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Drill down to the underlying fear

As an example, let‘s look back to Athletic Andy. He’s a conscious consumer who cares about the environment, which is positive — but I also know for a fact that Andy hates greenwashing.

Greenwashing is a type of misleading marketing where companies try to portray themselves as being more environmentally friendly than they really are. In a targeted campaign, you could speak to this negative emotion that Andy has by explicitly saying, “No greenwashing here — look for yourself.”

Donald Miller, founder of StoryBrand, has said on his podcasts that fear in marketing is a lot like salt in baking — it shouldn’t be the predominant flavor, but every recipe should have a little.

In order to speak to your audience‘s fears, you need to understand them. If I look at Nervous Natalie, I know that she’s afraid of being inexperienced. As a reaction to this, she’s researching heavily to feel empowered and prepared.

One of Nervous Natalie‘s biggest concerns is finding the best way to walk her Camino de Santiago. Rather than telling her what time of the year I think is best, I’ve gathered the data to empower her to make a decision for herself.

I chose the metrics that are most important (precipration, temperature, number of pilgrims, and daylight hours). I then organized them in a guide called the Best Time To Walk The Portuguese Camino? [Data + Tips].

I could’ve just told Nervous Natalie that I think spring is the ideal time to walk, but then she wouldn’t have empowered her to feel like she can overcome her fears.

 

Use their lingo.

A single story can be told to ten groups of people using ten completely different sets of vocabulary. Marketers need to pick the right vocab — tailoring the copy to obvious factors like location and generation, as well as sneaky factors like individual platforms.

Case and point: When I open up TikTok, I feel like people are speaking a different language. Creators on the platform speak and act in a way that’s different from Instagram or Facebook reels.

Before investing your time, you need to do some audience analysis to make sure you’re speaking the same language as them. This leads directly to the next best practice: testing.

Consider a focus group.

The worst-case scenario for your profile is that it gets your audience wrong. The only solution? Asking.

A focus group is ideal, but if an entire focus group is too big of a task for your campaign, then run it by a few individuals. If you‘re like me, you’ll be surprised by the feedback you get.

I wrote an article for my new niche site on israel telegram data senior pilgrims walking the Portuguese Camino. My mom matches the profile, so I asked her to read it. I didn’t anticipate her feedback! She negatively reacted to the term “older pilgrim,” clearly favoring the term “senior” or “retiree.” I thought “older” was a polite term, but thank goodness I asked. A focus group survey would tell me how widespread this is.

Choose platforms carefully.

Imagine seeing free cheese samples randomly sitting out next to a bus stop. Would you take one? I hope not. But if you saw the exact same free cheese samples in the grocery store, you’d be making a beeline (same).

When marketing efforts feel out of place, we trust them less. While you might have a brilliant idea for your audience on TikTok, you can‘t automatically apply it to LinkedIn, even if it’s the SAME audience. Choose your platform and message very carefully to establish trust.

Allow your persona to evolve.

What do Marketing Maria, Athletic what are the performance evaluation models most used in brazilian companies? Andy, and Nervous Natalie all have in common? The real people behind the personas are changing every day, and your profile needs to change with them.

Consumer interests, platforms, and it cell number trends are all evolving constantly. In fact, most marketers agree that the industry is changing more rapidly than ever before. This means that our profiles can never be chiseled into pixels.

You can track analytics right within the HubSpot Marketing Hub. With these insights, you can continue to refine your campaigns and tweak your audience profile to fit shifting interests.

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