Attract New Customers Without Alienating Your Old Ones

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Attract New Customers Without Alienating Your Old Ones

By Ryan Hamilton and Annie Wilson | Harvard Business Review Magazine | July–August 2025 Issue

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Anytime a brand grows—or tries to grow—by attracting new segments, it risks creating conflict with the old ones. And the larger a brand gets, the more heterogeneous its customers will become, increasing the likelihood that tensions will arise.  
  2. Avoiding that problem—or solving it when it does emerge—requires a deeper understanding of the relationships between customer segments.  Four basic ways that customer segments relate to each other:  separate communities (divergent and indifferent), connected communities (collaborative and indifferent), incompatible segments (divergent and influenced), and leader-follower segments (collaborative and influenced).
  3. To avoid or resolve a conflict, strategists and brand managers must first understand where it comes from.  Four sources: Functional conflict,  Brand-image conflict, User identity conflict, and ideological conflict.  Escaping conflicts between customer segments most often requires nudging them into either a separate-communities relationship or a leader-follower relationship. Occasionally, it requires the difficult decision to jettison one of the segments completely.  The right approach often depends on the source of the conflict.

Full Article

(Copyright lies with the publisher)

Topics:  Strategy, Business Model, Marketing Strategy, Customer Segmentation

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