Posts Tagged “Market Segments”

Knowing Baby Boomer characteristics will help you to more effectively market to Baby Boomers.

Baby Boomers Characteristics

Marketers have pursued Boomers since they were adolescents. Today Boomers continue to be an important target market. The Oct. – Nov. 2007 issue of US Marketing Executives ranked Boomers the most important demographic segment that marketers must know.

Two groups make up two different target markets of Boomers. The two groups differ substantially by characteristics. To market effectively to Boomers, you must understand how these Baby Boomer characteristics differ between the two groups:

  • Vietnam group members, the oldest group, were classified as Hippies during their youth. They fought against the Vietnam war and for civil and womens rights.
  • Me group members, the younger group, were classified as Yuppies in their youth. They grew up without war in a time of economic prosperity, and most prospered as young professionals.

The characteristics of these two market segments differ enough that you need to market differently for each. If you market to them the same, your marketing message may fall on deaf ears, wasting your marketing resources!

Plus learning Baby Boomer characteristics, enables you to:

  • Sell Baby Boomers more of the kinds of products and services they want by discovering how and on what, they spend their money.
  • More successfully relate to Baby Boomers by understanding their values, attitudes, and concerns.
  • Create effective messages and deliver your messages through media that will reach Baby Boomers by discovering the most effective media to reach them and the type of information that will best appeal to them.
  • Market effectively to Baby Boomers as a whole and to smaller niches by discovering differences by gender and age.
  • Discover even more ways to improve your marketing by determining additional Baby Boomer characteristics.

Knowing Baby Boomer characteristics can bring you profits. But if you are not a Baby Boomer, and want to target the 77 million people in the Baby Boomer generation, you must understand how they differ from you and from one another.

Improve Your Marketing
By Discovering
Baby Boomer Characteristics
And Marketing Appeals

You can discover Baby Boomer characteristics in three ways.

  • You can spend days  researching Baby Boomer characteristics yourself.
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  • You can spend just $7 and get my Baby Boomer target market profile immediately.

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Target Market Profile

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Many market segmentation experts define market segmentation as the process by which you separate a target market from the mass market. Thus, when they refer to a segment, they refer to what I call a target market.

Market Segmentation
My Definition

I use slightly different terminology. Instead of referring to a specific market within the mass market as a segment, I refer to that market as a target market. Likewise, instead of using “segment” to refer to a target market, I use it to refer to a demographic variable, from which psychographic and behavioral characteristics can be determined.

Market Segmentation: Defining Market Segments

Criteria For a Target Market

As a result, I consider several demographic variables as criteria necessary to determine a target market. These include age, occupation, education level, gender and race or national origin.

You may notice my different use of terms when reading the report on my matrix market segmentation process.

Simplifying Market Segmentation

This process simplifies market segmentation. It starts with demographics because most business owners know at least some demographic characteristics of their target markets. It then uses a systematic process to determine psychographic and behavioral characteristics based on the demographics.

By considering all the characteristics across different demographic segments, you can determine four to five shared characteristics that will effectively communicate with and relate to target market members.

In addition to defining segments and necessary criteria differently, my matrix market segmentation process also differs from many other market segmentation processes because of what it doesn’t require. It enables you to gather significant information about a target market without the technical skills, computer software or statistics required by most market segmentation processes.

You can get more information on market segments at the following link: Criteria Necessary For A Market Segment: Measurable and Identifiable

Discover more about market segmentation. Subscribe to my blog, and I’ll send you weekly post summaries and a copy of my matrix Market Segmentation report. Just complete the form below:



Or you can get my ebook – Know’em, Sell ‘em: Discover The Best Appeals For Your Target Market. Just click the art in the upper left corner.

sharePosted 5-22-08:
Market Segmentation
:
Defining Market Segments

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Market segmentation by life stages can help you learn about your target market.

People, like butterflies, go through life stages.

People, like butterflies, go through life stages and look psychologically different at each stage.

When you know your target market’s age range, you can use market segmentation to learn about what your target market members consider important.

Every adult needs to accomplish similar tasks as they move through different age ranges or life stages. So knowing the age range of your target market, enables you to discover tasks that your target market members consider important. This information will help you to better design marketing appeals for them.

All people move through different stages in their adult lives. People in each life stage share characteristics and tasks with other people in that life stage. These shared characteristics remain somewhat common in spite of the generation presently in the life stage.

Market Segmentation By Life Stage
Reveals Career Tasks

For example, the list below provides some of the most important tasks by life stages.

  • Provisional Adulthood – Choosing a career and entering the workforce.
  • Early Adulthood – Progressing in careers and settling into work.
  • Middlescense – Reexamining work.
  • Age of Mastery – Adjusting to realities of work and approaching retirement.
  • Age of Integrity – Disengaging from paid work and searching for new achievement outlets.

Market Segmentation By Life Stage
Improves Marketing

Knowing the life stage of your target market members, tells you the most important tasks and responsibilities that concern them. This information helps you to create marketing tactics and messages that speak and relate to what they are experiencing.

For instance, all teenagers and young adults in the provisional adulthood stage (18-29), strive for independence, value their friends more than their families, and are sometimes rebellious.

You can use similar life stage tasks to better understand and market to your target market. It’s easy with market segmentation.

You can also read about Lifestyle As A Basis for Market Segmentation.

You can get my ebook – Know’em, Sell ‘em: Discover The Best Appeals For Your Target Market. Just click the art in the upper left corner.

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sharePosted 3-12-08:
Market Segmentation
by
Life Stage Market Segments

Comments 4 Comments »

Market segmentation by generations enables you to determine characteristics of your target market.

