It’s the start of a new half year! Where better to begin than with the job of figuring out what makes your ideal buyer tick? A customer or buyer persona is a collection of the characteristics common to buyer types in your target organisation. Figuring out your personas allows you to market to many like-minded individuals with the same messaging. This is in stark contrast to when you have a specific customer in mind – effectively a market of one organisation – because then you can message directly to that person, rather than to the persona construct.
Crucially, there may be more than one buyer persona you need to engage with in your target customer: lifestyle people; money-makers, corporate ladder-climbers; business heads, finance people, procurement. These personas may well fulfil multiple or different roles in the decision-making unit of your target organisation: decision-makers, budget-holders, influencers, users, and other staff.
You should gear all of your marketing and messaging to your personas, and adapt it to each persona. Framing your personas comes from research, which might be based on quantitative or qualitative information. Where to go for that information? It’s what you already know, it can come from interviews, calls, or meetings, from your sales teams, or from your customer database.
I’ve found the following list of headings to be useful when building a persona:
- About them: gender, age profile, education, family, job role, experience?
- Personality: approachable or aloof, prefers emails to calls, passionate, dispassionate?
- Goals: commercial, personal, emotional?
- Challenges: resources, politics, regulation, competition?
- Hangouts: where do they go for their information? Websites, social media? You need to be where they are…
- What can you do for them? Help them hit which goals, meet which challenges, be recognised?
- Objections: what might stop them working with you? Time-pressured? Locked in to a supplier?
- Message: how might you best message to them? Productivity, growth, compliance, morale?
Giving each persona a name, even a picture, and hanging their profile on a wall will keep them front and centre.