A buyer persona is a fictional, generalized representation of your ideal customer. They help you understand your customers and prospective customers better. If you're in the process of conducting research to curate a buyer persona, tell us below! Give us your tips and tricks, and what research methods you've found success with. To learn more about buyer personas, check out the "Getting to Know Your Customer" lesson via HubSpot Academy.
em nov 15, 20258:10 PM - editado pela última vez em nov 17, 20256:22 AM por BérangèreL
Membro
Hello everyone,
I own/run a small insurance agency in Arizona & Ohio. I put together a few Persona's based on current customers and a few that I still follow up with. Even though I may not gain their business from the initial contact, I still stay in touch to follow up for renewal time.
A buyer persona is an excellent tool for gaining a deeper understanding of your target audience’s demographic characteristics, behavioral patterns, and purchasing motivations.
Surveys and questionnaires – Gathering quantitative data on preferences, demographics, and behaviors from a larger audience.
Website and social media analytics – Reviewing engagement data, traffic sources, and audience insights to see who’s interacting with your brand and how.
Feedback from sales and customer service teams – Collecting insights from people who regularly communicate with customers about their needs, objections, and questions.
SInce all our customers are extremely High Ticket Customers. Interviewing them is difficult due there time constraints. Social Media like LinkedIn and other tools helped me to do research.
In developing buyer personas, I’ve found that interviews and surveys provide the most meaningful insights. Interviews allow for deeper conversations that uncover motivations, challenges, and emotional triggers that data alone can’t reveal. Surveys, on the other hand, help validate those qualitative insights with larger sample sizes. I’ve also used social media listening to track real-time customer feedback and sentiment trends, which helps identify shifting preferences. Overall, combining these methods gives a more well-rounded and accurate picture of the target audience.
In my experience, social media listening and surveys have been the most effective research methods for curating buyer personas. Social media insights help reveal authentic customer opinions, pain points, and emerging trends in real time. Surveys, on the other hand, provide structured data about preferences, motivations, and purchasing behaviour. Combining both gives a well-rounded picture, blending qualitative insights with quantitative validation. I’ve found this mix especially helpful when identifying what truly matters to a target audience before designing content or product strategies.