“You can’t be all things to all people.” It’s as true with financial services as with any other product. Being an asset manager, you’ve put a lot of hard work into developing a product with a distinct thesis. As appealing as that product is in concept, not every advisor is going to need or want it. There are three possible reasons why an advisor may turn away:
To avoid issue #3, you need to know your target audience. This starts with defining your buyer personas. Buyer personas are representations of your ideal clients and the key to unlocking access to your target RIAs. They are comprehensive portraits that include demographic information, AUM, risk profile, and account minimums. Other basics can include firm size and title/position. But they also go deeper, looking at your the target Advisor's pain points and goals. If you don’t understand what drives your target audience, you will be at a loss on how to reach them and craft messaging that motivates them.
In developing buyer personas, one of the first places to begin is with current clients. Here you want to probe questions from Marketing 101:
It would be extremely unusual that all your RIA targets fit into one neat uniform package. Instead a picture of several personas will develop—each requiring a tailored strategy and messaging.
As we said earlier, your product is not going to be right for every advisor. Who doesn’t invest can be just as insightful as who does. You may find that the issue is the advisors you are targeting. Or it could be that your message isn’t clear or isn’t effective in overcoming objections.
Feedback from your sales team is incredibly valuable but it can also be skewed. One of the best scenes in the movie Moneyball is when the scouts give their reports to Bill Bean. It’s filled with all sorts of preconceived notions—some valid and some laughable. Numbers tell an unbiased story. If you are not looking at the analytics from your website and social media posts, you are missing out on one of the easiest, least expensive, and most objective sources of information about your audience.
Ad agencies and marketers know this extremely well: they create inspiration boards, complete with a name for each persona. By the time you complete the persona profile, you can almost picture this person. If fact, it can be helpful to assign stock images along with the name.
Buyer personas are the embodiment of who is most likely to invest with your firm. Having a deep understanding of who they are, what motivates them, what challenges they face, and what objections they hold gets you closer to reaching out to them and to turning them into a client.