Article
Target Audience Interviews: How to Tell the Right Stories to the Right People
Published
Share

We use cookies to improve your browsing experience. .
Article
Published
Share

Social impact organizations naturally measure the success of their activities in terms of impact. That’s certainly true of program work. But it also applies to marketing activities. When it comes to making an impact, your organization’s marketing and communications will only succeed to the extent that you tell the right stories to the right people. And that means understanding who you are speaking to and what matters to them.
To begin, you must develop an understanding of your key audiences. These are the key groups of stakeholders who are impacted or influenced by your organization and cause. Depending on your area of focus, your key audiences might include groups like donors, volunteers, activists, local residents, and clients.
Of course, most organizations have a working understanding of their key audiences. But they often make assumptions about how their constituents perceive their organization and what motivates them. Assumptions like these can set you off on the wrong path in the way you manage your brand and messaging.
Target audience interviews are a critical precursor. They help you understand your core audiences and how best to activate them. In our work with social impact clients, we’ve established these interviews as a key element of our discovery process. The information they surface inevitably shapes our strategy and enables our clients to achieve greater impact.
Target audience interviews are incredibly useful for a number of reasons.
For one thing, they give you a 360-degree view of how your organization is perceived. It’s all too easy for organizations to develop their own ideas about how they are seen by donors, funders, and others in the social impact space. But without the input of external audiences, these impressions are little more than self-perceptions. They may contain kernels of truth, but they aren’t complete.
Target audience interviews allow staffers and representative external stakeholders to offer their perspective on your organization and cause. Together, they give your nonprofit a grounded and well-rounded view of how it is viewed. They also shed light on gaps in awareness.
Second, target audience interviews help you gain a much deeper understanding of the different groups who are impacted by or support your cause. They give you fresh insights into why certain people feel connected to your organization and its cause. In addition, they clarify the values and motivations behind those connections.
Finally, when we conduct these interviews on behalf of nonprofits, they enable us to deliver better, more effective recommendations. Through the interview process, we develop a deep understanding of our clients, how they are perceived, and what’s happening in their space. We get up to speed faster than we otherwise could. This means we come away from the interview process with a clarified perspective about how to proceed with a client’s branding and marketing strategy. In short, target audience interviews translate to stronger strategy and greater impact.
The quality of the feedback you receive in your target audience interviews is directly correlated to the way you approach these important conversations. When we partner with social impact organizations, we take the lead in conducting target audience interviews and formulating takeaways. We've found that the following ingredients are key to getting the most out of target audience interviews.
Target audience interviews have the power to impact an organization’s entire brand strategy. In order to fully leverage the interviews, you must first plumb the responses for key insights.
When we work with clients to analyze their target audience interviews, we ask the following questions:
These questions (and others like them) enable us to draw out useful observations that go on to inform the entire strategic process from branding to messaging.
Target audience interviews are an indispensable source of valuable information for your nonprofit. Want to learn more about how they can help you refine your brand and marketing strategy? We'd love to talk.
Article