It reveals differences between generations to help you discover the best appeals to use in your marketing. For example, World War II women, represented by the picture below, differ from all other generations of adult women in the USA today. So you have to market to them differently than to women in the Baby Boomer, X and Y generations.

Market Segmentation By Generations
Reveals Four Adult Generations

Generation research has determined that four types of generations cycle though USA history. These types and the present adult generations that they represent are, from the oldest adults to the youngest:

1. The adaptive generation, represented by today’s WWII Generation, become active problem solvers in order to adapt to major historical and economic changes.

2. The inner fixated idealist, represented by today’s Baby Boomers, are indulged kids, me-oriented youth, and mid life moralizers.

3. The reactive generation, represented by today’s Generation Xers, include under-protected youths, alienated risk takers who burnout young, mellow into pragmatists and become conservative at middle age, and caustic as elders.

4. The civic generation, represented by today’s Generation Y, are protected by adults and become strong-willed, moral, serious, and optimistic with age.

Market Segmentation By Generations
Is Based On Historical Influences

In addition to the four types of generations, generation research holds that the historical events of people’s lives have a profound influence on the type of people they become. Therefore, people in different generations are different because they have experienced different events at different ages.

Events can be historically or culturally significant:

  • Historical events change history, but the exact time of the event may be difficult to pinpoint. For example the great depression was a historical event for the WWII generation.
  • Cultural events affect us psychologically for a while, but don’t necessarily change the way we live. For instance the Hindenberg represents a cultural event for the WWII generation.

When the two combine, they comprise a defining moment. Defining moments have the most profound influence on a generation, and the more impressive the age of people in the generation when the event occurs, the more profound its influence.

Following is a brief description of adult generations in the USA today.

Market Segmentation
For The WWII Generation

The oldest generation is called the World War II Generation or WWII Generation for short. This generation represents today’s retirees.

You can best market to this generation by understanding how it differs from other generations and how the older and younger members of this generation differ from one another.

  • Those born from 1901 to 1924 are active, confident problem solvers, intelligent and have a sense of optimism.
  • Those born from 1925 to 1942 want to stay young and are attracted to adventure.

Both groups become less materialistic as they age, but still comprise important target markets, especially for those in the health care and home improvement industries.

Market Segmentation
For Baby Boomers

The next oldest adult generation is called Baby Boomers. Boomers are nearing retirement age, but aren’t expected to retire in the traditional sense.

Market segmentation research reveals that Baby Boomers believe they are important. To market to them successfully, you must recognize their need to feel important, and their drive and individualism.

Baby Boomers are smart consumers. Because of the Baby Boomer generation’s size, businesses have long catered to its members with customized and personalized products and with niche marketing.

So if you want to market to Baby Boomers, you need to market to niches of them with personalized products and excellent service. You also need to use market segmentation to determine characteristics that differ between older and younger Baby Boomers. You can read more about marketing to Baby Boomers at

Improve Your Baby Boomer Market Strategies

Market Segmentation
For Generation X

The present reactive generation is called Generation X.

Market segmentation research reveals that Generation X members distrust their elders, especially Baby Boomers. They also don’t respect people just because of their positions.

If you want to do business with Generation X members, you have to earn their trust and keep it. You can reach them best by word-of-mouth because they don’t trust traditional media.

If you reach them, earn and keep their trust and provide the products they need, you will find Generation X members to be materialistic and rabid consumers.

Generation X members start their own businesses at three times the rate of Baby Boomers.
So they comprise an especially important to business-to-business market.

Market segmentation provides additional characteristics to aid you in marketing to this elusive generation.

Market Segmentation
For Generation Y

The youngest adult generation today is called Generation Y.

Marketing to Generation Y isn’t easy because its members have few shared experiences, and their tastes constantly change. Plus, their media preferences differ from all other generations.

Still market segmentation reveals many characteristics that will help you market to Generation Y effectively.

And because of the large size of Generation Y, and how much its members spend, it’s a profitable market. Generation Y members spend $95 billion annually.

Market Segmentation
For Generations
Conclusion

Present generations differ from one another because each generation experienced different historical events, were raised differently and were given different social missions.

This requires a different type of marketing for each generation. So if you want to market your products and services successfully, you must know the generation of your target market and its distinguishing characteristics.

You can also read distinguishing characteristics by life stages.

Or you can get my ebook – Know’em, Sell ‘em: Discover The Best Appeals For Your Target Market. Just click the art in the upper left corner.

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sharePosted 3-11-08:
Market Segmentation

By Generations

Comments 7 Comments »

Market segmentation provides a wealth of information about people from their age because age reveals your target market’s

  • generations and
  • life stages.

Market Segmentation Reveals
Generation Characteristics

Generation research holds that historic events during a person’s life have a profound influence on their psychographic and behavioral characteristics.

Because a person’s generation is determined by birth date, age is an important market segmentation criteria.

Market Segmentation Reveals
Life Stage Characteristics

The second reason that age is an important market segmentation criteria is because it reveals a person’s life stage. Life stages reflect changes that people make as they age, regardless of historical influences.

All adult stages are about psychological and social growth propelled by what Gail Sheehy calls “an underlying impulse toward change.”

I provide more information about generations and life stages in the following posts.

Market Segmentation by Generations

Market Segmentation by Life Stage

Market Segmentation by Age
Conclusion

In conclusion, when you know the age of your target market, generation and life stage characteristics help you to better understand target market members. So age provides an important criteria for market segmentation.

You can get my ebook – Know’em, Sell ‘em: Discover The Best Appeals For Your Target Market. Just click the art in the upper left corner.

Get Free weekly summaries of my posts by completing the form below:

sharePosted 3-10-08:
Market Segmentation

by Age

Comments 6 Comments »