People like to buy what is offered specifically for them. Well-defined personas make all the difference for the business. According to Viver de Blog surveys, traffic on the websites of companies with defined personas increases around 210% and sales generated by them are 124% higher.
Persona is a fictional representation of the ideal client of the business, created to help you better understand who the customer is and what it needs. Briefly, personas are a market segmentation tool to better serve customers.
It is based on real data on the clients’ behavior and demographic characteristics, as well as their personal stories, motivations, objectives, challenges, and concerns. Understanding who purchases is essential not only for product development and sales but also for the creation of content and digital marketing, as companies can change the whole marketing strategy according to the persona.
Now look at the basic example of a Persona:
Name: Flávia
Age: 34 years old
Occupation: Marketing Manager (Hospitality Sector)
About: Flavia has been a Marketing Manager for 5 years. She copes with challenges to prove the results of the marketing actions and every investment in her department. She has an innovative profile, thinks way beyond a quality delivery, wishes to enchant the customer.
Challenges: She wants to get away from the trivial. She believes that service quality is already something that many companies offer nowadays. She sees that a stable WiFi pleases customers, and wants to have everything running perfectly, even when they go through periods with greater volume of data usage.
She wants to offer unique experiences. She longs for each client’s opinion. She knows companies that implement WiFi networks. However, she is still unaware of the value of having a data collection platform.
Using this persona as a starting point, we can create more assertive content and make it more interesting for Flavia. Thus, the lead generation is assertive. Having personas is understanding where your ideal clients are in the Purchase Journey, where would they like to go and how you can help them get there.
It is quite common that there is a misinterpretation in concepts. Therefore, we must be aware of the differences between the two terms.
See a practical example:
While the audience survey provides superficial demographic information such as age, economic class, and profession, the Persona will go further, bringing more information on consumer desires and challenges
Setting my business’ persona?
Meeting the challenge of creating personas can be easier when you ask the right questions. If you have a customer base, this will be the perfect source to start investigating. Even if you have different profiles of people or companies who consumed your product, some of them tend to exemplify your persona.
To begin, come up with a script to conduct interviews and think about the approach:
Job
Company
Shopping habits
One tip is to focus as much on satisfied customers as dissatisfied ones. In both cases, you will learn something about the perception of your product and what challenges customers are facing. Moreover, there is no need to limit yourself to a single Persona if you think you have segmented too deeply.
You can gather this information through email, surveys, public places, conversations on social networks, blogs, events or through your website.