A buyer persona is a fictional, generalized character built to represent your ideal customer profile. They usually encompass not only demographic information like age, location and income, but as well, psychographic information, such as interest and motivations and concerns in their decision making process. While they are very similar to your customer persona, they somewhat different. Let's dive in and learn more about the process of creating personas.
Have you ever heard of the Gillette model of almost giving away the razor but selling the blades?
Or have you ever noticed that while the price of printers continues to drop and their functionality continues to improve, the cost of ink remains stubbornly high?
Perhaps you travel frequently, as I do, and have wondered why most airports are basically uncomfortable, yet the business lounge is usually ok, even has a few perks, like "free food" or drinks.
These are actually sales models that came out of deeply understanding what makes someone buy a product or service.
Aligning Your Buyer Persona to Your Sales Process is Critical
These are all well known classic sales models, yet when they were developed, it was regarded as a revelation.
Yet, consumers change constantly, and thus, these models of buyers and their habits must also change.
Companies that fail to detect a change in their customers 'buyer persona', stand a good chance of being blindsided, perhaps eliminated from the marketplace.
Take the Blackberry, sometimes called the crackberry by dedicated users.
It now finds itself on the block, having been blindsided by first the iPhone and then the iPad, and many competitors, and suffering from device quality issues.
Perhaps even Microsoft, with a couple of flops on its hands, could stand to learn to listen a little better to their customer.
But how might they do that? What sensors are out there and how could you use them to best advantage. What are the first steps or techniques they can take toward developing their buyer persona(s)?
B2G or C2G.
Usually needs to buy off a GSA (General Services Administration) “Schedule” if possible.
You still need to find the right person to sell to, but the buying will generally be handed off to a procurement department to try to get the best price and ensure compliance with an almost infinite number of procurement rules (Federal Acquisition Rules), which have been largely designed to keep the small business out of the government’s business, though that won’t be obvious.
The upside is that some government business is set aside for various classes of small and disadvantaged business, but if you're one of these, you will find you are forced to invest far more in ‘compliance and reporting’ than you would in a B2B sales process.
The above means you have to build a relationship, as in any other sales process, but it won’t quite play out the same way as far as doing the deal is concerned.
You might wonder why you need to develop a Buyer Persona? Or even how to create a buyer persona. Glad you asked.
One of the key reasons you need to develop your Buyer Personas is that they form a key part of developing an effective marketing strategy.
An Informed Buyer Persona (also called a a customer avatar or target audience profile) is a living document. It should evolve constantly, both as you learn more about your customer and as your product or service changes over time. Changes affect your understanding of your customer's journey.
Marketing strategies can be fairly complex, when you consider that they must address your customer's pain points, across multiple channels, such as social media, the web, radio and even TV.
Your customer behaves very differently today than they did just 20 years. Not that long ago, they relied heavily on the sales person, and above all, on recommendations from friends and family and colleagues. Now, they may visit your website multiple times, consume many blog posts that you publish, and almost certainly, they will check you (LinkedIn, in all likelihood, but possibly other social media profiles, such as Facebook) and your company out on social media. This makes it very difficult to tease out just what pain point your buyer personas are actually trying to solve. That's why you need a marketing plan that has, as its foundation, profound knowledge about your product or service and what benefit it provides to your buyer persona.
Due to the complexity of today's customer journey, your content marketing plan must align with both your buyer persona, your marketing and sales funnel design and the expected touch points of your buyer's along each step of their journey. Due to the complexity of this process, we have developed buyer persona templates to cover most scenarios which can also be easily modified to suit our requirements.
A key functional requirement of your Inbound Marketing Platform, typically the Hubspot Marketing Suite, is the ability to deliver the right content at the right time. That's why Advanced Inbound Marketers understand the importance of having in place all of the various tracking codes necessary to listen to the signals the your potential buyers are giving off. For example, Facebook Audience Insights require that you have both the Facebook Pixel installed and in all likelihood, a number of events (more tracking code), configured in your Facebook Business Manager.
Because you will typically have tracking codes from Google, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Pinterest installed on your website (usually via Google Tag Manager or GTM), you will quickly come to appreciate the ability of Hubspot to provide you with actionable information from all of these digital marketing channels.
By delving deeply into the wants, needs and your customer's paint points during the market research portion of your Buyer Personas development process, you will uncover the key characteristics of your target audience. The better you can identify your target audience, the better you can do at creating a Content Plan and the more effective your content creation process will be.
In the process of creating buyer personas, it will often become obvious that you really are dealing with multiple buyer personas. This is especially true in the Business-to-Business (B2B) space, and specifically (not exclusively) when you're using an Account Based Marketing strategy.
In these types of market scenarios, you may be targeting 3, 5 or even 10 or more 'roles' within a typical company that might consumer your product. While the ideal is usually to have one or two buyer personas defined, the reality is, large complex products, such as SAP, are often bought by committees.
This is why you will often find people with different job titles performing a role you have defined during your buyer persona development process. This is why this particular approach takes more time and resources, as well as deep expertise about what transformation your product brings to the customer's life or business.
As you flesh out your customer personas, be sure to describe both who each persona is now and who they want to be. This allows you to start thinking about how your products and services can help them get to that place of ambition.
Your paid marketing campaigns will perform much better when they are targeted at exactly the right target audience, and your buyer persona will go a long ways toward helping you achieve this outcome. You should create buyer personas that address, at the most granular level possible, each product you offer, the pain points it helps solve and the benefit of solving it will bring to your buyer persona. This is no easy feat.
Brands typically create and share their buyer personas with the marketing team and the business owner in a variety of different ways. It might be a list of bullet points; it could be a robust, multi-paragraph story. It might include a stock photo or illustration. There's no wrong way to format these reference docs: do it in whatever way makes sense to you and your team and in whichever format helps your team understand your customers (and target personas) best.
As it is one of the most critical aspects of your Inbound Marketing efforts, we have developed a complete Buyer Persona Template Development Kit that will take you deeply into the process of developing your buyer personas.
To access it, just click the button below.
People Who Read This Also Read:
6 Marketing Metrics Your Boss Actually Cares About
How To Unlock The ROI Of Your Marketing Analytics
How To Segment Your Customers Using SAP BW and CRM
10 Tips For Airlines To Leverage Inbound Marketing
The Art Of Assessing Your Market Segmentation
Do you have your buyer persona clearly developed? Do you have special techniques you use to develop and focus on yours? Please let us know in the comments below.