Behavioral Segmentation
Behavioral segmentation groups leads and customers based on their actions, such as pages viewed, quiz answers, or features used, rather than static demographic traits.
In depth
Behavioral segmentation works by capturing signals at the moment they happen: a click, a quiz response, a pricing-page visit, or an abandoned form. Those events are stored against a contact record and combined into segments like "high-intent visitors" or "trial users who never invited a teammate." Because the inputs are observed actions rather than self-reported labels, the segments tend to predict purchase intent far better than firmographics alone, which is why marketing and sales teams use them to prioritize follow-up.
The most common pitfall is over-segmenting: teams create dozens of micro-segments that nobody can act on, and each one holds too few contacts to matter. A healthier approach is to start with three or four behavior-based tiers tied to concrete next steps. In a quiz-funnel workflow, the quiz itself becomes a rich behavioral signal source: each answer reveals priorities, pain points, and readiness, letting you place a respondent into a segment the instant they finish and trigger the right result page, email sequence, or sales handoff.
Example in practice
Frequently asked questions
How is behavioral segmentation different from demographic segmentation?
Demographic segmentation groups people by fixed attributes like industry, role, or company size. Behavioral segmentation groups them by what they actually do, such as quiz answers or feature usage, which tends to predict intent more accurately.
What data do I need to start behavioral segmentation?
You need a way to capture events such as page views, form completions, or quiz responses and store them against a contact record. A quiz funnel is an easy starting point because every answer is a clean, structured behavioral signal.
How many behavioral segments should I create?
Start with three or four segments that each map to a distinct next action, like fast-track sales, nurture, or disqualify. You can split them further later once each segment is large enough to act on and measure.