Creating personas that say yes

by Sapphire (January 22, 2008)

I was reading this piece by Holly Buchanan on creating personas when I realized this is a huge stumbling block for me.

First, if you’re not familiar with the concept of personas: marketers try to imagine the sort of person who would buy their products. Then they write copy and come up with campaigns that will sell the product to that person. The big pitfall with this approach is thinking in stereotypes (which is covered in Holly’s post): if you assume things about your personas that aren’t in fact the case, you get a “Were you talking to me?” response.

I realize I do something else wrong with the persona approach. I focus on personas that aren’t likely to say yes to me. I worry more about convincing people who don’t want my product than in simply finding those who do and offering it to them in an enticing way. So all my persuasive arguments sound to my target audience like I’m trying to distract them from some huge flaw in what I’m selling. And to those who are just not inclined to buy what I’m selling, I’m wasting my breath anyway, right?

This is the sort of thinking that drives me crazy when I find a TV show I love, and all the producers can think is, “How do we change this winning formula so we can attract more people from this other demographic and to hell with the fans we have?” I know that’s advertiser driven, but what I can’t understand is why advertisers want them to change a show to draw in the crowd they like rather than just go advertise on a show that appeals to the crows they like.

I’ve been noticing some changes for the better in my writing style lately, and I think this is going to help me focus on writing lightly persuasively for those who need only light persuasion, and lighten my load.

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2 Responses to “Creating personas that say yes”

  1. Brian Massey said:

    I spend most of my week developing conversion profiles (personas) and built my process on Holly’s and FutureNow’s process.

    The first question I ask is “who is your most valuable customer?” Who closes the fastest, spends the most, returns often, contributes comments, etc. Then I ask who is the most common customer. We usually can transform a web site with just these two personas.

    Of course, this implies that you know your customers. Think of personas as organizing what you already know about your customers.

  2. Wishful thinking in buying | ChillyCool Web Digger said:

    [...] reminds me of the conclusion I came to when I wrote Creating personas that say yes. You could be turning away easy sales by focusing on the tough ones. But if you start with the easy [...]

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