Beyond age and gender: Why mindsets matter more in marketing.

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Gymshark campaign.

Why demographics became the default.

For decades, demographics have been the backbone of marketing. Age, gender, income, and location are easy to measure, widely available, and straightforward to report. Market research companies, media platforms, and analytics tools all present data in these categories, making them the obvious first step when segmenting an audience.

If you want to know how many women aged 25–34 live in Manchester and earn above £30,000, those numbers are easy to find. This simplicity explains why demographics have shaped so much of marketing practice. But demographics only give you the surface. They tell you who your customer might be, but not why they make decisions.

The limits of demographics.

The problem is that demographics oversimplify human behaviour. Two people can look identical on paper but behave in very different ways.

  • A 30-year-old woman earning £40,000 might spend her money on travel and experiences, while another 30-year-old with the same salary may prioritise saving for a house.
  • A 50-year-old man could be an early adopter of every new piece of technology, while his neighbour, also 50, still prefers paper statements and cash.

 

When you rely too heavily on demographics, you risk grouping these very different people together. That means your messaging, targeting, and product design may miss what actually motivates them.

Moving towards mindsets and behaviours.

That’s where psychographics and behavioural insight change the game.

Psychographics go beyond demographics to explore values, attitudes, and lifestyles. Do people value convenience or sustainability? Do they see fitness as part of their identity or just a way to stay healthy? These factors explain motivation in ways that demographics never can.

Behavioural insight looks at what people do, not just what they say. What are their daily habits? Which triggers spark a purchase? How do they interact with your brand online and offline?

Together, psychographics and behaviours provide a much clearer lens. They don’t replace demographics – they build on them to give you a layered understanding of your audience.

Real-world examples.

Gymshark: Rather than targeting “18–25 year-olds,” Gymshark markets to people who see fitness as part of their lifestyle and identity. Their community spans students, new parents, and seasoned athletes. Age matters less than belonging to the mindset of “fitness first.”

Monzo: Often labelled a “millennial bank,” Monzo’s real appeal lies in mindset. It attracts digital-first money managers who want real-time control and transparency. That includes younger people, but also freelancers in their 40s, retirees who are confident with mobile apps, and anyone who values tech-led simplicity.

IKEA: Its target isn’t just “young renters.” It speaks to people with a DIY mindset – those who want affordable, adaptable furniture they can assemble themselves. This psychographic cuts across generations and incomes.

Why this matters for you as a marketer.

When you design campaigns based only on demographics, you risk shallow connections. For example, assuming all Gen Z consumers want TikTok campaigns misses the fact that some value sustainability above all else, while others care more about entertainment or price.

By layering demographics with mindsets and behaviours, you:

  • Create messaging that feels more personal and relevant.
  • Build products and services that fit genuine needs.
  • Avoid stereotypes and clichés about age or gender.
  • Reach new audience groups you might otherwise overlook.

 

A layered approach.

The most effective marketers start with demographics but don’t stop there. Think of it as three layers:

  • Demographics – the basics: age, gender, income, education, location.
  • Psychographics – the motivators: values, interests, lifestyles, attitudes.
  • Behaviours – the actions: habits, purchasing triggers, decision-making patterns.

 

When you combine these layers, you move from knowing who your customers are to understanding why they buy. That insight is what drives meaningful marketing.

Takeaway.

Demographics give you a starting point, but they are not the full picture. If you want to connect with people in a way that feels authentic, you need to go deeper. Explore what they value, how they behave, and the mindset they bring to their choices.

That’s how you build marketing that resonates – not just with a number on a spreadsheet, but with the real person behind it.

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