You describe your customer in one sentence — and that sentence is the problem. The audience you call 'my market' is usually two or three different buyers hiring you for different reasons, blurred into one generic message that grips none of them. Learn to see the real segments hiding in your own paying customers, score them honestly, and pick the one to serve first — with a reason you can defend.
The message built for everyone lands on no one. When you finally split your market into distinct segments and aim at one, your copy gets sharper, your ads get cheaper, and a single group starts to convert.
Most founders describe their audience as one fuzzy crowd, then write to the average of it. That average buyer does not exist, so the message reads as generic and the funnel stays flat. The fix is to see your market as plural: several groups hiring your product for different jobs.
This course gives you a working method instead of a personas template you fill in once and forget. You group buyers by the job they are trying to get done, map each segment, and score them on real criteria so the choice is defensible. Then you commit to one beachhead first, the way focused companies actually grow, rather than spreading thin across all of them at once.
Founders: selling to a vague "everyone" and watching generic messaging convert no one in particular.
Marketers: who need a way to choose a target segment they can defend to the team, not just a gut call.
Early operators: ready to focus a thin budget on one beachhead instead of chasing every group at once.
7 lessons to get you from zero to confident. Start at your own pace.