How do you evaluate Maslow's Hierarchy in Marketing in a business strategy?
How to evaluate it
Use the hierarchy to pressure-test message strategy: at which tier are competitors operating? Is there an unoccupied tier where our offer could credibly speak? Is the buyer's most pressing need actually being addressed?
What we are evaluating
Maslow's hierarchy of needs orders human motivation in five tiers: physiological, safety, social, esteem, and self-actualization. Marketers use the hierarchy to identify which need a product is satisfying and to position messages at the right emotional altitude.
The benchmark framework
Lower-tier needs are typically prepotent — unmet basic needs dominate motivation until satisfied. Marketers should ensure the offer addresses the most prepotent need for the target. Many products operate on multiple tiers simultaneously: a sports car can satisfy transportation (physiological), perceived safety, social belonging (the owner community), esteem (status), and self-actualization (the realization of a lifelong aspiration).
An evaluation walk-through
A premium watch brand could position around precision engineering (functional, esteem), inheritance and legacy (self-actualization), or membership in a community of collectors (social). The same watch sells differently in each frame. A budget grocery chain, by contrast, must lead with safety (food security) and physiological (affordability) before any aspirational layer.
Failure modes to flag
The hierarchy is cleaner in textbooks than in life — buyers move between tiers fluidly and culture reshapes the order. Using the framework as a strict ladder rather than a useful lens leads to wooden marketing. Pretending a commodity satisfies self-actualization needs invites ridicule.
Source basis: Open Textbook Library: READ MORE