nationality • Religion • Social class


• Region (continent, country, state, neighborhood)


• Size of city or town • Population density • Climate


• Activities • Interests • Opinions • Values • Attitudes • Lifestyles


Segmenting by Behavior Behavioral segmentation divides people into groups according to how they behave with or act


toward products. Benefits segmentation—segmenting buyers by the benefits they want from


products—is very common. Take toothpaste, for example. Which benefit is most important to you


when you buy toothpaste: the toothpaste's price, ability to whiten your teeth, fight tooth decay,


freshen your breath, or something else? Perhaps it's a combination of two or more benefits. If


marketing professionals know what those benefits are, they can then tailor different toothpaste


offerings to you (and other people like you). For example, Colgate 2-in-1 Toothpaste &


Mouthwash, Whitening Icy Blast is aimed at people who want the benefits of both fresher breath


and whiter teeth.


Another way in which businesses segment buyers is by their usage rates—that is, how often, if


ever, they use certain products. For example, the entertainment and gaming company Harrah's


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gathers information about the people who gamble at its casinos. High rollers, or people who


spend a lot of money, are considered "VIPs." VIPs get special treatment, including a personal


"host" who looks after their needs during their casino visits. Companies are interested in frequent


users because they want to reach others like them. They are also keenly interested in nonusers


and how they can be persuaded to use products.


The way in which people use products is also a basis for segmentation. Avon Skin So Soft was


originally a beauty product. But after Avon discovered that some people were using it as a


mosquito repellant, the company began marketing it for that purpose. Eventually, Avon created a


separate product called Skin So Soft Bug Guard, which competes with repellents like Off!


Similarly, Glad, the company that makes plastic wrap and bags, found out customers were using


its Press 'n Seal wrap in ways the company could never have imagined. The personnel in Glad's


marketing department subsequently launched a website called 1000uses.com that contained both


the company and consumers' use tips. Some of the ways in which people use the product are


pretty unusual, as evidenced by the following comment posted on the site: "I have a hedgehog


who likes to run on his wheel a lot. After quite a while of cleaning a gross wheel every morning, I


got the tip to use 'Press 'n Seal wrap' on his wheel, making clean up much easier! My hedgie can


run all he wants, and I don't have to think about the cleanup. Now we're both GLAD!" (Glad,


2009).


Although we doubt Glad will ever go to great lengths to segment the Press 'n Seal market by


hedgehog owners, the firm has certainly gathered a lot of good consumer insight about the


product and publicity from its 1000uses.com website.


Segmenting by Demographics Segmenting buyers by tangible, personal characteristics such as their ages, incomes, ethnicity,


family sizes, and so forth is called demographic segmentation. This section will discuss some


prominent demographic characteristics used to segment buyers, including age, income, gender,


and family life cycles. Other demographic characteristics include occupation, education,


nationality, religion, and social class.


Demographics are commonly used to segment markets because a mountain of demographic


information is publicly available in databases around the world. You can obtain a great deal of


demographic information on the US Census Bureau's website (http://www.census.gov). Other


government websites you can tap include FedStats (http://fedstats.sites.usa.gov/) and The World


Factbook (https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/index.html), which


11


contains statistics about countries around the world. In addition to current statistics, the sites


contain forecasts of demographic trends, such as whether some segments of the population are


expected to grow or decline.


Age


At some point in your life, you are more likely to buy your first home than a funeral plot.


Marketing professionals know this. That's why they try to segment consumers by their ages.


You're probably familiar with some of the age groups most commonly segmented in the United


States. They are shown in Table 5.2, "US Generations and Characteristics." Into which category do


you fall?


Table 5.2 US Generations and Characteristics


Generation Also Known As Birth Years Characteristics


Seniors "The Silent Generation," "Matures," "Veterans," and "Traditionalists"


1945 and prior


• Experienced very limited credit growing up


• Tend to live within their means • Spend more on health care than


any other age group • Internet usage rates increasing


faster than any other group


Baby Boomers 1946– 1964


• Second-largest generation in the United States


• Grew up in prosperous times before the widespread use of credit


• Account for 50 percent of US consumer spending


• Willing to use new technologies as they see fit


Generation X 1965– 1979


• Comfortable but cautious about borrowing


• Buying habits characterized by their life stages


• Embrace technology and multitasking


Generation Y "Millennials," "Echo Boomers," includes "Tweens" (preteens)


