The Value of Market Segmentation
        

Market segmentation helps to easily classify your best customers and find more like them. By dividing your target market into further slices, you are able to speak to them in terms that will get their attention and be more likely to do business with you.

What is a Market Segment?

A market segment is a homogeneous group of prospective buyers that have common needs and will respond similarly to your marketing call to action. You usually segment a market when different groups perceive a different value for your product or service than another group. This helps you develop your marketing activities and messages so that you do not come off as being all things to all people.

Why Segment?

Analyzing your target market and dividing it into individual segments can offer you insight into which segments you can more successfully service based on your current resources and skills, alert you to a market segment that is losing money or one you are not capable of servicing effectively, or help you understand what you need to do to expand your business to include a particular segment. This analysis may help you determine that one particular segment is so lucrative that you only want to work with that segment even though the others are out there that you could effectively service.

In addition, market segmentation offers many benefits. You are able to be more precise in how you speak to individual prospects and which marketing efforts will be used to reach them, thereby spending your marketing dollars more wisely. It also allows you to clarify how your products and services apply to these different segments of the market, including the perceived benefits and what messages will more likely resonate to that particular segment. One potential benefit of market segmentation is that you just may find a segment that is willing to pay a premium for your products and services.

Selecting Market Segments

To segment a market, there are various attributes that you can use to paint the picture of your ideal client. For consumer markets, these variables include:

  • Demographics - age, gender, education, income, marital status, ethnic or religious background
  • Psychographics - personality, values, spending patterns, buying behavior, brand consciousness, lifestyle (conservative, trendy, economical), activities and interests (fitness, shopping, sports, etc.), attitudes and beliefs (health conscious, environmentalist, security conscious, etc.)
  • Geographic area
  • For business markets, some variables to consider include industry, size, age, location, private or public, financial condition, independently owned, franchise, or chain.

    Once you have selected a segment or segments to target, you then need to determine if the segment is worth going after.

  • Is the segment large enough to go after?
  • How difficult will it be to reach this segment with your marketing activities?
  • Does this segment have the need and the money to satisfy the need?
  • Is the segment viable - i.e. is this segment growing? A stable or declining segment would need to be evaluated based on the number of competitors already servicing that segment.
  • Does the company have the necessary skills, knowledge and expertise to service the segment?
  • Does the segment meet the mission of the company?
  • How to Segment

    Some business owners have difficulty getting started with segmentation. Start by looking at your current client base and see if there is a pattern. Sometimes businesses just naturally attract a particular type of client. Take a look at those clients you just love to work with. What characteristics do they all have in common that you could turn into a segment?

    Let's take a look at an example:

    A massage therapist would start by picking their target market based on geographic location since it is more likely that their client base will come from within a 10 mile radius of your office. After a relaxing massage, most people don't really want to drive more than 20 minutes to get home. However, within that target market, you could segment even more in order to offer specific services based on physical need.

  • When would athletes more likely get a regular massage?
  • Would corporate executives benefit from a massage as a way of relieving the stress of the job?
  • What would attract stay-at-home moms more often?
  • Is there a type of massage that is beneficial to seniors?
  • Understanding what motivates these segments into booking an appointment for a massage enables you to develop marketing programs that speak directly to these people. This does not mean you would exclude the general person who comes in for a massage, but you may end up marketing your business exclusively for seniors to relieve arthritis pain or athletes who need to be in top condition for their events. The key is to explain why your service caters to their needs, especially if you make it a regular part of your health and wellness activities.

    Summary

    Successful marketing usually occurs when you speak precisely to your target audience. Market segmentation helps you achieve that precision. Once you go through the exercise, you may choose to market to only one segment within your target market at any one time or you may choose to reach multiple segments simultaneously. In either case, you now can develop marketing messages that speak to your target segments, activities that are geared towards these segments, and clarity around your business that attracts clients like a magnet.

    Ms. Murphy is a marketing consultant with a background in computer science, management, and marketing. With more than 20 years experience in marketing, her specialty is strategic consulting and management of focused marketing programs, ensuring businesses reach their ideal target market. Debra is a contributing author of Create The Business Breakthrough You Want: Secrets and Strategies from the World's Greatest Mentors featuring business giants Brian Tracy, Robert G. Allen, Bob Proctor and Mark Victor Hansen (Chicken Soup for The Soul) and endorsed by Dr. Stephen Covey and Ken Blanchard. Debra is based in Massachusetts and can be reached at 508.303.0766 or via email at dmurphy@vista-consulting.com. For more information or to subscribe to her monthly newsletter for businesses that want more clients, visit www.vista-consulting.com.

    Read other articles in this issue:

    The Distance You Move Increases with Your Education Level
    The Value of Market Segmentation
    Dare to be Different


    Newsletter Overview




            








    FREE
    Direct Marketing Tips!


    Sign up for our FREE
    BrandNewMovers.com
    Newsletter now!



    Name: 
    Email: 
     

     





    OUR GUARANTEE

    BrandNewMovers.com guarantees that at least 90% of the records we provide you will be new mover or new homeowner households within the time period you specified in your order. No other provider will make the same 90% guarantee.

     

     

     

    BrandNewMovers.com         12857 Banyan Creek Drive     Fort Myers, FL 33908       p: 866.882.6111       info@brandnewmovers.com
    Home     Login     About Us    Why BNM     Products and Services     Create Account     Find New Movers     Pricing
    Newsletter    Resource Center      FAQs      Contact Us      Guarantee      Small Business Services      Press      Order Process Tutorial     Link to Us
    Client Reviews      Success Stories      Site Map      Values      Help      Careers      Entrepreneur Magazine Hot 100     Make us your Homepage
    New Residents      New Movers      New Mover List      New Homeowners      New Home Owner List

    Terms of Use ~ Privacy Policy

    ©2006 BrandNewMovers.com
    All Rights Reserved.