What Is Customer Profiling? A 5-Step Masterclass
L?den Foust
CEO at Spatial.ai | We help retail marketers reveal, rank, and reach their most valuable customers with AI-powered segmentation software.
A masterclass on creating ideal customer profiles. Learn how to conduct customer profiling the right way to drive better business decisions.
Are you typically most effective when you face a blank canvas, or when you have a clear objective and boundaries? Paradoxically, having defined parameters often sparks our best ideas and decisions. In business, one of the most effective frameworks for guiding smart decisions and creative strategies is a well-crafted customer profile.
What Is Customer Profiling?
Customer profiling is the process of categorizing customers into distinct groups based on shared, actionable characteristics. These profiles provide businesses with the data-driven insights needed to guide marketing campaigns, store expansions, customer retention strategies, and more.
But customer profiling is done wrong most of the time. Most businesses approach it as an ambiguous creative arts process, which leads to customer profiles that simply aren’t useful.
To avoid this, you must follow the four laws of customer profiling.
The Four Laws of Effective Customer Profiling
Customer profiles are most effective and actionable when they are:
How To Create Customer Profiles
Creating an effective customer profile involves a combination of quantitative and qualitative research. Here’s how to approach it in five steps:
1. Start with Quantitative Data
Start with quantitative data and then move towards qualitative aspects. Most people get this backwards. Begin by analyzing data from your CRM or POS system. Below are a few approaches you can take to segment your customers based on measurable attributes:
These quantitative insights should help you identify 4-8 targetable segments for your business.
If I had to go with an approach that delivers consistently across industries it would be demographic profiling combined with total spend. For example, the brand below uses a combination of spend, age of the customer, and implied gender based on name. This gives them a basis of 8 segments to focus on (the four bubbles below split by gender).
Depending on the nature of your brand and data available you may want to choose different variables such as urban/rural, income, or product type. Below is a step-by-step resource for completing this process. If you do this, you are already ahead of 90% of mid-sized brands.
Note: To create a more accurate customer profile, you may find that you need additional data, such as income. In this case, consider using 'demographic enrichment' services to append missing characteristics to your list. Companies like Spatial.ai offer demographic appends as well as many other variables.
2. Layer in Qualitative Insights
Now move to qualitative research to add more depth to your customer profiles. Conduct 3-5 interviews per segment to gain deeper insights. The goal of these interviews isn’t to answer predefined questions, but rather to refine the questions you’ll use in your surveys. Focus on questions around customer motivations, triggers, and lifestyle.
If you can, prioritize interviewing customers who have recently started or stopped buying from you.
Motivation Questions
These questions help uncover what drives your customers' decisions and the alternatives they considered. Use these insights to shape your messaging and differentiate your product from competitors.
Trigger Questions
These questions aim to identify the moment that prompted your customers to take action. The answers will help you craft marketing hooks around specific pain points for each segment.
Lifestyle Questions
Understanding your customers' lifestyle helps identify synergistic brands, marketing channels, and potential influencer partnerships.
Pro tip: Use a “show and tell” approach during interviews. Ask participants to share their social media feeds with you. This method reveals real behaviors and preferences that might be harder to express verbally.
Bringing It All Together
After your interviews, evaluate how distinct each segment is. You may want to combine similar groups or redefine the segments based on the qualitative insights. Finally, use the results to create targeted survey questions that validate and expand on your findings.
Credit: Many of these questions are inspired by the Jobs To Be Done framework by Bob Moesta and Clayton Christensen.
3. Validate with Surveys
Now that you’ve gathered qualitative insights, it's time to craft a quantitative survey to validate and expand on those findings. These survey questions should be directly inspired by the insights you’ve gained and tailored specifically to your brand. Below are some suggested categories and example questions to get you started.
Psychographics
Media Consumption
Shopping Attitudes and Behaviors
Brand Perception
Consumer Habits
4. Layer in Digital Research
By now, you should have a clear understanding of your 3-10 customer segments, including their motivations, trigger moments, and lifestyle preferences. The next step is to dive deeper into these insights using digital tools to gather real-time information and validate your findings. Here are seven free (or affordable) tools to help you refine your profiles:
In 2015, I was conducting market research for a perfume company in Russia. We were looking at scent preferences among 18-21-year-old males and uncovered a recurring theme: many of them were fans of the rapper Eminem. This insight led us to a deeper digital inquiry into the relationship between youth rebellion and scent preferences, which ultimately shaped our marketing approach.
The key is to let the insights from your interviews and surveys guide your digital research. While it’s important to dig deeper into these emerging themes, remember that digital research may not always map perfectly to your customer profiles unless you’re using a full-stack segmentation tool like PersonaLive, which can generate data directly from your CRM.
5. Build & Operationalize Your Customer Profiles
Finally, take all the data you’ve collected and formalize it into actionable profiles. Ensure each profile includes both quantitative data (e.g., demographics and spending habits) and qualitative insights (e.g., motivations and lifestyle).
Here are some practical ways to operationalize your customer profiles based on the four laws we mentioned at the beginning of this article:
At this point, the design team can visualize the customer profiles using a template like the one below:
Here is a full-developed and stylized example from our PersonaLive platform.
Conclusion: The People Behind The Profiles
Customer profiling isn’t just another checkbox in your marketing plan—it’s the foundation of every smart business decision. Whether it’s refining your campaigns or choosing the right store locations, a well-crafted customer profile brings clarity amidst the noise. And without it, you’re simply guessing.
But there’s a deeper truth that comes with this work. After collaborating with hundreds of brand managers and performance marketers, both as a consultant and through software, I can confidently say that the most powerful outcome of customer profiling isn’t just better data—it’s the moment you truly understand your customer. You’ll realize that they’re not just numbers or segments, but real people with incredible stories. And when you understand this, everything else falls into place.
Now, go out there and make a dent.
What you should do now
Whenever you're ready, here are 3 ways Spatial.ai can help:
Vice President of Innovative Technology, Systems and Data at The Melting Pot Restaurants, Inc.
4 个月Great stuff Lyden!
Principal, Director Market Intelligence, Retail
4 个月Hi Lyden. This is amazing! Wow, a wealth of strategic info.