How to use customer segmentation data to improve your business and overall CX

A common misconception exists in the conflation of customer segments and personas.

  • Customer segmentation, according to Optimove (a relationship marketing hub), is the “practice of dividing a company’s customers into groups that reflect similarity among customers in each group.”
  • Customer personas, according to the Digital Marketing Glossary  (an online publishing and marketing hub), are a fictional character that embodies “the characteristics, needs, motivations, environment, and behaviour of typical distinct audience types.”

Customer segmentation offers a way of separating out your many types of customers into collective ‘groups’ with shared characteristics. Personas are then used to characterize each group and the participants/type of customer within it. This blog will look at customer segmentation, what it is, how you do it, and why segmenting your customer will be beneficial to your business in the long run.

Customer segmentation

There are two key questions to answer when deciding on customer segments, ‘how do you go about segmenting your customers?’ and ‘what are the options and why choose one method of segmentation over another?’

This infographic outlines the four key approaches you could take to segmenting your customers. How do you want to segment your customers? Key options include demography by behaviour, psychology, or geography.

customer persona

Each approach has its advantages and disadvantages; often one approach might be more suited to your business offering – behavioural segmentation may be a better way for retailers to segment their customers, enabling them to understand the purchasing and consumption patterns of individuals consuming their products or services. Alternatively, a global media subscription service might find geographic segmentation useful in understanding the varying needs and interests of different customers according to their location.

Retailers use segmentation to gain enhanced insight into purchasing and consumption patterns, enabling them to promote their products in a more targeted fashion. They can approach bargain shoppers preferring to purchase more products at lower prices with deals and discounts while offering luxury shoppers exclusive notifications of premium brands.

A global media subscription service may find that city-dwellers use their streaming service more, due to easily accessible internet; whereas individuals living in more rural and remote corners of the world may be more likely to download rather than stream, due to a less-reliable internet connection. The business can, therefore, ensure that the features on the media subscription service are tailored to each geographic segment and that the ability to either stream or download is promoted more effectively to its relative audience.

So, where do you find the information you need to carry out your customer segmentation?

Alongside the multiple ways you can segment your customers, there are varying methods to determine this segmentation. The method you use dictates the information necessary to carry out your segmentation, and where this information could come from.

The three most common ways, and their advantages and disadvantages, are summarized by this infographic below, namely: a priori; value-based, or needs-based.
three ways to segment customers

Ultimately, the way you go about segmenting your customers depends entirely on your resource availability, information, and organizational setup. Yet, whatever you decide regarding your customer segmentation, the benefits for your business are significant.

By identifying the different segments of customers relevant to your product and/or service, you enhance your insight into those segments and build a clearer view of the individuals buying your product or service, allowing you to:

  • Improve your product – a clearer understanding of who wants to buy your product/service and why enables you to better serve their individual needs, offering them greater satisfaction and better customer experience.
    • H&M focus their products towards young people and have managed to enhance not only their product offering but also the price at which their target audience has to pay by aligning with NUS to offer a student discount to young, student shoppers.
  • Focus your market message – understanding your customers enables you to develop a targeted, focused, and personalized marketing message and strategy. A study by Denamico found that by creating hyper-personalized newsletters their open rates increased by 43% and click-through rates by 89%.
    • Sephora does this particularly well by offering incentives or rewards for signing up and creating an account with them. They also send out offer emails with discounts or special purchases on birthdays.
  • Clarifying strategic priorities – with clarity on your customers, you’ll be able to focus your business energy on your more successful segments, increase win rate, and ultimately increase revenue.
    • With increased consumers adopting vegan and vegetarian diets, many fast-food chains have recently introduced vegan options in their otherwise largely meat-based menus. UK-based bakery Greggs has been creating a whole range of plant-based products and released a vegan version of their infamous sausage roll in 2019. This product alone helped to drive a 58% first-half profit rise.

So, once you’ve segmented your customers; the next step would be to delve deeper into each customer segment, and create customer personas.

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