Targeting
Name variants
- English
- Targeting
- Katakana
- ターゲティング
Quality / Updated / COI
- Quality
- Reviewed
- Updated
- Source
- Citations & Trust
- COI
- none
TL;DR
Targeting is the decision to focus resources on specific segments that are most attractive and best fit the offering.
Definition
Targeting follows segmentation and selects the customer groups a business will serve first or most deeply. The choice depends on segment size, growth, profitability, accessibility, and strategic fit. Clear targeting aligns product roadmaps, channel choices, and messaging so the organization does not spread resources too thin.
Decision impact
- It decides which segments receive product investment and marketing budget.
- It narrows messaging and channel choices to those most relevant to the target.
- It sets the benchmarks for success based on the target segment's needs and behaviors.
Key takeaways
- Evaluate segments on attractiveness and fit, not just size.
- Choose a primary target to avoid diluted value propositions.
- Align product features and service levels to the target's priorities.
- Document why a segment is not targeted to avoid random expansion.
- Revisit targeting when evidence shows the segment is not responding.
Misconceptions
- Targeting is not discrimination; it is strategic focus based on fit.
- Targeting does not mean ignoring all other customers forever.
- Choosing more targets does not always reduce risk; it can increase complexity.
Worked example
A meal delivery startup segments customers into busy parents, fitness enthusiasts, and students. After testing demand and margins, it targets busy parents because they value convenience and are willing to pay. The team adjusts menu options and delivery windows around family schedules and shifts ad spend to parent-focused channels. Conversion improves because the offer now matches the selected segment's priorities.
Citations & Trust
- Principles of Marketing 5 Chapter Summary (OpenStax)