You’ve probably heard it a million times: your brand needs to know its audience to grow. To do this, you need to understand your target audience so you can tailor your marketing efforts to them.
But how do you identify your ideal audience?
The key is to understand who they are and what problems they want to solve so that you can create marketing for your products and services that speaks directly to their needs.
This blog post will give you six methods for identifying your ideal audience and making sure your marketing efforts are tailored to them in the future.
What is an ideal or target audience?
People make emotional decisions to improve their lives. They spend their money on problems that need solutions. You have an excellent product or service ready to provide their desired solution.
Let’s start with who your target audience is.
Your ideal or target audience will often consist of people who are strongly aligned with your brand values, have similar goals and interests as you, and desire the benefits your product or service offers them. This group isn’t going to stay static but will constantly evolve and change as they go through different phases of life and life events.
You must stay present and aware of their needs and concerns to attract them to your business offering and entice them to buy, subscribe to a newsletter, or contact you for services.
Why does defining your target audience matter?
Before any strokes of a digital pen hit the webpage, designs are finalized in a marketing campaign, copy is written for a Google ad, or content is created for your website. You need to know your audience.
Defining your audience is arguably the most valuable step in the entire process of marketing.
Why?
Knowing your audience first allows you to mold and share your story in a way that resonates and inspires the viewer to take action. Your goal any time you create marketing material is to speak directly to the needs and interests of the viewer and guide them through the next steps of your product or service.
If you don’t know who your target audience is, you’re making the mistake of marketing to everyone. While this may get you the reach you need, it will also lead to a large percentage of your reach never paying attention to your efforts and wasting time or money.
As growth partners in the web-building space, we’ve seen what happens to websites that lack a target:
- Visitors spend less time on a website and are prone to leaving quickly.
- Visitors get confused as to how they can use your product or service.
- The words on the webpage are not nearly as powerful as they could be because you are trying to talk to too many people simultaneously.
- The lack of clarity often plays itself out in organizing your site’s contents.
This can be a frustrating ordeal.
If you have not dived headfirst into narrowing down your audience, you are in for an awakening. It can take a couple of weeks to write down ideas, let them simmer, and then come back to refine, refine, refine.
You’ll have to find the right questions to ask yourself to help you further narrow the audience scope. It can feel unproductive—all this thinking and planning without initial action. It’s contrary to the “results now” mentality we often have.
We would argue you are doing something wrong if you aren’t feeling frustrated. It’s a considerable amount of work.
We’ve walked through this ourselves.
We experienced the same predicament with Magnified Web. Based on our marketing background, we wanted to launch a new website as soon as possible to start lead generation. Still, we realized that we couldn’t magically bypass this pivotal step.
We had to press in and force ourselves to define our target audience. Hopefully, the ideas below will help you do the same.
How do you identify individuals who will appreciate what you do?
Alright, let’s get into the meat of it, shall we? There are several ways to find people likely to love what you do and become your ideal audience.
1. Start with your current customers
Don’t overlook them. These individuals directly fall in line with needing what your business offers and benefit from your business solutions, helping them achieve their goals and interests.
Create Personas of Your Top 3 Customers
Think of the top three customers that you currently have. These can be the top buyers or even just the ones you like to work with the most (we went with the customers we enjoy the most). Create a persona for each person by making a list of these questions and answering them for each of those three people:
- What problems do they have that you solve?
- How does your product or service make their life better?
- What does success look like for your customer(s) when they buy your product or work with you?
- What’s their age and gender?
- What do they do for work?
- What kind of lives do they live outside of work?
- Do they have hobbies?
- What is their outlook on life and family?
- Do they have family, or are they single and braving the world on their own?
- Why are they one of your top 3?
Answering these questions will allow you to understand who they are and why they may be interested in your products and services.
Ask your customers
Ask them, yes, directly, why they are interested in your business. What brought you to buy from our business? What problems did we solve? What keeps you coming back? Why did you choose our business over anyone else? How did our product or service improve your life?
2. Think benefits, not features
This is a little game of reverse engineering.
You have a product or a service and know its features like the back of your hand. You believe that once people understand those features, they will love your product but don’t seem to get it for some reason. This is because consumers don’t care what features you have to offer, they only care about how it will solve their problem and improve their life or work.
What exactly does your product or service do to solve your customers’ problems and help them achieve their goals? What kind of individuals need those benefits? Who needs those benefits the most and will find success when they use your product or service?
That’s your audience.
3. Research your competitors
There is no time more appropriate to do competitive research than right now. You’re already interested in the market, so dive deeper into your competitors and learn about them. You can do this by
- Reading their websites
- Visiting their social media and reading the comments they receive
- Viewing the social media profiles of those who follow and interact with them
- Reading reviews and comments they receive on review websites
Ask yourself these questions when comparing:
- What do you think your competitors are doing right?
- What do you think your competitors are doing wrong?
- What problems do you solve that they do not and visa versa?
- How are you different?
- What is unique about you, your business, services, products, programs, background, or even how you work?
These things will help you understand your competitors and give you an idea of their ideal audience. Knowing who your competitors are and who they market to will help you better understand your own target audience.
4. Frequently, your target audience is a previous version of yourself.
While we were rebranding and rethinking our service offering here at Magnified Web, my partner and I brainstormed about what problems we would solve, the kind of client we would want to work with, and the type of website that clients would bring with them.
As we created three personas each, we found that they all seemed to be past versions of ourselves. They were people who were having the same problems that we were once riddled with. They were people who had the same outlook on their future and business.
Do you remember what made you excited and fueled your passion? What was it that you wanted? Why did you start your business? What problem were you trying to solve for yourself?
To add to this point, think about your favorite musician. Why do you like their music so much? It’s probably because you can relate to the music. You can remember being in similar positions or having similar emotions that the artists allude to in their songs. There’s no better customer than yourself.
5. What frustrates you?
To the last point, another way to find your ideal audience is to think about what frustrates you in your daily life.
What are the things that consistently annoy you and cause you frustration? Your product or service probably solves some of those frustrations, right?
So, who are the types of people who share your frustrations?
6. Your ideal audience may not be your only audience
We know! We stressed how important it was for you to understand your target audience, and while this is important, they may not be the only audience that will resonate with you.
You need to consider that multiple groups of people may be interested in your brand, products, and services. This lends itself to opportunity.
You can focus on these different audiences by creating different marketing campaigns and messages for each group. While your ideal audience is the group you want to focus on most, it’s important to remember that other audiences may be interested in your business.