Segmenting
your target audience is a very common practice…
almost expected even. Let me explain. Perhaps
you sell a nutritional supplement. Think of all
the people who might use your nutritional supplement.
There are adults, pregnant women, growing teenagers,
children, senior citizens, athletes, and many
others. While all of these may seem to be entirely
different target markets, they are actually just
segments of the same nutritional supplement market.
These people all have a need and an interest in
nutritional supplements, but for very different
reasons.
While some of the information you provide to each
segment will be general and apply to everyone,
other information will be specific to that particular
segment.
Information Specific To Each Segment
For instance, everyone will want to know the overall
benefits of taking the nutritional supplement
you offer. Perhaps they can expect to have more
energy, lose a little weight, or prevent or cure
certain diseases. Everyone cares about these benefits.
But your nutritional supplement may offer other
benefits that only certain customers would have
a need/want for.
Pregnant women want a nutritional supplement that
has high levels of folic acid and other nutrients
that will aid their developing babies. Senior
citizens may have a need for supplements that
contain higher levels of calcium (and in a more
readily absorbable form). Athletes burn a lot
of nutrients and have a higher chance of getting
injured so those things are important to them.
Make the information about your product or service
specific to whatever the needs of each segment
are. You can do this in specific ways through
a variety of different advertising mediums.
Segmenting In Brochures
Create one brochure with the general information
laid out within its panels. Then create a separate,
single panel addressing the needs/wants of one
specific segment of your market (seniors, athletes,
etc.). When you mail or give out your brochures,
simply slip the correct insert into the regular
brochure, and you have a custom-designed marketing
piece.
Segmenting On The Web
Web sites are also an excellent place to make
use of segmenting. Starting with your home page,
give general information that is applicable to
all your site visitors. Then break out the information
specific to each segment of your market. Give
a brief description of the details that this segment
can expect to find and a link to the page where
they'll find them.
When your customers click to the various pages,
they'll find specifics on how your product will
benefit them and their special needs.
NOTE: When you segment on the Web, you also have
a great opportunity for search engine optimization.
Many excellent keyphrases come from highly specific
phrases. So, instead of "nutritional supplements,"
you might find that "nutritional supplements for
seniors" or "nutritional supplements for athletes"
will give you the high rankings you want.

Segmenting In Print
Are you running newspaper ads? If so, ask about
multiple placement discounts. Many papers will
give you discounts for running ads in various
sections of the paper at the same time. This gives
you greater exposure and also allows you to segment
your market through the use of the different sections.
Before you lump all your customers into one category,
take a good hard look. Do they have different
needs? Do you see various groups immerging from
the crowd? Is there a way to segment your market?
If your market is already broken into various
segments, what is the best way to reach each group?
Once you determine the needs and wants of each
segment of your target audience, you'll be better
equipped to write copy that appeals to them. When
you accomplish this through your copywriting,
you'll find yourself with higher conversion ratios
and more sales.
by Karon Thackston © 2004
http://www.copywritingcourse.com |
|
|
|
|
| From
the Forum: |
| Yahoo
Rolls out Updated eMail |
I was just finally able to login to my email
account on Yahoo and was greeted with a pleasant surprise
100MB of space! So what are your thoughts on the new Yahoo
email?
Seems pretty much the same as the old Yahoo, but just additional
space...and a little longer to load.
|
|