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Wrong messages sent to the wrong people causes loss of opportunities, says Strategy Analytics

April 18, 2017

Posted by: Avadhoot Patil

Smart home service companies are missing opportunities with the wrong messages sent to the wrong people, says Boston-based Strategy Analytics.

By a lucky chance the analyst is also reporting the availability of a new customer segmentation plan for the United States. This, it says, will help smart home product and service providers improve their marketing and communications strategies.

The segmentation identifies six groups, ranging from Laggards to Affluent Nesters, all of which are potential customers for smart home products but which must be targeted in different ways. Strategy Analytics used a Latent Class Analysis methodology; this avoids the pitfalls of traditional age- and demographic-based approaches, which mistakenly assume that everyone of a certain age behaves the same way.

Some smart home products and services have struggled to gain acceptance because they focus on issues which are less relevant to certain customer segments. For example, some people are less interested in technology, but are willing to pay for products and services that are environmentally friendly or will help them to better manage their homes.

Bill Ablondi

“The idea of home management encompasses everything from energy management to budgeting to maintenance and repair,” said Bill Ablondi, director of Strategy Analytics’ Smart Home Strategies service. “To appeal to a mass market, companies should focus on solving real problems for consumers.”

The segments identified by Strategy Analytics are:

Strugglers

Laggards

Affluent Nesters

Greens

Impressers

Millennials

“There are some consumer groups that will be easier to reach than others,” said Joe Branca, principal Industry analyst at Strategy Analytics. “This research helps to identify some of the challenges associated with reaching customers outside of the early adopter segments.”

Strategy Analytics surveyed a total of 2007 smartphone owners who own or rent their own residences in the United States. The survey was conducted in the latter half of 2016 and the data was weighted by age and gender to demographically reflect the population of smartphone owners.

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