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Writer's pictureDan Bentley

How Using Personas Can Help You Better Understand The Needs Of Your Clients


When it comes to delivering the best possible outcomes for your clients, understanding their needs is important. But people are complex and there are often so many data points, so how do you make sense of that so you will know what will resonate with them? That's where personas come in.


In this article, we'll explore how creating fictional representations of your clients can organise data and insights into clear, relatable profiles that make it easier to empathise with the people you support.


What Are Personas?


Personas are fictional representations of your real-life clients or customers. They help you organise and make sense of all the data and information you have about the different people you work with.


Think of personas as shopping bags, you've got all these individual items - your clients and their unique needs - and personas allow you to group the similar ones together into manageable 'bags' that are easier to carry and understand.


Rather than getting bogged down in endless data points, personas give you a clear, relatable way to empathise with your clients' experiences. You might create a persona called "Gary" who represents a certain segment of your client base, complete with details about his demographics, behaviours, pain points, and goals.


The Benefits of Using Personas


So why go to the effort of creating these made-up characters? Personas help you better empathise and consider the needs of your clients. They can inform your decision-making, help you understand different experiences, and educate your whole workforce about the diverse needs you're trying to address.


Essentially, personas make it easier to put yourself in your clients' shoes. When you're designing a new program or service, you can ask yourself, "How would this affect someone like Gary?" rather than just looking at the data.


Personas are useful not just for understanding clients, but for other stakeholders too. You might create donor personas, employee personas, or personas for any group you need to deeply understand.


Building Effective Personas


How do you actually go about creating these personas? I recommend starting with the information you already have - demographic data, feedback, and any empathy mapping you've done.


Empathy mapping is a powerful tool that gets you thinking from the client's perspective. You explore what they're thinking and feeling, what they're seeing and hearing, and what their key pain points and goals are. This empathy-driven data is gold when building out your personas.


Once you've gathered this rich information, you can start to synthesise it into distinct persona profiles. Just remember to keep them simple and manageable - no more than 5 or 6 key personas, rather than trying to capture every possible client segment.


Bringing Personas to Life


The real magic happens when you start actively using your personas, rather than just filing them away. Many organisations make the mistake of just emailing them out and expecting people to know what to do.


The best way is to talk about the personas as a team, get people exploring them, and have those valuable conversations about how you'd deal with a 'Gary' client differently. Personas should also become embedded in your everyday language and decision-making processes. When proposing a new idea, for example, you might ask, "How would this work for our 'Sarah' persona?"


It's also crucial to keep updating your personas over time. As you learn more about your clients and their contexts change, your personas need to evolve too. Otherwise, you risk designing solutions that no longer fit their needs.



Personas might seem like a lot of work upfront, but the payoff is huge. By truly understanding the diverse needs of the people you serve, you can design more impactful solutions and make a bigger difference. So why not give personas a try? 


🎯 Ready to break the cycle of overwhelm and say “no more” to the constant fight for survival?


A high-performing, productive organisation with exceptional staff retention and client experiences is possible.


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