By Pious Nsajja
Recently, a colleague requested my support in designing a communication strategy for his organisation. As we discussed its work, goals, and stakeholders, one question stood out: Who exactly are we communicating with? It may seem simple, but it is arguably the most important question in strategic communication.
I told him that communication is like speaking at a family gathering filled with grandparents, parents, young people, children, teachers, and businesspeople. If you deliver the same message, in the same language and tone, to everyone, only a few will truly connect with it. Some will find it irrelevant, others too technical, and some may misunderstand it altogether.
This is why audience segmentation is so important.
Audience segmentation involves identifying and grouping people according to shared characteristics, interests, needs, behaviours, or experiences. It recognises a fundamental reality: people are different. They care about different issues, consume information differently, and respond to different messages.
A donor, for example, wants evidence, impact, and accountability. A policymaker is interested in data and recommendations. A beneficiary wants practical information that can improve their daily life. Likewise, a young person on social media receives information differently from an older community member who relies on the radio. Treating all these groups as one audience often results in communication that fails to resonate with anyone.
After setting up your goal(s), audience segmentation becomes a foundation of an effective communication strategy. Before choosing communication channels, developing messages, or designing campaigns, organisations must first understand their audiences.
Once this understanding exists, many decisions become easier. Organisations can identify the channels their audiences trust, the language they prefer, and the tone that resonates with them. They can also better understand their audiences’ hopes, concerns, motivations, and expectations.
At its core, communication is not just about sharing information—it is about building connections. People pay attention when they feel understood. They engage with messages that reflect their realities and address their concerns.
Audience segmentation also helps organisations use resources more effectively. Many communication efforts fail not because the message is weak, but because it reaches the wrong people, through the wrong channels, or in the wrong format. In an age of information overload, relevance matters more than volume.
As I told my friend, setting up your goal(s), every communication strategy MUST focus more on the people, not messages. Too often, organisations focus on what they want to say before understanding who they need to reach.
Audience segmentation reminds us that communication is ultimately about the listener. It transforms communication from a one-size-fits-all approach into meaningful engagement, helping organisations build trust, strengthen relationships, and ensure that their messages truly matter.
Pious Nsajja is a Strategic Communication Specialist







