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audience's Introduction

Audience

Audience allows you to segment your application's users using regular Ruby classes. Audience Segmentation is a process of dividing people into subgroups ("segments") based on defined criteria, such as age, geography, gender, income, etc.

Audience is built on Rails, but otherwise does not assume any particular database or ORM.

What problem does Audience solve?

Suppose marketing wants to send an email to all female users who are between the age of 18 - 25 who have been registered on the site more than a year. Kind of a pain right? Normally you might pinch your nose to keep out the code smell while you add some new helper methods to your already 1,000 line User model. Or even worse, put the business logic inline in a view somewhere. If you're lucky, maybe your app already uses Service classes and you just create a new service for this and move on.

Next week, marketing now wants to send ten slightly different emails to ten different segments of your users. And so the madness continues...

With Audience, you can easily create segment definitions which provide a common interface for defining and working with user segments. It will keep your code organized, reduce code repetition, decouple the segmentation interface from its implementation, and keep you from going crazy.

What can you do with a segment?

After defining a segment, you will be able to do common operations you might expect, such as:

  • Iterate through all members in the segment
  • Count the number of members
  • Select a random sample of the segment
  • Check if a user belongs to the segment
  • Get a list of a user's segments
  • Add a user to the segment
  • Remove a user from the segment

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'audience'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install audience

Then run:

$ rails g audience:install

In your user or member model, add:

class User
  include Audience::Segmentable
end

Basic Segment

Continuing the example above (young female members who joined more than a year ago), you can define this kind of segment easily with Audience. Run:

$ rails g audience:segment loyal_female_millenials

This will generate a segment in app/segments and register it for you in config/initializers/audience.rb.

Open up app/segments/loyal_female_millenials.rb and add:

class LoyalFemaleMillenialsSegment < ApplicationSegment
  def members
    User.where(gender: 'F', age: 18..25).where("created_at > ?", 1.year.ago)
  end

  def include?(user)
    user.gender == 'F' &&
      (18..25).include?(user.age) &&
      user.created_at < 1.year.ago
  end
end

Looking in config/initializers/audience.rb, you can see that the segment has been registered with a unique name.

Audience.register_segment :loyal_female_millenials, LoyalFemaleMillenialsSegment

Now you can iterate through all users in this segment like so to send them an email:

User.segment(:loyal_female_millenials).each do |user|
  MarketingEmailMailer.campaign(user).deliver_later
end

Check the size of the segment:

User.segment(:loyal_female_millenials).size

Check if a specific user belongs to this segment:

if curent_user.in_segment?(:loyal_female_millenials)
  @show_marketing_blurb = true
end

Get a random sample of members of this segment:

User.segment(:loyal_female_millenials).sample(100)

Mutable Segments

Suppose you have a segment defined by membership in an arbitrarily chosen marketing group. You want to be able to add and remove users from this segment easily. Let's define a segment that allows this to be done easily without leaking the implementation all over the app.

$ rails g audience:segment arbitrary_marketing_group
class ArbitraryMarketingGroupSegment < ApplicationSegment
  def members
    group.members
  end

  def include?(user)
    group.members.include?(user)
  end

  def add(user)
    group.add(user)
  end

  def remove(user)
    group.remove(user)
  end

  private

  def group
    @group ||= Group.find(:arbitrary_marketing_group)
  end
end

Now, in addition to iterating through the segment members and checking if a user belongs to the segment, you can also add users to the segment and remove them:

user.add_to_segment(:arbitrary_marketing_group)
user.remove_from_segment(:arbitrary_marketing_group)

# Equivalent

User.segment(:arbitrary_marketing_group).add(user)
User.segment(:arbitrary_marketing_group).remove(user)

Reusable Segments

Suppose you want to segment users into 20 different cities, and send a slightly different version of a marketing email to each city. You can create one reusable segment, and use that to register 20 different segments, one for each city. Let's see how you can do that. In this example, we'll use the Postgres earthdistance extension.

$ rails g audience:segment location
class LocationSegment < ApplicationSegment
  def initialize(latitude:, longitude:, distance: 20)
    @latitude = latitude
    @longitude = longitude
    @distance = distance
  end

  def members
    User.within_radius(@distance, @latitude, @longitude)
  end

  def include?(user)
    members.where(id: user.id).exists?
  end
end

Now you can register different segments for different cities! Open up config/initializers/audience.rb and add as many cities as you need:

Audience.register_segment :london, LocationSegment, latitude: 51.508515, longitude: -0.125487
Audience.register_segment :los_angeles, LocationSegment, latitude: 34.052234, longitude: -118.243685, distance: 50
# etc.

Customizing a Segment Definition

The example below shows all the methods a Segment may implement and what can be overriden if necessary.

class ExampleSegment < ApplicationSegment
  def members
    # Return an enumerable of all members
  end

  def include?(member)
    # Return a boolean to indicate if this member belongs to this segment
  end

  def add(member)
    # Add a member to this segment, or remove this method if you don't need it.
  end

  def remove(member)
    # Remove a member from this segment, or remove this method if you don't need it.
  end

  def each(&block)
    # If you need to customize how to iterate through a segment, override this
    # method. Otherwise remove it. For example, you may want to use
    # ActiveRecord's find_each instead.
  end

  def size
    # Defaults to calling members.size. If you need a different or more optimal
    # version, implement this method. Otherwise remove it.
  end

  def sample(size)
    # Defaults to calling members.sample. If you need a more optimal sampling
    # implementation, implement this method. Otherwise remove it.
  end
end

Segmentable Member API

When your member/user class includes Audience::Segmentable, it gets the following API:

#in_segment?(name)

Check if a member belongs to the named segment.

#segment_names

List the names of the segments this member belongs to.

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/[USERNAME]/audience. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

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