Customer segmentation is the process of grouping your customers together based on the factors (e.g. demographics, industry, income) and traits (e.g. personality, interests, habits) they share so you can serve them better.
When you seek and maintain consideration for your customers in this way and actively tailor your marketing, sales, and customer service for them, all of your customers benefit.
Here’s everything you need to know to create a customer segmentation strategy that works—plus a few whys for good measure.
Grouping customers based on their basic human traits like age, gender, income, education level, occupation, and marital status is helpful in determining how to provide them with the best sales and service experience.
Bonus: here are some helpful thoughts on inclusive language.
Your business may decide to group customers by the country, state, city, and town in which they live. This can help you understand the region, what needs people have there, and how you can best reach them.
The psychographic model of grouping customers places people in groups based on personality, attitudes, values, and interests. Though this is harder to identify and understand than “hard fact-based” information like age or geographic location, the act of empathizing with your customers in their way makes your business stronger all on its own.
4. Technographics
Group your customers by which of them use mobile, desktop computers, or don’t use computers at all. If you provide apps and software, group them by which ones they prefer. This helps you understand how to design your website better, and how to get your products to people who love them but don’t use computers, etc.
5. Behavioral
Group customers by their frequent actions, feature or product use, and the habits they’ve exhibited in regards to what your business offers.
Groups customers by which products or services you offer that they require.
Think about which outcomes you’re hoping to achieve so you can develop the rest of your strategy in a way that will help you accomplish them.
Ask yourself why you are spending time on segmentation and what you hope to derive from the process (see the top 5 reasons above for ideas).
Remember: this is unique to YOUR business.
For instance, the number of goals you have should be based on your business’s size, type, and industry as well as your overall buyer personas/customer avatars.
Your specific goals could be relevant to RevOps (e.g. marketing, sales, service) or for one department. Definitely use your company’s specific traits and business needs to begin sketching out your customer segmentation goals.
Look back at the 6 common customer segmentation models to determine what kind of groups work for your business and the goals you outlined in step one.
For example, if you want to create targeted ads for your UK followers and customers to increase conversions in that region, you can geographically segment your customers to help you understand how to create those campaigns to the utmost success.
Bonus: here’s extra knowledge about organizing and segmenting your contacts using HubSpot’s list tool here.
Once you have all your customers segmented according to your business’s goals, decide how you’ll create content, ads, and campaigns for them.
Make sure that all the departments in your organization (e.g. marketing, sales, and service) understand why and how your customers are segmented in this way so that they can benefit from this strategy, too.
There are a number of options when it comes to customer segmentation software — here are five of the most popular to help you get started.
(Note: Mailchimp integrates with your HubSpot CRM.)
When you understand exactly who your customers are, it’s much easier to attract, engage, and delight them, and a customer segmentation strategy works to help you organize and manage your company’s relationship with them.
The best way to make sure you serve your ideal customers is to show up for them exactly where, when, and (especially!) how they need you to show up.
To do that, you have to know the traits, pain points, expectations, etc. they share, but also how they’re unique from each other so that you’re not leaving anyone out.
If you think about all the ways you shift the way you communicate with people in your lives—and how effective that is—you realize that your messaging is more effective when you adjust in the very same ways for your customers to meet their expectation regarding communication, support, and more.
Want more great ways to reach your customers exactly where they are? Ask us! It’s what we do.