Business geographics is a field in business that uses geographic
techniques and tools to accomplish a variety of tasks important to the
world of business, marketing, and ideal site selection.
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The most commonly used tool relating to geography that is used in business geographics is mapping -- notably the use of
geographic information systems, also known as
GIS.
Applications of Business Geographics
Identifying Markets
An important aspect in business is the identification of a target
market or "customer mapping." By using geography and mapping potential
customers, those looking to identify their market can find the highest
concentration of the best potential customers. GIS allows this mapping
to be completed in an efficient manner and maps created with this tool
can have color-coding to identify customer concentrations.
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For example, if a children’s clothing store is considering
relocation because it is not doing the ideal amount of business the
store could map the population of people with children in its target age
group throughout the city or area it is considering moving to. The data
can then be put into a GIS and mapped using dark colors for the highest
concentration families with children and lighter colors for those
without. Once completed, the map will highlight the ideal areas for the
clothing store to locate based on that factor.
Determining if a Service is Needed
Like customer mapping, it’s important to businesses to locate where
a service is needed to get the best possible sales numbers. Using
mapping allows various types of customers to be easily identified to see
if an area needs a business or service.
Take for instance, a senior center. Because this is a
specialized service it is important for it to be located within an area
with a high proportion of senior citizens. By using customer mapping
like in the children’s clothing store example, the highest proportion of
senior citizens in a city can be easily identified. Therefore, the area
with a greater senior population would need this service more than
another without that age group.
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Identifying Other Services in the Same Area
Another problem that sometimes occurs in business is the location
of two types of service in the same area. Often one can drive another
out by taking its customers and/or users (in the case of the senior
center). For example if there is already a hot dog cart in a downtown
area, a new one should not open on the next corner over unless there are
enough customers to support both.
With business geographics all businesses or services of a certain type in a city can be mapped. By
using GIS,
the target customers can be put on top of a layer showing current hot
dog stand locations for instance. The result would be the ideal location
for a new stand.
Analyzing Sales
Business geographics also helps businesses to analyze the
geographic patterns in their sales. In identifying these patterns,
business managers can see certain areas where people buy various
products. This is important because the peaks of say, black coffee as
opposed to coffee with cream, might not be recognizable any other way.
By identifying such peaks through the sale of different items at several
coffee houses in a chain, the manager of the chain can determine which
items to carry at the different locations. In doing so, business for the
chain can become more efficient.
Site Selection
Identifying markets, determining if a service is needed, and
identifying the location of other similar businesses in an area are all
part of site selection - a major part of business geographics. Also
important to site selection however, are incomes, community growth
rates, available workers, and the physical features of an area such as
roads, water, and other materials that may be needed to produce or sell a
product.
By using GIS, each of these factors can be layered on top of
each other. The resulting map will then highlight the best possible site
based on the characteristics deemed most important by the businesses
managers.
Marketing Plans
The applications of business geographics listed above (minus site
selection) all aid in the creation of marketing plans as well. Once a
business is built, it is important to be able to advertise to its target
market in an efficient manner. By using GIS and mapping to first
identify an area’s market and the customers within it, the products
offered by the stores can best match demands specific to that market
area.
The efficient sale of products and offering of services to the
population is an important part of the world’s economy. By using
business geographics, those in charge of the task of locating businesses
and selling such goods are doing this in the most efficient way
possible. In using maps, businesses managers are also reinforcing the
notion that maps make excellent graphical tools.