Consumer marketing data comes in several types, and the differences determine what kind of targeting each enables. Demographic, behavioral, and purchase-intent data answer different questions about a consumer — who they are, what they do, and what they’re about to buy. Understanding the distinctions helps you build audiences that match your campaign goals. This article defines each type and explains when to use it.
The three data types
Consumer data divides into three broad categories, each describing a different dimension of a person.
Demographic data describes who a consumer is — fixed or slow-changing attributes: age, gender, marital status, household income, education, home ownership, presence and ages of children, ethnicity. Demographic data answers “what kind of person is this?” It’s stable, broadly available, and forms the foundation of most consumer targeting.
Behavioral data describes what a consumer does — patterns of action over time: past purchases, brand affinities, lifestyle interests, hobbies, media consumption, charitable giving, subscription history. Behavioral data answers “how does this person act?” It’s richer than demographics for predicting interests but requires more sophisticated collection.
Purchase-intent data describes what a consumer is about to buy — signals indicating active shopping or imminent purchase: recent searches, comparison-shopping behavior, in-market signals for specific categories (auto, mortgage, insurance, travel). Intent data answers “what is this person ready to buy right now?” It’s the most time-sensitive and the most valuable for conversion-focused campaigns.

The three are complementary. Demographics define the broad audience, behavior refines it by interest, and intent identifies who’s ready to act — and the best targeting often layers all three.
Common questions
What’s the core difference between these three data types?
They describe different dimensions: demographic data is
who someone is (age, income, household), behavioral data is
what someone does (purchases, interests, habits), and purchase-intent data is
what someone is about to buy (active shopping signals). Demographics are stable, behavior is patterns over time, and intent is time-sensitive and immediate. Each answers a different targeting question, and they’re most powerful combined.
Which type is most valuable?
For conversion, purchase-intent data is usually most valuable because it identifies consumers actively ready to buy — the highest-converting audience. But intent data is expensive, time-sensitive, and only available for consumers currently in-market, which is a small fraction at any moment. Demographic and behavioral data are less immediately powerful but available at scale for the whole audience. The “most valuable” type depends on whether you’re driving immediate conversion (intent) or building broader awareness and consideration (demographic and behavioral).
How long does purchase-intent data stay valid?
Briefly — which is its main limitation. Intent signals typically remain meaningful for 30 to 180 days depending on the category and signal type, after which they decay rapidly. A consumer who was in-market for a car three months ago may already have bought one. This is why intent data must be fresh to be useful; stale intent data can actively mislead, targeting consumers whose buying window has closed. Always confirm the recency of intent signals before using them.
Can I target on all three at once?
Yes, and layering them is often the most effective approach. You might define a broad audience demographically (homeowners earning above a threshold in target regions), refine it behaviorally (those with relevant lifestyle interests or past purchases), then prioritize those showing purchase intent (currently in-market for your category). This layered approach narrows from a large demographic pool to a high-converting, intent-qualified subset, focusing budget where it converts best.
Which type raises the most privacy concerns?
Behavioral and intent data generally raise more privacy sensitivity than basic demographics, because they track what people do and infer what they want — more revealing than static attributes like age or location. Behavioral and intent data collection is more scrutinized under state privacy laws, and sensitive categories (health, finances) carry extra obligations. Demographic data is more routine, though income, ethnicity, and household composition can be sensitive too. Handle behavioral and intent data with particular compliance care.
Where does demographic data come from?
From a mix of sources: self-reported registrations and surveys, public records (property records reveal home ownership, census-derived estimates), and modeled estimates (statistical inference of attributes like income from other signals). The reliability varies — self-reported and public-record data is more accurate than modeled estimates. When demographic precision matters, ask whether the data is verified or modeled, since modeled estimates can be wrong for individual records even when accurate in aggregate.
Is behavioral data the same as intent data?
No, though they overlap. Behavioral data is the broader pattern of what someone does over time — their general interests, habits, and purchase history. Intent data is a specific, time-sensitive subset signaling active shopping for a particular category right now. A consumer’s behavioral profile might show long-term interest in outdoor activities; their intent data might show they’re shopping for a kayak this week. Behavior is the enduring pattern; intent is the immediate signal within it.
How this applies to your business
Match the data type to your campaign goal. If you’re driving immediate conversions and have budget for premium data, purchase-intent targeting focuses spend on consumers ready to buy. If you’re building awareness or reaching a broad qualified audience, demographic and behavioral targeting cover the full market at lower cost. Most campaigns benefit from layering — demographics for reach, behavior for relevance, intent for conversion priority.
Respect the time-sensitivity of intent data above all. Its value evaporates as buying windows close, so intent-based campaigns must launch quickly against fresh signals. Buying intent data and sitting on it for weeks wastes its central advantage. If your campaign timeline can’t move fast, intent data may not be the right investment — behavioral targeting may serve better.
Handle behavioral and intent data with extra compliance care, since these types attract more privacy scrutiny than basic demographics. Document the sourcing, respect consumer opt-outs, and ensure your use aligns with the consent under which the data was collected. The richer the data, the more carefully it must be handled.
Iscope Digital’s
B2C Email & Postal Data service offers segmentation across demographic, behavioral, and purchase-intent variables, with the recency and provenance documentation that responsible targeting requires. For how to target on intent specifically, see
How to target consumers by purchase intent and on the compliance dimension,
How CCPA, CPRA, and state privacy laws affect B2C marketing data.