Posts from — July 2008
Savvy Customer Segmentation
People often used demographics when describing their customers: some will add a lifestage view (25 - 35 years with children), some may add a value (people who aspire to healthy living), and some may add a lifestyle (sportsmen). But few use all three to describe the context of their customers’ lives. Yet, it is in this context that ‘unique selling propositions’ are to be found. Additionally, as a 2007 report by McKinsey found, not understanding this context is creating a trust gap between consumers and organizations.
Pigeonholing consumers into lifestage as a start, is a pretty reasonable gauge for needs: Shakespeare’s ‘seven ages of man’ still elicits wry smiles, whatever our age. But today’s ‘lover sighing like furnace’ is more likely to check his mistresses views on climate change before texting his ballad. For each generation has life shaping values, and astute companies must monitor these to guide their value propositions.
As the world enters a new economic stage, how are trends in cultural values playing out with different generational lifestages?
How are the ‘freedom protesting’ baby boomers approaching their retirement, will they differ from today’s austerity pensioners? How are generation Y coping with their mobile lives, and are emerging teenagers ‘hoodies’ or ‘greens’?
To start with differentiate between lifestage, values and lifestyle – all of which drive customer behaviour.
- Lifestage – is based on demographics (age, and family situation). Young families naturally have different needs to young singles, empty nesters from older families.
- Values – are what people aspire to and spring from two sources, upbringing and culture. Generational values are laid down in formative years and shape our life view, even as cultural values shift. For instance, how does the 60s generation react to the green values of today’s culture, and does this differ to the 80s generation?
- Lifestyle – the way people actually behave given their environment.
For the report Bridging the Trust Gap which looks at how values are affecting different lifestages resulting in various lifestyles, click here.
July 6, 2008 No Comments
