5 things to consider when building a member portal
by Nadia Lupton
We previously discussed why it’s important to create user personas in the process of building your brand and / or design strategy. In a nutshell, the creation of different identities that cover all your potential target audiences, allows you to more thoroughly test and strengthen your design… But how are they created and what should they include?
Your brand research should give light to how many personas you will need to create by broadly giving you the different audiences you either already or would like to speak to. In my previous example of a website that sells hats for dogs, these were: individuals, wholesale resellers (pet shops and groomers) and low scale manufacturers (Etsy-type sellers).
From here you can start off easy. For each segment consider a typical answer for that person’s:
This basic profile is now the representative of your segment, who you can also add a name to if you like. Everyone loves a Geoff so here he is:
From here, slip into Geoff’s shoes for a moment and consider his goals and barriers when it comes to his interaction with a product or service like yours.
We recommend creating personas with others in your team to keep you on track and stop the trap of projecting your own thoughts onto Geoff. The more valid points you can list, the fuller the picture you’ll be able to build of why your audience would or wouldn’t want to engage with you, which then become important considerations throughout all parts of your brand building: from positioning, to tone of voice, to packaging, to website — every strand and execution.
So what about Geoff?
From the above you get the drift — when fully fleshed out, user personas give you important and practical considerations for your brief, and should be used to test your strategy throughout all decision making to ensure you always have your audience’s needs front of mind.