1 / 11

Creating Personas

Creating Personas. What are Personas?. “A social role or a character” Personas help you identify a major user group Created by a process of selecting the characteristics which are most representative of the target group(s). Why Personas?. Create a bridge between disciplines

Download Presentation

Creating Personas

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Creating Personas

  2. What are Personas? “A social role or a character” • Personas help you identify a major user group • Created by a process of selecting the characteristics which are most representative of the target group(s)

  3. Why Personas? • Create a bridge between disciplines • Underpinned by high quality analysis • Accessible to creative professions • Create a consistent reference point for campaign development

  4. Meet ‘Motorway Man’

  5. The Analytical Foundation • 38% of the drivers were female • 64% of the drivers were of working age • 58% of recorded journey purposes were ‘commuting’.

  6. Building on the Analysis • MAST’s Integrated Portraiture • http://mast2.roadsafetyanalysis.org/wiki/ • Mosaic Interactive Guide • http://bit.ly/WxjHxF

  7. Summarising Types

  8. Malik & Dave Malik, Age 26 South Asian, probably Muslim Operator in food processing plant; 2nd job as Taxi driver • Dave, Age 32 • White British • Works in a distribution centre

  9. Malik & Dave • Malik lives with extended family & strong ethno-centric community ties • Malik lives in a cash economy • Spends lots of time on his phone • Dave lives with his partner, Lisa, who works as a carer – she has a son from a previous relationship • Dave spends time away from work watching TV.

  10. Malik & Dave • In a lower socio-economic class, they both find hard to cope on limited income and do their shopping in value supermarkets • Both own cars, though these are older vehicles with high mileage • Predominantly C2, D & E social groupings

  11. Sarah • Is a 37 year old, successful, married, working mother of two. • Sustaining a high mortgage on a nice property, in a time poor but active lifestyle. • Due to her position and ambitions, work can be consuming. • They are a car dependent family, too busy to shift to more sustainable modes • She is a daily internet user, predominantly at work; but also using the internet for product information and shopping.

More Related