What’s Your Business’s Target Audience? 5 Ways to Find Out

Target Audience for Your Business

Your business doesn’t exist merely to serve your interests. If it doesn’t satisfy the wants of your target audience, it will struggle to generate meaningful revenues. Any serious entrepreneur knows that pleasing their customers is an ingredient of business success that can’t be done away with; certainly not in a near-free market.


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The first logical step to serving your customers well is to know who they are. We aren’t talking about learning their first names or remembering where they live (there’s no problem with either). What we mean is that you understand the characteristics and traits that they have in common, which may determine how they interact with your business.

If you have a clear idea of what age group(s), parts of your city or state, occupations, or income level(s) people in your target audience tend to belong to, you can craft your marketing campaigns and sales pitches to appeal to them better. This, in turn, will increase the number of conversions (including sales) that you achieve.

This article shows you how to identify your target audience.

Analyse Your Current Customers

If you already have customers (even a few), start by studying them. Ask yourself these questions:

  • Who are they? (age, gender, income level, location)
  • What do they do? (occupation, lifestyle)
  • Why do they buy from you?

For example, if you run a food delivery service and notice most of your orders come from busy professionals in Lekki (Lagos State), you know your ideal audience might be young working-class Nigerians who value convenience.

For even stronger insights, look at repeat customers. They are your best indicator of who truly loves your product.

Use Social Media Insights

Platforms like Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok provide free analytics tools. These can show you things like your followers’ age range, gender breakdown, top locations where your audience lives, and what time they are most active

Here’s an example. If your Instagram insights show most of your followers are women aged 18-30 in Lagos and Port Harcourt, you can create ads and content to suit their specific interests and language.

If you run ads, monitor which demographic clicks the most. They would be the type of people you want to market and sell to the most, because they are already indicating interest in the kinds of products you’re offering.


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Conduct Simple Surveys

You don’t need expensive market research to do this. Use Google Forms or a short Instagram story poll to ask questions about the challenges your followers have with your products, how often they buy the product, and how much they spend on it.

Surveys help you understand needs, pain points, and buying power. These factors are critical in a market like Nigeria, where income levels vary widely.

Study Your Competitors

Look at businesses similar to yours, and find out who they’re targeting, what kind of people engage with their social media posts, and what language and tone those people use.

Let’s say you run a skincare brand. You see that your competitors get the most engagement from women aged 20-35 in urban areas. That’s a clue that your audience may be similar.

There’s so much more you can learn from wandering around the comments section of your competitor’s posts. You could discover what your target audience likes, dislikes, or wishes existed.

Observe Offline Behaviour

Not everything happens online. To feel the pulse of your ideal audience, you may need to go to markets, malls, and local events where your product is relevant. Watch how people shop and what they ask vendors. This is especially important for businesses targeting middle to lower-income groups, who may not be active online.

If you sell children’s school bags and visit a popular market in Onitsha, you’ll learn what parents prioritise: things like price, durability, or design. That insight can shape your marketing message and pricing strategy.


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Final Words

It takes more than just a one-time exercise to define our target audience.  The Nigerian market is changing all the time, thanks to its economic realities and cultural shifts. However, the more you understand your customers, the better your chances of building a brand they trust and love.

You can adopt a mix of the methods we’ve discussed here and begin gathering data. Your next marketing campaign will thank you for this.


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