Growth Marketing Glossary

Market Segmentation

mar·ket seg·men·ta·tionnoun

Dividing the market to serve it better. Segmentation splits a market into groups with similar needs, so you can target and tailor to each — the foundation of targeting, positioning, and relevance.

a whole marketsegmentation dividesdistinct segments
Schematic — a market divided into similar-need groups
Term
Market segmentation
Is
Dividing a market into similar-need groups
Enables
Targeting and tailoring to each segment
Foundation of
Targeting and positioning

Parts of speech & senses

market segmentation · noun
  1. Market segmentation divides a market into distinct groups of customers with similar needs or traits — so marketing can target and serve each segment better than a one-size-fits-all approach. "Segmentation revealed groups with very different needs."

What market segmentation is

Market segmentation is the process of dividing a broad market into distinct subgroups (segments) of customers who share similar needs, characteristics, or behaviors — so that marketing can target and serve each segment with an approach tailored to it. Rather than treating a whole market as one undifferentiated mass (and marketing to everyone the same way), segmentation recognizes that markets contain groups of customers who differ in meaningful ways, and divides the market accordingly. Common bases for segmentation include demographics (age, income, etc.), geography, psychographics (values, lifestyle), and behavior (usage, needs, benefits sought). Segmentation is the first step of the classic segmentation-targeting-positioning (STP) framework, foundational to marketing strategy.

Market segmentation matters because customers differ, and a one-size-fits-all approach serves no one as well as a tailored one — different segments have different needs, value different things, respond to different messages, and use different channels. Segmentation lets a company identify these distinct groups, choose which to target (targeting), and tailor its offering, positioning, message, and channels to serve them better (positioning) — achieving relevance and effectiveness that mass, undifferentiated marketing can't. It's the foundation of targeted, relevant marketing: by recognizing and serving the distinct segments within a market, a company can meet customers' varied needs more effectively, compete where it's strongest, and allocate resources to the most attractive segments.

Why segmentation works and how it's done

Segmentation works because it enables relevance and focus. By dividing a market into segments with similar needs, a company can tailor its marketing to each segment's specific needs and preferences (relevance), focus on the segments it can serve best and most profitably (focus and resource allocation), differentiate its positioning for the targeted segments, and avoid the compromise of trying to appeal to everyone (which appeals strongly to no one). The result is marketing that's more relevant, effective, and efficient — meeting real needs of defined groups rather than diluting its appeal across an undifferentiated mass. Segmentation is the basis for the targeting and positioning that make marketing relevant.

Effective segmentation requires segments that are meaningful and actionable. Good segments are: distinct (genuinely different in needs or behavior in ways that matter), substantial (large enough to be worth serving), identifiable and reachable (you can identify and reach the segment), and actionable (you can serve them differently). Segmentation should divide the market in ways that reflect genuine, marketing-relevant differences (especially differences in needs and what customers value), not arbitrary or superficial distinctions. After segmenting, a company evaluates the segments' attractiveness and fit, targets the chosen ones, and positions for them. Done well, segmentation reveals genuinely distinct, serveable groups and enables tailored, relevant marketing; done poorly (arbitrary or superficial segments, or segmenting on irrelevant bases), it doesn't improve relevance or effectiveness.

Segmenting a market well

Segmenting a market well means dividing it into genuinely distinct, meaningful, actionable segments — based on differences that matter (especially in needs and what customers value) — then evaluating the segments' attractiveness, targeting the ones the company can serve best and most profitably, and tailoring the offering, positioning, message, and channels to them. It means segmenting on marketing-relevant bases (reflecting real differences in needs and behavior, not just superficial demographics), ensuring segments are substantial, reachable, and actionable, and following through to targeting and positioning. Good segmentation is the foundation of relevant, focused, effective marketing.

The failures are not segmenting and treating the market as one undifferentiated mass (one-size-fits-all marketing that serves no one well), segmenting on arbitrary or superficial bases that don't reflect meaningful differences, creating segments that aren't substantial or actionable, and not following through to targeting and positioning. The discipline is to segment a market into genuinely distinct, meaningful, actionable groups based on differences that matter, target the most attractive and best-fit segments, and tailor marketing to them — recognizing market segmentation as the foundation of targeted, relevant marketing that meets customers' varied needs far better than an undifferentiated, one-size-fits-all approach.

Worked example. A company markets its product to its entire market with one message and offer — and underperforms, because the market actually contains distinct groups with very different needs, and the one-size-fits-all approach appeals strongly to none of them. Conducting market segmentation, it discovers genuinely distinct segments (differing in the needs they prioritize), targets the two it can serve best and most profitably, and tailors its offering, positioning, and message to each — achieving a relevance and effectiveness the undifferentiated approach never could. The lesson: market segmentation divides a market into distinct groups with similar needs, so marketing can target and tailor to each — the foundation of targeting and positioning — so segmenting on differences that matter, targeting the best-fit segments, and serving each with a tailored approach is what makes marketing relevant and effective, where one-size-fits-all serves no one well. (Illustrative; RGM analysis.)
Failure modes to watch. Treating the market as one undifferentiated mass (one-size-fits-all marketing that serves no one well); segmenting on arbitrary or superficial bases that don't reflect meaningful differences; creating segments that aren't substantial or actionable; and not following through to targeting and positioning.

Synonyms & antonyms

Synonyms

market segmentationcustomer segmentationaudience segmentation

Antonyms

mass marketingundifferentiated market

Origin & history

Market segmentation — dividing a market into distinct groups with similar needs — is the foundation of targeting and positioning, enabling tailored, relevant marketing that serves customers' varied needs far better than one-size-fits-all.

Etymology: source.

Usage trends

Search interest for this term over the last five years:

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Common questions

What is market segmentation?
Dividing a broad market into distinct subgroups (segments) of customers who share similar needs, characteristics, or behaviors — so marketing can target and serve each segment with a tailored approach, rather than treating the whole market the same.
Why does market segmentation matter?
Because customers differ, and a one-size-fits-all approach serves no one as well as a tailored one — segmentation lets a company identify distinct groups, target the best-fit ones, and tailor its offering and message to serve them more relevantly and effectively.
What makes a good segment?
Distinct (genuinely different in needs or behavior in ways that matter), substantial (large enough to serve), identifiable and reachable, and actionable (you can serve them differently) — based on marketing-relevant differences, especially in needs and what customers value.

Resources & people to follow

Curated, non-competitor resources verified per term.

Related training

Disciplines

Areas of marketing where market segmentation is a core concern:

Sources

  1. trendsGoogle Trends — "market segmentation"