1980– 2000


• Largest US generation • Grew up with credit cards • Adept at multitasking; technology


use is innate • Ignore irrelevant media


Note: Not all demographers agree on the cutoff dates between the generations. Sources: U.S. Census Bureau, http://www.census.gov/population/www/popdata.html; Richard K. Miller and Kelli Washington, The 2009 Entertainment, Media & Advertising Market Research Handbook, 10th ed. Loganville, GA: Richard K. Miller & Associates, 2009, 157–66; Sydney Jones and Susannah Fox, "Generations Online in 2009," Pew Research Center,http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2009/Generations-Online-in-2009.aspx; Maria Paniritas, "Generation Gap: Boomers, Xers Are Reining in Spending," Philadelphia Inquirer, August 2, 2009, http://articles.philly.com/2009-08-02/business/25275378_1_spending-habits-boomers-consumer-economy.


12


Today, Generation Y is the largest generation. The baby boomer generation is the second largest,


and over the course of the last 30 years, it has been a very attractive market for sellers.


Retro brands—old brands or products that companies "bring back" for a period of time—were


aimed at baby boomers during the economic downturn in the early 2000s. Pepsi Throwback and


Mountain Dew Throwback, which are made with cane sugar—like they were "back in the good old


days"—instead of corn syrup, are examples (Schlacter, 2009). Take a look at Figure 4.3


illustrating Coke's retro look bottle. This was the original Coca-Cola bottle from Coke's early


history through the mid-twentieth century when technology allowed for cans and simpler bottle


designs. Marketing professionals believe they appealed to baby boomers because they reminded


them of better times—times when they didn't have to worry about being laid off, about losing their


homes, or about their retirement funds and pensions drying up.


Figure 4.3 Coca-Cola's Retro Look Bottle


If you are old enough to remember this bottle, you are


probably a baby boomer, and the bottle design may


appeal to you when buying soft drinks.


Source: Photo by Kansir. (2012). Flickr. Used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.


But baby boomers are aging, and the size of the group will eventually decline. By contrast, the


members of Generation Y have a lifetime of buying still ahead of them, which translates to a lot of


potential customer lifetime value (CLV) for marketers if they can capture this group of buyers.


However, a survey found that the latest recession had forced teens to change their spending


13


habits and college plans, and that roughly half of older Generation Yers reported they had no


savings (Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 2009).


So which group or groups should your firm target? Although it's hard to be all things to all people,


many companies try to broaden their customer bases by appealing to multiple generations so they


don't lose market share when demographics change. Several companies have introduced lower-


cost brands targeting Generation Xers, who have less spending power than boomers. For


example, kitchenware and home-furnishings company Williams-Sonoma opened the Elm Street


chain, a less-pricey version of the Pottery Barn franchise. The Starwood hotel chain's W hotels,


which feature contemporary designs and hip bars, are aimed at Generation Xers (Miller &


Washington, 2009).


The video game market is very proud of the fact that along with Generation X and Generation Y,


many older Americans still play video games. (You probably know some baby boomers who own a


Nintendo Wii.) The spa market is another example. Products and services in this market used to


be aimed squarely at adults. Not anymore. Parents are now paying for their tweens to get facials,


pedicures, and other pampering in numbers no one in years past could have imagined.


Staying abreast of changing demographics can be a matter of life or death for many companies. As


early as the 1970s, US automakers found themselves in trouble because of demographic reasons.


Many of the companies' buyers were older Americans inclined to "buy American." These people


hadn't forgotten that Japan bombed Pearl Harbor during World War II and weren't about to buy


Japanese vehicles. But younger Americans were. Plus, Japanese cars had developed a better


reputation. Despite the challenges US automakers face today, they have taken great pains to cater


to the "younger" generation—today's baby boomers who don't think of themselves as being old. If


you are a car buff, you perhaps have noticed that the once-stodgy Cadillac now has a sportier look


and stiffer suspension.


And what about Generations X and Y? Automakers have begun reaching out to them, too. General


Motors (GM) has sought to revamp the century-old company by hiring a new younger group of


managers—managers who understand how Generation X and Y consumers are wired and what


they want. "If you're going to appeal to my daughter, you're going to have to be in the digital


world," explained one GM vice president (Cox, 2009).


Companies have to not only develop new products designed to appeal to Generations X and Y but


also find new ways to reach them. People in these generations not only tend to ignore traditional


advertising but also are downright annoyed by it. To market to Scion drivers, who are generally


14

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