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Redefining Personas

posted by Soccer Science
Sunday, November 22, 2009 at 7:14pm EST

A look at the soccer world from the personal perspective of Amanda Vandervort, a former college coach and fan of professional soccer, with an emphasis on the technologies that are revolutionizing the way we see the beautiful game.

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Redefining Personas

In the past week, I’ve spoken with two national organizations about to their social media strategies. The beauty of helping others is certainly two-fold. First of course, it’s awesome to see companies and people that you care about succeed, but also that you end up learning so much more about yourself in the process. This blog post was borne out of those two conversations.

We’ll take a look at how personas are currently defined in the online space. Then, we’ll look at a new and broader approach to defining the term.

Personas: Defined

Persona is a term given to describe the versions of self that all individuals possess.

Behaviors are selected according to the desired impression an individual wishes to create when interacting with other people. Therefore, personae presented to other people vary according to the social environment the person is engaged in, in particular the persona presented before others will differ from the persona an individual will present when he/she happens to be alone.

Let’s consider this definition of persona in the context of online social media. Both companies and humans can create multiple versions of their identity by posting profiles on various sites. For example, my Facebook profile is a place where I can communicate and interact informally with my friends and join silly groups just for fun. However, my LinkedIn profile is where I manage my networking relationships and collaborate with other Soccer and Social Media Marketing professionals. As an organization, Women’s Professional Soccer uses Facebook and Twitter to engage in conversation with our fans, share information about our league and provide a national platform for our teams to leverage, but we use Delicious to post links to external news sites and embed a live RSS onto the website. Those are just a couple examples of the ways we can use social media to create unique personas, by this definition.

It’s important to take a strategic look at which personas to develop as part of you or your company’s social media plan. There are about a zillion posts online about this topic, so instead of beating a dead horse, here are a few of my favorites:

Personas: Redefined

The Persona MachineAs we enter the new age on information sharing (*cough* Web 3.0), I think we should really reconsider how we define the term persona.

We shouldn’t think of an individual or corporation’s various social media profiles as separate personas, but instead as one living, breathing, changing, engaging character. A persona, therefore, includes multiple social media personalities, and combines them with whatever other online presence that user has, to create the complete picture of who/what that individual or corporation is. Keep in mind that the term persona can describe either a person or a company. (Subsequent posts will build on this idea.)

For example, Amanda Vandervort is my persona. I have multiple personalities (haha, get it?!) online which include each of my social outlets including Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, MySpace, Delicious, Fan Corner, YouTube, Digg and Flickr. I may act or communicate differently in each of these spaces, but they’re still all part of what makes me… well, “Amanda”. Women’s Professional Soccer has Fan Corner, Facebook, Twitter, Delicious, and YouTube profiles, and WPS is essentially a confluence of them all. No two profiles or social personalities of one persona are mutually exclusive – instead they should all be considered part of a greater persona.

Personas extend beyond the social sphere to include any and all websites that are owned and operated by the person or company. A person or company’s online presence is often (read: should be) clearly defined by their site or blog, and the central place where all the moving parts converge. Hence, AmandaVandervort.com is the central hub of my Amanda Vandervort persona, womensprosoccer.com is the central hub of the WPS persona, and if you look closely at either of these sites, you’ll notice a tremendous amount of social integration at the root level.

The Takeaway

A persona is more than your brand identity online. It’s more than your social media marketing campaign, and more than your website. It’s everything you are as a person or a company, honestly represented through multiple channels online. And remember, personas are not static, they change and grow just as you and your company do.

View Original Post at amandavandervort.com

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There are 2 comments on this post. Join the discussion!


Q McCall
Great post Amanda! Much food for thought.

One thing I wonder about is that although "personas are not static", people will often perceive them as static (e.g. early impressions will be lasting and hard to overcome).

For example, a basketball player like Ron Artest (or Stephen Jackson, for that matter) will never live down what he did during that fight in Detroit. And if you indulge me in a political analogy, politicians of all affiliations are often defined by words and actions from decades prior to a campaign (McCain, Obama, and Kerry all come to mind as people who had to deal with past acts/words that were only loosely relevant to their abilities as leaders).

So I say all that to say, is there an attribute to social media that makes it possible to actually avoid being seen as static and be more novel? How can public figures or athletes use social media in ways that help them avoid being seen as static? Or are these questions altogether irrelevant? :)
Sunday, November 22, 2009 at 7:35pm EST

vandey01
Thanks Q! In the online world and social media context, I do think we mirror who we are in real life in many ways. Just as certain people you mentioned may struggle to redefine their perceptions in the sports world or political world, its still the same world, just viewed through a different medium.

One particular beauty, which you bring up here, is that you may become more novel, or less-static. I think that can be true, as one can communicate their honest message, with more frequency, in a personal way. And, if they market their message correctly and engage in dialogue online, perhaps they can tip the scales in their favor. However, I really don't think the Internet is the sole medium to completely redefine your public perception, it's just one piece of a larger PR strategy.
Monday, November 23, 2009 at 1:39pm EST

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