Tag Archives: Market segmentation

What is Reverse Segmentation and Why is it Becoming a Popular Market Analysis Tool?

There is an outstanding post by Nico Peruzzi on reverse segmentation over at Research Access from last week.

I have to admit, I had never heard the term “reverse segmentation” and I’m a fool for segmentation.  Can it be that I’ve missed some HUGE development in market research?  Nope.  There is a good chance you’ve already been doing and struggling “reverse segmentation” and just didn’t know that this was what we were calling it these days.

A Definition of the Reverse Segmentation Process

Let’s start with the basics — segmentation is grouping.  Marketing managers and small business owners alike intuitively know and understand that smaller, more targeted groups are more desirable because we can develop a message that appeals to them and makes it more likely for them to choose us.

There have typically been two basic kinds of segments; demographic (more concrete and observable segments such as gender, income, age, etc) and psychographic (emotional, aspirational, attitudinal attributes such as independent, organized, practical or cautious).

There is a common criticism of segmentation in that we typically collect either demographic or psychographic info, but not really both.  And this is where the “reverse segmentation” comes in.

What’s The Trigger for Reverse Segmentation – How Do You Know You Should Do it?

Say you already have an existing customer segment of college-educated women from Ohio between the ages of 25 and 35 who purchase your product.  And now you wonder how many of them are procrastinators or how many of them go skydiving?  Because if you had more than 50% that were procrastinators, you could develop an offering just for them.  This sounds like a job for reverse segmentation.

Richard Hamer from Deft Research puts in another way in his article titled “What the Heck is Reverse Segmentation Research?”  He explained that all you do is take the demographic data you already have within an existing customer database and do more research to assign new (perhaps psychographic) data.

Use QuestionPro‘s and Survey Analytics‘ Custom Variables to Do Reverse Segmentation

After I read that- the first thing I thought of was the hundreds of survey’s I’ve done using the custom variables tools in QuestionPro.  THIS is where I put the data I already knew about my customers.  For example, I wanted to know if customers that ran frequent and multiple transactions had different satisfaction levels than those that were less expert and ran few transactions.

We took our existing database and created 4 segments based on the number of transactions that these customer ran.  Then we ran the survey and attached their satisfaction results to those segments.  After that we ran some analysis to see if there was a difference.

As it turns out reverse segmentation might be a new term — but we’ve had the tools to do it all along.

What’s been your experience with “reverse segmentation”?

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Creative Segmentation Methods That Will Help You Identify New Opportunities

Segmentation has been around for so long, that we often take it for granted, and yet it continues to be the most powerful, lowest cost and most effective marketing tool we have access to.

In the most basic sense, we segment our audience and our customers because it’s more cost effective and more efficient to group them into clusters that will react similarly to a specific message.  For example, men between the ages of 19 and 25 who are currently attending college are very different from women between the ages of 35 and 45  who live in mid Western suburbs.  Although both of these groups might purchase Hamburger Helper, they have different reasons and different perceived benefits.

Malcolm Gladwell Talks About Spaghetti Sauce Segments

This is a fascinating story about how Campbell’s Soup discovered an unmet need by looking at their customers’ preferences for different types of spaghetti sauce rather than just their demographics.

Segments Can Come From Anywhere

Don’t get stuck in the rut of simply creating segments out of demographics, psychographics or benefits.  S-T-R-E-T-C-H  yourself and your outlook and start exploring segmentation opportunities.

In the new book “The 24-Hour Customer” Adrian Ott explores the new product opportunities and ideas that were uncovered when researchers realized that we only spend about 28% of our time shopping (this includes researching as well as buying).  That’s not so shocking.  But get this — given out increased exposure to new products and services as well as our ability to shop online hasn’t made an impact on that figure anywhere in the world.  In other words – there are more products competing for that same slice of time.  In this case, pulling out TIME and our interaction with it turned out to be an interesting segment.

Take Another Look At Segmentation

If it’s been a while since you’ve looked at segmentation — then read this article by Nico Peruzzi over at Research Access.  He pulls together an outstanding overview of segmentation that you can use to get your creative juices flowing.

What have been your experiences with segmentation?  Have you ever found yourself finding a new opportunity by segmenting differently?  Share your segmentation tips and experiences in our comment section.

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