The post Using Different Types of Personas appeared first on Actuation Consulting.
]]>A Persona is a representation of a group of customers with similar characteristics. Personas help your team make decisions about the product during development. You gather data to create the Personas through primary research and also through Voice-of-the-Customer activities.
Personas can be minimal or fully blown out, giving an elaborate description of behaviors, activities, and motivations. They vary based on whether they are for a business-to-consumer or a business-to-business product or service.
Personas include information such as:
A Buyer Persona hones in on a specific type of buyer targeted by the sales channels. An end user or a purchasing manager is an example. The Buyer Persona informs the development of the components, functionality, and benefits of the value proposition. They can also impact sales messages.
A User Persona represents a specific type of buyer who will have a very specific use for your product or service. A good example is a manager who will set up a computer program for a team. This person is not an end user, but has interests and goals for the product that are different from the end user who is the employee who will actually use the product.
The main goal of developing Personas is to understand typical customers for your product. Personas that achieve the results intended share three characteristics:
It is unfortunately fairly common for a product team to build elaborate Personas out of thin air, with no research to back them up. This is not valid nor is it appropriate for a vital business document. Take the time and make the effort to actually do the background work.
Advancing the Profession of Product Management
website I consulting I training I toolkits I books I blog I twitter
The post Using Different Types of Personas appeared first on Actuation Consulting.
]]>