Buyer Persona

How is a Buyer Persona created?


Personas are fictional representations of ideal customers based upon real data of demographics and online behavior, along with educated speculation about their personal histories, motivations and concerns.

The strongest buyer personas are based on market research as well as on insights you gather from your actual customer base (through surveys, interviews, etc.). Depending on your business, you could have as few as one or two personas, or as many as 10 or 20. (Note: If you’re new to personas, start small! You can always develop more personas later if needed.)

Here is a template of Buyer Persona of a CIO:                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 


 
Enterprise
Mid-Market
 Key Titles
Chief Information Officer
SVP of IT, VP of IT (highest level IT executive in a company /division)
CTO (some common interests with CIO)
       SVP of Technology
        SVP Business Technology
  VP of Technology
  IT Director (as highest IT role)
Role of Buyer
The most senior decision maker for the IT organization; final approver for majority of IT expenditures.
Control 65% of company’s IT spend (CIO Magazine’s “State of the CIO 2014”).
Challenges
Create business value
Provide agility and drive innovation with IT
Reduce IT costs and improve business efficiency
Deliver “IT as a Service” - position internal IT as preferred service provider; rapid delivery of IT as a consumable, optimized service
Attract, retain and develop IT talent
       Maintaining/ transforming legacy apps
  Reduce costs focus; greater % report to CFO
 Trend to move faster to cloud/outsource IT staff
Buying Center
Corporate (44% of CIOs report to the CEO) and Finance (18% report to the CFO) per CIO Magazine’s “State of the CIO 2014 “report
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Daily Responsibilities
Drive innovation - identify opportunities for competitive differentiation and develop a culture of innovation within IT and the business
Align IT initiatives with business goals; cultivate partnerships between IT and business
Improve IT operations/control costs; manage system/architecture decisions, manage crises
Technology Coherence – make sure new technologies, applications, and other assets fit. Understand with business architectures and infrastructures
Business Continuity – establish predictable, high service levels and always-on IT services
Provide and validate technology vision and direction to the IT  organization, business stakeholders, end-users, customers, partners and vendors
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Content Preference
        Business Publications (e.g., WSJ, Economist, Forbes); Peer Research, (CIO/CXO assoc and events); Executive Summary Reports; increasing exposure to multi-media/social networking
       Social media use by staff
       More likely to use social media
Watering Holes
Industry Groups; Analyst Summits; Partner/Vendor/3rd party CIO events
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