WHO — Understanding people as motivational trajectories, not behavioral states
How to Read This Document
Read the Framework document and the WHY module (Need Architecture) first.
The WHY module identifies the customer needs and motivational territories that exist within the market. The WHO module builds on that foundation by identifying the groups of people who are organized around those needs.
The purpose of this module is to determine which personas represent the most important opportunities today, which emerging personas may drive future growth, and how each group is likely to evolve over time. While the WHY module defines the motivational territories, the WHO module identifies who occupies those territories and how large, valuable, and strategically important they are.
The outputs of this module become key inputs into the WHAT module (Product & Value Proposition Architecture) and the HOW MUCH module (Pricing Architecture).
Consumer Persona
KEY TAKEAWAY
Needs create demand. Personas carry demand
Personas are not simply demographic or behavioral groups. They are groups of people organized around similar motivations, behaviors, and growth trajectories. Persona Architecture identifies who these people are, what motivates them, and how they are likely to evolve over time.
The WHY module identifies how customer needs are evolving. The WHO module identifies which personas are leading that evolution, how quickly the rest of the market is likely to follow, and what that means for future growth opportunities. The ultimate goal is not simply to understand customers, but to create personas that can guide product design, pricing, communication, and customer activation decisions across the organization.
Personas as Demand Carriers
Customer needs create demand, but people express demand. Personas are the human carriers of Motivational Territories. If the WHY module identifies which needs exist in the market, the WHO module identifies the people most likely to act on those needs today and how they are likely to evolve in the future.
Personas are not static customer types. They are behavioral trajectories shaped by motivations, behaviors, and future direction.
Personas as Motivational Trajectories
Traditional segmentation assumes that customer groups are relatively stable. Persona Architecture assumes that people evolve. Personas are therefore defined not only by what they do today, but also by the motivations shaping their future direction.
Understanding where personas are heading is often more valuable than understanding where they are today.
Persona Priority
Persona Architecture recognizes that some personas generate demand today, while others signal where demand is heading tomorrow.
The objective is not simply to identify customer groups, but to prioritize them. Which personas should be protected? Which should be expanded? Which represent emerging opportunities? And which signal future market change?
This shift transforms personas from descriptive research outputs into strategic growth tools.
Building Personas
Persona Architecture combines three dimensions: customer motivation, observed behavior, and future direction.
Dimension 1. Motivational Architecture
KEY TAKEAWAY
This is the key dimension in persona analysis. Personas are defined first by their motivational architecture; behavior and future direction build on top of it.
- Need Domains: which human motivation organizes this persona’s behavior — control, freedom, security, status, belonging, achievement, competence, or others.
- Need Levels: the depth at which that motivation operates — from functional needs to emotional & ecosystem level needs.
- Motivational territory (Need Vector): the combination of a Need Domain and Need Level, along with the expected direction of future need migration.
A few examples of persona Motivational Territories (Need Vectors):
| Persona Example | Motivational Territory | Motivational Character |
|---|---|---|
| Financial Optimizers | Control @ Identity | Financial mastery as part of identity. Likely to migrate toward advisory and stewardship ecosystems. |
| Flexible Explorers | Freedom @ Emotional | Seek freedom from obligation and lock-in. Likely to migrate toward simplicity and portability solutions. |
| Recognition Seekers | Status @ Identity | Financial success as a status signal. Likely to migrate toward premium and exclusive ecosystems. |
| Family Protectors | Security @ Emotional | Security and reliability first. Likely to migrate toward integrated protection solutions. |
| Creator Builders | Self-expression @ Ecosystem | Financial choices as an expression of values and identity. Likely to migrate toward purpose-driven ecosystems. |
Dimension 2. Consumer Behaviour from Sales and Survey Data
Observed behavior grounds personas in what customers actually do, including spending patterns, usage intensity, and category engagement.
Dimension 3. Future Direction
The third dimension identifies where personas are heading and how they are likely to evolve.
- Vertical migration: upward through need levels within the current domain.
- Horizontal migration: across domains — from control toward freedom, from security toward belonging, from competence toward self-expression.
- Niche signals: early indicators of future mainstream demand — both level and domain dimensions.
Persona Profiling: Traditional variables such as demographics, attitudes, life stage, communication preferences are used to profile and describe each persona. These variables help organizations understand who the personas are, but they do not define the personas themselves.
