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How to Use Field Research to Develop Audience Personas

How to Use Field Research to Develop Audience Personas - D Custom

On any given day, it’s our job to go through three or four personality changes.

From a corporate CTO looking to make a software purchase to a grocery-shopping parent picking out produce, we’re constantly pinning down our clients’ audience personas and putting ourselves in their shoes so that we can tell the right stories to the right people.

Related: Don’t waste marketing dollars on audience assumptions. Have an up-front strategy.

But channeling so many personas can be challenging — which is why we often rely on field research and ethnographic studies.  

Why Does Field Research Matter?

It’s in the numbers: 71% of buyers expect personalization from the brands they choose, according to research from McKinsey

Ideally, brands would conduct large ethnographic studies to get a better understanding of their ideal consumer and tailor their messaging accordingly, but these studies are costly and time-intensive. So what do you do on a tight timeline and budget?

Rather than skip the important step of understanding your audience, conduct small-scale contextual field research instead.

We’ve gotten good at it, since it’s our job to become experts across a wide range of industries. Here’s what we’ve learned from contextual field research and how you can apply the same methodology before starting new projects or refreshing audience personas for your own business. 

7 Ways to Conduct Field Research Fast

The problem with building audience personas through field research is that many ethnographic study methods can take a whole year, and sometimes businesses don’t have that kind of time.

We’ve been there. Here are our tried-and-true recommendations for high-value, in-a-pinch field research:

  1. Take to the streets, grocery aisles and public parks and survey consumers on-site.
  2. Call an expert or attend expert panels in the industry.
  3. Comb through research papers online. (We like Microsoft Academic and Academia.)
  4. Conduct consumer audits and surveys online with tools like AYTM and SurveyMonkey.
  5. Keep an eye on social media by searching hashtags and using social listening tools.
  6. Be a secret shopper in your own store or business.
  7. Reach out to your family, friends and former classmates or co-workers in the market.

Putting yourself in your consumers’ shoes can bring to light overlooked audiences, brand perceptions and what your competitors are doing in a similar place.

Update Your Audience Personas Often

Like anything else in your marketing strategy, your audience personas require some upkeep. You’ll need to assess and adjust them as their habits (and yours) inevitably change. Shoot to evaluate them at least a couple times per year.

Updating your audience personas could be simple, trend-related refreshes (likely to stream shows on Netflix; receives HelloFresh meals) or as in-depth as rethinking and rebuilding them from the ground up. Either way, you should walk away with complete pictures of your audiences and how (and where) you’ll have the most success talking to them.

Understand the Why Behind Your Audience Behavior

While observing and interacting with audiences in their purchasing environment, you also can experience and understand their barriers, pain points and motivators, both emotional and rational. Emotional motivators include how people react to brand names and colors, while rational indicators include price, quantity and perceived value.

Ask yourself:

  • What draws their attention?
  • What do they want to know more about — i.e., what parts of your product or service do they fixate on?
  • How long do they take to make decisions?
  • What might they interact with instead of your product or service, and what are the differences between that offering and your business’?

Here’s a tip: When you can, meet a potential customer’s searcher intent online, where B2B customers are increasingly likely to conduct research that will inform their purchase decision.

Look for the How

Interacting with your product or service through the eyes of your audience allows you to find other marketing opportunities you might not have dreamed up otherwise. Don’t be afraid to take on a whole new marketing strategy based on your findings. What works for your brand is all about what works for your audience.

Another key part of research is to always be open to hearing criticism about your company, product or service. The most successful companies know how to use feedback, good and bad, from their audience to improve what they have to offer.

By moving beyond what you assume of your target market and building your strategies through experiential field research, you can gain a better understanding of who your audience really is, what you can do to make their buyer journey more efficient, and how you can better serve your customer. If we know anything, it’s that they know best.  

To see other ways we’ve helped our clients reach their audiences, check out our work page.