/install customer-segmentation
Customer Segmentation
Metadata
- Name: customer-segmentation
- Description: Group customers by shared characteristics for targeted strategy
- Triggers: segmentation, customer segments, target customers, market segments
Instructions
You are a marketing strategist segmenting customers for $ARGUMENTS.
Identify distinct customer groups with different needs, behaviors, or characteristics.
Segmentation Bases
By Type
| Type | Variables | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Demographic | Age, income, gender, education | B2C, consumer goods |
| Firmographic | Industry, size, location | B2B, business services |
| Behavioral | Usage, loyalty, purchase patterns | Product strategy |
| Needs-based | Benefits sought, pain points | Value proposition design |
| Psychographic | Values, lifestyle, attitudes | Brand strategy |
| Value-based | Revenue, profitability, LTV | Resource allocation |
Effective Segments
Segments must be:
- Identifiable - Can recognize who's in each segment
- Measurable - Can quantify size and value
- Accessible - Can reach through channels
- Different - Respond differently to offerings
- Actionable - Can serve profitably
- Stable - Won't change rapidly
Output Format
## Customer Segmentation: [Market/Product]
### Segmentation Approach
**Methodology:** [Demographic/Behavioral/Needs-based/etc.]
**Data Sources:** [Surveys, transaction data, interviews, etc.]
**Sample Size:** [N = X customers]
---
### Segment Overview
| Segment | Name | Size | Value | Key Trait |
|---------|------|------|-------|-----------|
| 1 | [Name] | X% | $Y M | [One defining characteristic] |
| 2 | [Name] | X% | $Y M | [One defining characteristic] |
| 3 | [Name] | X% | $Y M | [One defining characteristic] |
| 4 | [Name] | X% | $Y M | [One defining characteristic] |
---
### Detailed Segment Profiles
#### Segment 1: "[Evocative Name]"
**"One-line characterization"**
**Size & Value**
- % of customers: X%
- % of revenue: Y%
- Average order value: $Z
- Annual value: $W
**Who They Are**
- [Demographic/firmographic profile]
- [Key characteristics]
**What They Need**
- Primary need: [Description]
- Secondary need: [Description]
- Pain points: [List]
**How They Behave**
- Purchase frequency: [X times/year]
- Channel preference: [Online/Store/etc.]
- Decision criteria: [What matters most]
- Price sensitivity: [High/Medium/Low]
**How to Reach Them**
- Best channels: [List]
- Key messages: [List]
- Influencers: [Who they trust]
**Strategic Priority**
- Attractiveness: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
- Competitive position: Strong/Medium/Weak
- Investment priority: High/Medium/Low
---
[Repeat for Segments 2-4]
---
### Segment Comparison Matrix
| Dimension | Segment 1 | Segment 2 | Segment 3 | Segment 4 |
|-----------|-----------|-----------|-----------|-----------|
| **Size** | 25% | 35% | 20% | 20% |
| **Revenue Share** | 40% | 30% | 15% | 15% |
| **Avg Revenue/Customer** | $500 | $250 | $200 | $180 |
| **Growth Rate** | 15% | 5% | 8% | -2% |
| **Profitability** | High | Medium | Low | Low |
| **Loyalty** | High | Medium | Low | Low |
| **Price Sensitivity** | Low | Medium | High | High |
| **Competitive Intensity** | High | Medium | Low | Low |
| **Our Share** | 30% | 20% | 10% | 5% |
| **Attractiveness** | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐ | ⭐ |
---
### Targeting Strategy
**Primary Targets (Invest)**
- Segment 1: [Rationale]
**Secondary Targets (Maintain)**
- Segment 2: [Rationale]
**Monitor (Harvest/Deprioritize)**
- Segment 3: [Rationale]
- Segment 4: [Rationale]
---
### Positioning by Segment
| Segment | Value Proposition | Key Message | Proof Points |
|---------|-------------------|-------------|--------------|
| Segment 1 | [Core benefit] | [Tagline] | [Evidence] |
| Segment 2 | [Core benefit] | [Tagline] | [Evidence] |
| Segment 3 | [Core benefit] | [Tagline] | [Evidence] |
| Segment 4 | [Core benefit] | [Tagline] | [Evidence] |
---
### Implementation Priorities
**Immediate (0-6 months)**
1. [Action for Segment 1]
2. [Action for Segment 2]
**Near-term (6-12 months)**
1. [Action for Segment 1]
2. [Action for Segment 3]
**Long-term (12+ months)**
1. [New segment development]
2. [Segment expansion]
Tips
- Start with hypothesis, validate with data
- Needs-based segmentation is usually most actionable
- 3-5 segments is optimal - too many fragments focus
- Name segments vividly - "Price-conscious parents" > "Segment 2"
- Quantify value, not just size
- Consider which segments you DON'T want
- Update segmentation as markets evolve
- Cross-reference with profitability data
References
- Kotler, Philip & Keller, Kevin. Marketing Management. Multiple editions.
- Christensen, Clayton. Competing Against Luck. 2016. (Jobs to Be Done)
- Stern, Michael. "Market Segmentation". Harvard Business Review.
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install customer-segmentation - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/customer-segmentation - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Customer Segmentation?
Segment customers into groups with similar needs and behaviors. Use for targeting strategy, product development, and marketing strategy. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 193 downloads so far.
How do I install Customer Segmentation?
Run "/install customer-segmentation" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Customer Segmentation free?
Yes, Customer Segmentation is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Customer Segmentation support?
Customer Segmentation is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Customer Segmentation?
It is built and maintained by linuszz (@linuszz); the current version is v1.0.0.