You have been in the marketing world long enough to know about the concept of personas. These semi-fictional portraits of your best customer you are marketing to can help you write more inspired messaging as well as present this information in a way your ideal audience likes to see it. However, personas are only as good as the work that goes into creating them. An imagined persona with loose demographic information doesn’t give you the information you need to make a targeted marketing strategy. Instead, thorough research, detailed interviews and careful analysis of real data about your existing customers are essential to creating a persona that works for your business.
As a marketing professional, you might need to occasionally remind your junior staffers that marketing supports sales. Yes, you are managing the brand and supporting communications and project managing web projects, BUT, ultimately, your goal is to create revenue. Every business exists to generate revenue. So, we think of personas as active buying customers. The purpose of a persona is to create content that helps to sell the active buyer through the stages of the buying journey (awareness, consideration, and decision). Every piece of content you produce should be useful to your sales team.
The purpose of a buyer persona is to direct your content plan. Your content plan should address your customer’s needs, questions, challenges, and expectations so that when they are in the decision stage of the buyers journey, your products, services, and content has earned their business.
This will also help you to determine where your customers spend time on the web and in the world, giving you insight into how to communicate with them, how to reach new customers and know where and how to promote your business.
The most critical outcome is that you will gain an understanding of how your customers make purchasing decisions, so you can better target your marketing and move them into and through your flywheel.
The first step to creating a buyer persona is to determine what tools you want to use to collect persona details. Here are the options:
We almost always choose interviews and the sales team as part of the process. Sales knows the customer best. A great sales person will impact your content in wonderful ways.
To encourage prospects or customers to agree to interviews, consider offering a small incentive such as a free meal or a gift card. Also, make sure it is clear this is not a sales call and set a time limit on how long the interview will take. You’re not trying to sell them anything, you want to learn from them about their lives, goals, and challenges.
Once you have your interviewees, it’s time for the interview! For the first part of the interview, create an interview script with questions on their demographics, role, challenges, how they imagine success, and the reasons they chose you.
Create a fictitious profile that you can point that gives them a name and other attributes. Then, focus in on the insights that will help you create content that matches up with what your personas need. There are five insights that we focus on:
“learn what prospective customers are thinking and doing as they weigh their options to address a problem that your company resolves. This will reveal insights about your buyers’ decisions -- the specific attitudes, concerns and criteria that drive prospective customers to choose you, your competitor or the status quo. This will give you the knowledge you need to align your marketing decisions -- from positioning and messaging through content marketing and sales enablement – with your buyer’s expectations.”
(source: Buyer Persona Institute)
What causes this persona to start looking for solutions like yours, and what is different about buyers who are satisfied with the status quo?
Tips and Examples
What operational or personal results does your buyer persona expect to achieve by purchasing this solution?
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What concerns cause your buyer to believe that your solution or company is not their best option or can get in the way of moving forward?
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Which aspects of the competing products, services, solutions or company does your buyer perceive as most critical, and what are their expectations for each? What are they weighing in their decision. Cost is often the biggest focus of conversation but it often is not the most important criteria. Consider quality, features, customer service, corporate responsibility, reputation, and other things as you explore this insight into your persona.
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This insight reveals details about who and what impacts your buyer as they evaluate their options and select one.
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Once your persona(s) is complete, you can map out that content plan with the buyer's journey in mind. Here is an infographic from HubSpot that illustrates content types for different parts of the journey.
Once you’ve gathered data from your customer research and your interviews, it’s time to knit this information into a cohesive buyer persona. Begin by recording the basic demographic information of your buyer persona. Also record their goals, challenges, motivations, where they look for information, and how they like to be communicated with on a day to day basis. Distill all of your interview notes into two-to-five buyer personas. Using a persona worksheet like this one can help organize your thoughts and make sure you’ve covered all your bases.
Here is an example of what the first page of your final buyer persona may look like. You may view the full example here: https://www.buyerpersona.com/buyer-persona-example
Use your buyer personas. Look at what they like about your company and do more of that. Also, find ways to stop doing what they don’t like. And, ensure your messaging clearly shows that you understand their challenges and have a solution for them. From now on, everything you do should be with this persona in mind. You can create content that speaks to your persona’s challenges, write blog posts that answer their common questions and concerns, and create branded content that shows your company is in line with their goals and committed to solving their pain points. Post this content on the platforms your persona goes to when they’re looking for information, be that Facebook, YouTube, or e-newsletters.
The persona’s usefulness doesn’t end with marketing. Your next task is to get everyone in the company on the same page about your marketing goals. The sales team, marketing department, human resources, C suite and other departments can all benefit from keeping your persona in mind.
Buyer personas result in a better brand experience that equates to more leads that are more sales-ready, because you’re reaching the right people by leveraging what they want, rather than by pushing what you want. A well-researched buyer persona adds a human face to your marketing strategies and tactics and, with the proper consideration, can revolutionize the way you go about marketing. So, go forth! Begin your journey to more personal and effective marketing!