Behavioral segmentation might be a challenge even when it’s based upon an already existing classification. Let alone creating your own. To spare you time and effort, UXPressia provides a special means — personalities for Personas.
Read on to learn more about personality types and how this functionality works in UXPressia.
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To put it shortly, it’s a combination of traits determining one’s behavior, mindset, emotions, and motivations. Each type has unique qualities and shortcomings, strengths and challenges. Each gives a new angle to look from.
The same Persona, depending on their personality type, thinks and behaves differently. Just one variable fundamentally affects their needs, pains, goals, and emotional experience. Consequently, your ideas and opportunities for improving user/customer experience will vary too. Of course, assigning Personality is optional, but it’s a good opportunity to take a different approach and see some things you probably never noticed before. Sometimes, it may lead to a completely different strategy, such as repurposing social media content, tweaking video marketing campaign plans, or enhancing the customer care system.
In our tool, we use the personality types defined by Dr. David Keirsey. You can check the primary source to get the fullest possible information. There are many other typologies, from Myers-Briggs Type Indicator to Socionics, but Keirsey’s classification is more insightful for design purposes and easier to grasp. It’s general enough to reveal representative patterns and detailed enough to go deeper if need be.
So, here are the types of personality to investigate and recognize your customers in. It’s the Rational, the Artisan, the Guardian, and the Idealist.
Now let's have a closer look at each type.
“I want my family to have anything they need, but I'm also realistic. In two years, our older daughter will go off to college. It's not the best time to buy a second car, and we have a one-car garage while winters are snowy and cold. All in all, carsharing is a true blessing.”
Key features:
“I stumbled upon this app and was immediately hooked. Short and funny descriptions, tons of pics, reviews, promo videos, a user-friendly interface, quick customer service responses… I came, I saw, I rented.”
Key features:
“Transport-related air pollution is a serious problem. But driving a car enables me to find new homes for shelter animals. That is when the ends justify the means.”
Key features:
“Driving carsharing enables me to move wherever I want and change directions whenever I want. I like to be independent and on my own.”
Key features:
One way is to compare how users or customers describe their experience to the key features we listed above.
Not all patterns within a type must match your Persona’s behavior to define its personality. Also, mind your domain. Some people are pragmatic when it comes to major expenditures but spend like a drunken sailor on the simpler pleasures of life. Such a Persona can be Rational for a realtor and Artisan for a coffee shop owner.
Too complicated? Take a shortcut.
Answer two simple questions:
1. Does your Persona act fast or take time to read reviews, compare prices, and think everything over?
2. Is your Persona guided by feelings or facts?
Impulsive and emotional people belong to Artisans. Idealists are cautious and empathetic. Quick and logical Personas fall into the Rational type. Finally, those who are factual and concerned can be called Guardians.
We also left some clues in the Personality/Type window. Point to a type to summon it.
If you deal with a lack of resources, create Personas only within the most common personality types in the world — the Guardians and the Artisans. Thus you’d cover almost 80% of your current and potential audience. Yet, it wouldn’t work for specific industries, businesses, and companies. Producing vegan goods, don’t neglect the Idealists. Running a high-tech start-up, don’t dismiss the Rationals.
Once the Personas and the personality types are matched, you have a unique perspective on what’s to be done.
For example, to win Rationals over, give them the most effective solution. Provide tools to compare and see actual benefits. Don’t be too pushy, stimulate their curiosity instead. Your service should save them time for more pressing matters to do. Choose a simple, clean design, automate the processes, minimize personal contact. Sell features and challenges.
Artisans are eager for handy services and appealing products. Everything needs to be visual. Use different high-quality images with short descriptions and clear calls to action. The fewer steps, literally or figuratively, the purchase away, the better. Build hype and stories around your business. Sell experiences and impressions instead of practical utility. Be friendly, funny, and fast. Awake their senses to seal the deal.
Guardians must be provided with detailed information about your goods and services to compare alternatives. Keep the data easy to follow and true to fact. Develop their trust by showing you are a decent person, your product is safe to use, and your service is quite reliable. Protect your reputation, make guarantees, and sell quality. Be polite, honest, and keep your word. Give a reason to take your offer.
Everything you present to your customers must be easy to use and as simplistic as possible. For instance, invoices are often overlooked, and it can take time to plan the perfect ones. However, there are many templates you can choose from that could please your customers.
Idealists want your product or service to be trustworthy. Make sure your company’s values are in line with theirs. Launch impactful social campaigns to promote your business. Show how it helps other people or changes the world. Sell dreams, promises, and inspiration. Forget the bots, embrace personal communications. Be concerned, lend your shoulder, lead by example. Sow motivation, reap happy customers, users, and partners.
All such insights can be turned into helpful tips to enter in the description field of your Persona’s type. To see them, hover a cursor over the lightbulb icon.
If you have other persona types in use, feel free to add them here:
This functionality is also good to distinguish between buyer/user or internal/external personas, or use whatever grouping makes sense in your particular case.
A personality type is not a mandatory step. It’s rather an extra dimension to put your Persona in. Defining a personality gives you a new perspective to consider user or client experience from. In the UXPressia’s Personas Tool, you’re free to use the default typology or bring and insert your own.
We hope building personas in the frame of personality type will hit a whole new mapping level for you. Don’t hesitate to try our tool and get valuable insights into your customer and user experiences.