What This Module Helps Organizations Decide
| Question | Business Decision |
|---|---|
| Which personas drive the market today? | Prioritize acquisition, retention, and investment. |
| Which personas represent future growth? | Identify emerging opportunities before competitors. |
| How are personas evolving? | Anticipate changes in demand and customer expectations. |
| Which personas are most valuable? | Allocate resources and growth investments. |
| Which products fit which personas? | Improve product-market fit and targeting. |
| Which pricing models fit which personas? | Improve monetization and adoption. |
| How should each persona be activated? | Design communications, CRM, onboarding, and experiences. |
What This Module Produces
The ultimate purpose of Persona Architecture is deployment. The module produces two key outputs:
- Persona Classification — tools for identifying personas and Motivational Territories at scale.
- Persona Activation — guidance on how to engage each persona through products, pricing, communications, and experiences.
The Two-Layer Persona Architecture
Every market contains two types of personas:
- Mainstream Personas — the groups that drive most demand today.
- Niche Personas — smaller groups that often signal where demand is heading tomorrow.
Most traditional research captures only the mainstream layer. Persona Architecture deliberately identifies both.
| Mainstream Personas — Scale Today | Niche / Weak-Signal Personas — Growth Tomorrow |
|---|---|
| 20–40% of the market each | 5–15% of the market |
| Stable, broad behavioral patterns | Intense, focused behavioral signature |
| Core revenue — optimize and retain | Growth signal — develop and seed |
| Visible in standard analysis | Only detectable through niche engineering methods |
| Incremental evolution within the current Need Vector | Potential migration to a higher level OR a different domain — or both |
| The market as it is | The market as it will be |
Niche personas are not edge cases. They are early indicators of future demand. They reveal two common migration patterns:
- Vertical Migration — movement to a higher Need Level within the same domain.
- Horizontal Migration — movement toward a different Need Domain.
Persona Stability: Some personas are inherently more stable than others. Security-oriented personas tend to be more resistant to change, while freedom-oriented personas are often more willing to explore alternatives. Understanding persona stability helps organizations distinguish between temporary behavioral shifts and long-term demand migration.
Persona Portfolio Management: Not all personas are equally important. Some generate the majority of revenue today, while others represent future growth opportunities. Persona Portfolio Management helps organizations balance investments between defending existing demand and preparing for future demand shifts.
What Makes Persona Architecture Different
Traditional segmentation describes customer groups. Persona Architecture explains what motivates them and where they are heading.
| Standard Segmentation | Persona Architecture |
|---|---|
| Who are the customer groups in this market? | Who are the customer groups, what motivates them, and where are they heading? |
| Describes customers | Explains customer motivations and future direction |
| Focuses on current demand | Identifies both current demand and future growth opportunities |
| Personas as communication targets | Personas as operational tools for products, pricing, CRM, and experiences |
| Point-in-time market view | Dynamic view of evolving customer motivations and demand |
Persona Architecture Toolbox
The WHO module transforms customer understanding into operational tools for growth, activation, innovation, and demand forecasting.
| Deliverable | Description |
|---|---|
| Persona Profiles | Detailed profiles of mainstream and emerging personas, including motivations, behaviors, growth opportunities, barriers, migration pathways, and activation recommendations. |
| Niche Opportunity Map | Identification and prioritization of emerging persona groups that may represent future growth opportunities. Includes assessment of market potential, strategic fit, and likely future evolution. |
| Growth Pathway Simulator | Models how personas are likely to evolve over time, including migration between motivational territories, adjacent opportunities, and future adoption potential. |
| Persona Migration Dashboard | Tracks changes in persona size, composition, motivations, and migration patterns over time, helping organizations monitor evolving market opportunities. |
| Typing Tool & Classifier | The typing tool allows organizations to classify existing and new customers into personas and Motivational Territories using a reduced set of variables. Outputs can be integrated into customer activation strategies, CRM, onboarding journeys, customer research, loyalty programs, and activation systems to support ongoing tracking and personalization |
| Persona / Product Fit Matrix | Evaluates how well products, concepts, or propositions align with each persona. Identifies opportunities for growth, unmet needs, and potential fit gaps. Serves as the primary bridge between the WHO and WHAT modules. |
| Activation Briefs | Practical guidance on how to engage each persona, including key messages, value propositions, channels, triggers, and experience considerations. |
What Success Looks Like
- Actionable personas created
- Growth and niche personas identified
- Persona migration pathways understood