User segmentation
Author: Patrick Jordan for Gain Capital, May 2016
Summary
Key findings
- The primary motivation of nearly all traders is to make money however only a small proportion manage to do so consistently
- The single biggest thing that we can do to improve the user experience is to help people make more money or at least to lose less
- The reasons that people make or lose money are known – they are a combination of knowledge, attitudes and behaviours
Analysis
- We have segmented people based on the extent to which they display knowledge, attitudes and behaviours that are likely to lead to winning trades
- We aim to provide user experiences that meet the needs of each segment and enable progression between segments
- A series of personas, representing each of the segments, has been created. These can be used as tools to guide the design of user experience
Index
- Scope
- Methodology
- Strategic direction
- Existing segmentation review
- Which is most useful
- Previous segmentations differ
- Literature review:
- Market reports UK
- Market reports US
- Market reports APC
- Internal reports
- Industry articles
- Scientific articles
- Most common trader mistakes
- Most common autotrading mistakes
- Trading psychology
- Media review - documentaries
- Emotions and trading
- Primary research:
- Internal interviews: key insights
- Ethnography: City Index tutorials (James Chen)
- User observation, interviews, trading analysis
- Trading data analysis
- Conclusions
- Segments & Personas:
Scope
We are looking for the most valuable ‘groups’ of users that share common needs and behaviors to target product development efforts.
- Existing users - Understand the needs and behaviors of people currently conducting Retail Online Leveraged Trading, specifically our current users and their potential value (not per user but by segment)
- Underserved users - Identify other segments whom we don’t serve or that we currently underserve and understand their value.
- Personas - Based on these develop and agree target personas that we can use to help us build products.
Methodology
Baseline what we know, validate with survey, deep dive to add detail
Phase | Key inputs / activities | Purpose |
---|---|---|
Phase 1 - Secondary research |
|
Process of breaking down and building up hypothesis to test in the primary research phase |
Phase 2A – Primary research (quantitative) |
|
Testing hypothesis to observe that the basis for segmentation is valid Uncover the basis for persona creation |
Phase 2B – Primary research (qualitative) |
|
Ensure that the personas really do exist and put more meat on the bones |
Phase 3 – Persona creation |
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Bring personas to life and localize them so we relate to them |
Strategic direction
How can we achieve our aims
- Own the IP that drives users to make better decisions
- To bundle advisory services with trading platforms to create differentiators
- Equities focus – to increate the percentage of equity markets traded on the platforms
- Consolidate – no new market entries in 2016
Existing segmentation review
A number of research attempts, some consistency, nothing that has landed internally or that is applied to product development
Research | Methodology | Basis of Segmentation | Segments |
---|---|---|---|
Foolproof (2014) | Qualitative (18 observations) | Trading style | Quick Trader; News Focused; Market Focused; Charts Focused; Explorer |
Rokkan (2014) | Qualitative (43 interviews) | Psychographics and trading attitudes and behaviors | Ambitious, Tech-Savvy Millennial Novices; Realists |
GfK (2014) | Quantitative (number surveyed not known) | Trading experience | Beginner; Experienced; Special |
Forrester (2008) | Quantitative (1412) | Trading attitudes and behavior, psychographics | Ambitious Techies; DIY Currency Traders; Realistic Enthusiasts; Diversified Independents |
Takeaways |
A variety of approaches to segmentation have been taken in the past They vary in terms of methodology and by the variables used to differentiate groups |
Rokken & Forrester provide the most complete view of our users
Research | Participants’ trading experience |
Participants | Pros | Cons |
---|---|---|---|---|
Foolproof (2014) |
None (7); |
UK, 22-65; |
Clear design implications |
Small, narrow sample Segments give limited information about users |
Rokkan (2014) |
Prospective traders (13); |
USA; UK; China |
Segments clearly identifiable Segments give rich information about users |
Small sample size May overemphasize the role of age |
GfK (2014) |
Beginner; experienced |
UK |
Large sample size Segments clearly identifiable |
Segments give limited information about users |
Forrester (2008) |
Forex.com users (448); |
USA 90% male; mean age 36 |
Large sample size Segments give rich information about users |
Segments difficult to identify Research done some time ago |
Takeaways |
The Foolproof and GfK segmentations are based on a single dimension and focus only on trading The Rokkan and Forrester segmentations give a wider picture of users looking both at trading and at their wider lifestyles and values |
The segmentations differ by the number of segments in each.
Research | Segment description |
---|---|
Foolproof (2014) |
Quick trader: Immediate trade based on news, tip; no analysis on platform News focused: Trades based on news; seeks more news on platform Market focused: Limited range of markets; uses news and charts Charts focused: Not interested in news; uses charts to decide when to trade Explorer: Explores and analyses markets based on news and charts |
Rokkan (2014) |
Ambitious, Tech-Savvy Millennial Novices: Competitive and confident, social media savvy; enjoy thrills, accept risk; little experience; limited product range; high service expectations Realists: seek challenge; moderate risk; realistic success expectation; wide variety of markets; expect personalized service |
GfK (2014) |
Beginners: Little experience of online trading; seeking better ROI than investment; vary in how they use charts and news; many time pressured; variety of risk and confidence Experienced: More experience of online trading; wider variety of products traded; older members may be less tech savvy Special: Seek particular features and services (e.g. joint account for couple; advisory services for corporates) |
Forrester (2008) |
Ambitious Techies: Tech savvy; high consumption of online financial media; wide range of products; competitive and materialistic DIY Currency Traders: Forex focused; chart based; low consumption of online financial media; low mobile usage Realistic Enthusiasts: Seek challenges; ,mainly focused on forex; consider themselves informed, knowledgeable; not materialistic; independent Diversified independents: Trade multiple products on multiple platforms; most don’t use demo; younger and more educated; not materialistic; independent |
Takeaways |
Experience levels are key variables in both the Rokkan and GfK segmentations With the Foolproof and Forrester analyses there is a range of experience levels within each segment |
Next: Secondary research - Literature review, media and analysis