Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

Understanding a buyer persona means more than knowing their job title and performance metrics. Research their public activity—panels, blogs, LinkedIn—to understand what personally excites and motivates them. This deeper, human-level understanding is a key differentiator in a crowded sales landscape.

Related Insights

Effective identity resolution goes beyond separating consumer and professional personas. True personalization involves linking these identities to market to the 'whole person,' allowing for more contextually relevant messaging, such as targeting a professional with IT products during their personal hobby time (e.g., watching golf).

Stop defining your Ideal Customer Profile with abstract firmographics. Instead, feed context from your best closed-won deals into an AI and ask it to find public data that signaled their specific pain *before* they engaged you. This reverse-engineers a truly effective, data-driven targeting model.

A key litmus test for genuine ABM is moving beyond abstract personas to identifying and targeting specific, named individuals within an account. This focus on real people, not roles, is what drives deep personalization and relationship-building.

In enterprise deals, discovery shouldn't stop at company objectives. Ask your champion about a key stakeholder's personal career goals. Are they newly promoted and need to prove themselves? Are they aiming for their next promotion? Aligning your solution to their personal ambitions creates a much stronger motivation to buy.

Don't just target the same job titles as your best customers. Dig deeper into the buyer's professional history (e.g., a COO with a 20-year sales background). This backstory is often the true indicator of an ideal fit, allowing for more precise and effective targeting.

Instead of general analysis, feed your AI a defined customer persona (e.g., "Growth Gabby") and ask it to evaluate a competitor's website copy from that specific perspective. This uncovers messaging weaknesses that directly relate to your target audience's concerns, like complexity or pricing.

Instead of a generic persona, define your target customer with a 'pull hypothesis': who would be *weird not to buy*? This structured framework forces you to articulate the specific project they're trying to accomplish, why their current options are bad, and why your solution becomes irresistible. It focuses on their demand, not your product's features.

To deeply understand your buyer's world, consume the content they consume. A top AE listened to an M&A industry podcast—not a sales podcast—which gave him the credibility and specific language to engage a senior executive. This builds authentic expertise that generic sales training cannot provide.

For products with multiple use cases, like Salesforce, content must reflect the buyer's specific role. To a Chief Data Officer, Salesforce is an order management tool; to a Head of IT, it's a customer service automation tool. This targeted positioning is crucial for creating effective bottom-of-funnel content.

When you're not a subject matter expert in the audience you're selling to (e.g., marketers selling to developers), the most effective strategy is to rely heavily on your customers. Use qualitative interviews to deeply understand their world, which provides the authentic language and positioning needed for your messaging and campaigns.