For today’s post, I will explore
the idea of developing and mapping personas in a manner that would most accurately
reflect how people are biased in absorbing and interacting with the world they live in. In this iteration, I will take my friend Cara
and relay to you the essential points of what she thinks, sees, says, hears,
hurts because of, and hopes for in day to day life. In learning to understand her, I hope
to gain insight on how best to understand and empathize with those consumers
with whom I hope build a relationship with as customers in the future.
What does Cara think about most? If I asked her how she felt every 15 minutes,
what would the answer most likely be?
Aside from the answer of being annoyed by hearing the same question
every 15 minutes, the answer provides us insight into the base ideas and emotions
that come from analyzing the elements of information that we absorb from the
world around. This ultimately creates
the ideas and feelings that drive our desires, our actions, our opinions, and
drive us generally as people.
For Cara, the thoughts of family
and friends are ever present. Though it
would be impossible (at this point in history) to know exactly what she thinks
and feels, and I can infer her thoughts and feelings based on recurring events
and ideas in her life. The value she
places on meaningful, emotion heavy social interaction is displayed through her
habits and recurring activities, as she calls each of her family members and close
friends several times a week.
Additionally, the idea of
professional success and ultimately leaving a memorable, positive mark on the
world ring through. The countless hours
spent in the fight against cancer through weekend workdays over several years
shows the importance that this role has in her life. On the other hand, at times her expressed
feelings portray disappointment and angst at a slow moving process. The fact that family and close friends rarely
if ever warrant an aired feeling of disappointment and account for so much of
her time communicate to me that these people ultimately hold the highest place
among her thoughts and feelings. The worry
of not leaving a positive, eternal mark on the world or achieving something
great bleeds through in her time of frustration with work, while also betraying
and communicating her aspiration to achieve something great in an altruistic
fashion.
After breaking down the thoughts
and feelings that drive her, we can much more easily review what she sees…or
moreso, what is placed in front of her.
Day in and day out, she walks the same path to work early in the morning
and later in the evening. She walks
through her apartment, through her lobby, and walks the same walk to work each
day seeing the same buildings and billboards, rarely noticing a change. Though
many things are in front of her, she sees and notices the cars and the
people. When she arrives at work, she
sits down at her computer and commences her workday
.
Moving throughout the lab, the
sights rarely change. A microscope here…a
beaker there…no changing content. In the entirety of her day, and career, the
only things that bring visual change and things that are seen and absorbed
instead of just seen are few. Her
laptop, which always has an internet connection, her phone, which remains connected
to the “virtualverse” as well, and her colleagues, are the primary sources of
new, changing visuals throughout her day at work.
These technological, social
lifelines make her an exemplary case of the world today. She remains connected not through radio and
TV, but through social media where she absorbs idea swaying thoughts, facts, and
opinions. She pipes in music through
digital feeds such as Spotify and Pandora.
Her iPhone serves as her lifeline to her loved ones, and her personal locker
for emotional tidbits, music, photos, and stories. This digital connection makes her similar in
the sense of “see, do, feel” to a large segment of other consumers that no
other aspect of her life can compare to.
A testament to how ignoring the digital revolution can be a costly
mistake, as the music industry so greatly exemplified, and showing how this
constant connection and stream of information will continue to capture and
revolutionize in the future.
Understanding, exploiting, and riding this wave of revolution, as Google
exemplifies, can produce exponential rewards and a place for an untold amount
of time to come.
For Cara, after work, the process
is repeated in reverse as she rejoins society in a more traditional, vice
digital, sense. She departs for the gym later that evening. A few days a week she runs on a treadmill
that is equipped with the option to watch television and movies. Finally, after the gym, she returns home to
see, and examine, what is in the cabinets to cook a meal with. The finally touch of a weeknight is a visual
examination of her emails and the world of social media as it pertains to her.
When the weekend arrives, the
wildcards are in play and what she sees is much more varied and in turn
absorbed. She goes to see movies, and
sees friends at the bar, before seeing the soccer game, but after visiting the
farmers’ market to see what it has to offer.
She visits clothing stores like Aldo and Under Armour, to see if
anything appeals to her. When the weekend
arrives, she fills her time with active, social, or healthy activities that
allow her to visually sample the world around her ina way that appeals to her.
As she is out and about in public,
she remains cordial, polite, and well put together. Maintaining the outward appearance of calm,
collected dignity despite internal circumstances. Though she may be thoroughly conflicted when
considering options in most situations, her decisions are most often
predictable and follow the established pattern.
As she maintains the outward air of
dignity, the constant milling of thoughts inside are fed by those around
her. Most of her friends are
international types of the professional background. They enjoy America, speak science, and
converse about food, clothes, and style in general. Examining the differences between themselves
and the American filled world around becomes a frequent topic of discussion, as
does the utopian idea of finding a place with the best of Europe and America
without its downfalls.
Her bosses vary widely in what they
speak. Some speak on guiding her towards
a life of consummate work towards the next professional goal, working
tirelessly in the lab as if it is the only thing that is important. Others, speak of work as a passion as part of
a healthy balance between work and life allowing one to change the world
professionally and personally while in a
constant state of happiness.
Amidst all of the sources of
information and overall distraction it is easy to see how frustration can
potentially arise. With so much to offer
in the world, and so many potential paths, how does one find happiness? For her, frustration most often arises after
having invested, emotionally and physically, in an endeavor that bears no
fruit. Logically, this feeds into her
ultimate fear of taking the wrong road and investing in the path that breeds
the least happiness per hour of effort.
Luckily for her, the measure of
what makes a successful day and successful activity is simple. Enjoyment, satisfaction, approval, and
recognition. Leaving the gathering of
friends with a smile on her face because of laughs and like ideas shared. Leaving the laboratory with a feeling of
satisfaction because experiment results proved a hypothesis. A comment of admiration or approval from a stranger
on the tasteful outfit or the visible, physical results of a healthy
lifestyle. The feeling of seeing her
name cited as the author of a meaningful paper that one day is attributed as a
meaningful data point that led to the cure to cancer.
All of these show signs of the
benchmarks of her life and the measures of happiness and success. Smiles and enjoyment, satisfaction
professionally and personally with life’s outcomes, approval from those in the
world around her, and acknowledgement of her efforts and successes in making
the world a better place. Ultimately,
many things stand between her and these outcomes but the most important is her
own perception. Being in a good mood or
a bad mood can be the deciding difference in how she perceives the world around
her and how the interactions rate according to her own benchmarks. Perception is everything and a blatantly
important thing to Cara. Just as
understanding how her own perception and her means of interacting with the
world give her the tools to control what she gets out of life, having that
insight communicates to us her wants, needs, and what drives her. This is the very essence of consumer insight.
Hi Carlos - This was interesting to read about Cara. I probably have a pretty good sense of her, but I think that your writing style, while very elegant and sophisticated, is a bit less direct than what I am used to and, therefore, makes Cara's profile a bit opaque for me. I liked that you included images, although I would like to encourage you to use more of them and find some that are more specific and, thus, less generic. I realize that it's difficult to reveal much of someone in one blog, so I get that. Good job, overall.
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