Step-by step persona workshop: A practical sprint for small teams.

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The value of speed and iteration.

Personas are only as useful as the decisions they shape. Too often, they’re treated as static documents – polished once, then forgotten. In reality, personas work best when they are lightweight, adaptable, and regularly refreshed with new insights.

That’s where a workshop approach comes in. A short, structured sprint gives your team a clear, practical way to capture what you already know, test its usefulness, and refine over time. You don’t need expensive research or specialist tools. What matters is speed, collaboration, and the discipline to keep evolving.

 

Step 1: Gather insights.

If you work in a large organisation, you may already have access to rich sources of customer data – detailed analytics, commissioned research, customer satisfaction surveys, or CRM records. These are invaluable and should absolutely feed into persona development.

But if you don’t have access to that level of information, you can still make progress. Scrappy insights, gathered quickly and cheaply, are often enough to build a first draft. These come from the touchpoints you already control:

  • Customer reviews – revealing what people praise, criticise, or repeat.
  • Social media comments and mentions – showing authentic language and recurring themes.
  • Customer service logs or FAQs – frontline teams know what questions come up again and again.
  • Search behaviour – from Google Trends, keyword tools, or your own website search bar.
  • Sales conversations – objections raised during pitches or emails are often more telling than survey responses.
  • Quick polls and surveys – a lightweight LinkedIn poll or Instagram story can surface fast feedback.


The key point:
whether you have access to detailed data or just a handful of customer quotes, there’s always enough to start building. Personas don’t need to be perfect at the first attempt – they need to be useful and alive.

 

Step 2: Spot the patterns.

Once you’ve gathered raw inputs, map them out on a wall, whiteboard, or digital board (Miro, FigJam, Google Docs). Cluster similar themes: convenience, trust, price sensitivity, need for reassurance. Patterns will emerge naturally.

This isn’t about statistical significance. It’s about recognising the issues that come up again and again – clues to what really drives or blocks your audience.

 

Step 3: Build one starter persona.

From these clusters, create a single, clear profile. Give them a name and short backstory to make them relatable, but focus on substance:

  • Goals – what they’re trying to achieve.
  • Pain points – what gets in the way.
  • Motivations – why they choose one option over another.
  • Behaviours – how they research, evaluate, and buy.

 

Keep it simple – one page is enough. A starter persona isn’t meant to be perfect; it’s designed to be useful straight away.

 

Step 4: Test its usefulness.

The quickest way to validate a persona is to use it in a real decision. When drafting copy, approving a campaign, or shaping a product feature, ask:

  • Would this message resonate with our persona?
  • Does it solve their main frustration?
  • Would they choose this over an alternative?

 

If the persona influences your decision, it’s working. If it makes no difference, refine it.

 

Step 5: Refine over time.

Personas are not one-and-done. As you collect more data, update them. Add new pain points, shift priorities, or even split one persona into two if patterns diverge. Treat them as living documents – reviewed regularly, not archived.

 

Quick example.

Weak persona: “Millennial Mary, 25–34, likes social media and coffee.”

Useful persona: “Sophie, 29, project manager. Time-poor, values services that reduce friction, willing to pay extra for convenience, frustrated by delays.”

The second directly informs marketing choices. Instead of promoting “quality coffee,” you’d highlight “coffee ordered ahead and ready to go.”

 

Tools that work for small teams.

You don’t need specialised software. Post-it notes on a wall, a shared Google Doc, or a Miro board are all effective. What matters is accessibility – the persona should be easy for everyone to find, update, and apply in daily decisions.

Takeaway.

A persona created once and forgotten is no better than guesswork. But a persona created quickly, tested in real decisions, and refined over time becomes a living strategy tool.

Small teams don’t need big budgets to make this work. They just need structure, focus, and the discipline to keep personas alive.

Before running a workshop, see why personas remain one of marketing’s most powerful tools, read our article: Personas: Why they still matter in marketing.

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Check you meet all these criteria before applying:

  • You’re aged 19–65 (if self-employed, you can be over 65).
  • You’ve lived in the UK for at least 3 years and can prove your right to work (e.g. passport, visa).
  • You currently live or work  in Derbyshire or Nottinghamshire.
  • You’re either:
    • looking for a job in digital marketing
    • self-employed
    • supported by an employer who will contribute to your place
  • You’re ready to start work as soon as the course ends.
  • You can join live lessons every Wednesday 9:30am-4:30pm.
  • You can commit to around 10 hours of learning each week for 12 weeks.
  • You haven’t joined another Skills Bootcamp in the last 12 months.
  • You’ll attend a 30-minute screening interview.
  • You’re willing to share personal information with MacMartin, the EMCCA and the DfE. We store data securely under GDPR.
  • You’ll provide evidence of your progress, such as proof of an interview, a new job, or an action plan showing how you’ve applied your learning.

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The course has given me a much deeper understanding of the wider marketing landscape. It’s really helped me see how all the different pieces fit together, which in turn has made me feel more confident and capable in my day-to-day work. What I love is how practical the course is – you can take what you’ve learnt and apply it straight away. I’ve already made changes to our business newsletter after a really insightful session on adding value for your audience (shoutout to Jessica for that one!). It’s made me think differently about how and why we communicate with our audience, not just what we’re saying.

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Level 4 CIM student

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