Why Milanote built 20+ persona-based homepages. [Listen Online]( | [Read Online]( Choose Your Homepage Why Milanote built 20+ persona-based homepages. [Nicolás Cerdeira]( [like]( [fb]( [fb]( [fb]( [fb](mailto:?subject=Post%20from%20Failory&body=Choose%20Your%20Homepage%3A%20Why%20Milanote%20built%2020%2B%20persona-based%20homepages.%0A%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fnewsletter.failory.com%2Fp%2Fchoose-homepage) Hey â itâs Nico. This is Behind Tactics ð§ , the Failory newsletter where I share the strategies behind the best startups. In this issue: - [Milanote]( is using a persona-based strategy to personalize their website copy. - This approach directs users to specific landing pages tailored to their needs and roles. - By guiding visitors to segment themselves, Milanote improves user engagement and conversion rates. - The strategy provides valuable insights into customer behavior, helping refine both marketing and product development. Letâs get into it! Presented by FundraisingOS Get Failoryâs Fundraising OS for $97 $297 90% of startups fail because they run out of cash. Fundraising is hard and a challenge all founders face. This is why [Iâve built Fundraising OS](, which has everything you need to raise funding for your startup. This includes: - 5 lists of 3,500+ investors. - 7 tools for tracking and talking with investors. - 18 templates for different emails to investors. - 3 learning resources. And as a thank you for being a Failory subscriber, Iâm giving you a 67% discount. [Buy It Now For $97 ð]( The Strategy Choose Your Own Adventure When you're marketing a product that appeals to a wide range of customers, it can be tricky to craft a website copy that speaks to everyone. A one-size-fits-all approach often falls short because different types of customers care about different things. This is especially true for companies like [Milanote](, a visual tool used for organizing ideas and projects into boards. Milanoteâs user base is incredibly diverse: everyone from filmmakers to game designers to photographers use the platform for their own unique reasons. So, how does Milanote manage to speak directly to each type of user without overwhelming their website with too much information? The answer lies in their smart approach to website copy. Milanote doesnât just create one homepage that tries to cover everything. Instead, they offer a âchoose your own adventureâ experience, where users can select the persona that best matches their needs. This way, when a visitor lands on their site, theyâre not given a generic sales pitch. Instead, they're prompted to find out how people like them use Milanote, and from there, theyâre taken to a sales page thatâs tailor-made for their specific role or industry. Milanoteâs 20 Homepages At the heart of this strategy is Milanoteâs clever use of their navigation bar. Right on their homepage, youâll see a button that says "How People Use Milanote." When you click on it, a dropdown menu with over 20 different options appears. Whether youâre a filmmaker, a graphic designer, or a photographer, thereâs a page specifically designed for you. Each page features its own layout, images, and copy that highlights how Milanote can solve problems unique to that profession. For example, filmmakers are shown how they can use Milanote for storyboarding, pre-production planning, and visual brainstorming. The images and examples are all tailored to filmmaking, making the pitch feel personalized and relevant. For a photographer, the messaging shifts to focus on mood boards and visual project planning, showing how Milanote can help them pull together a cohesive aesthetic for a photoshoot. By offering specific pages for each persona, Milanote ensures that their product feels custom-made for whoever is visiting. Instead of drowning users in a sea of features, they guide them toward the ones that matter most for their profession. Milanoteâs strategy works because it helps convert more visitors into paying customers. When users can see exactly how a product fits into their specific workflow, theyâre more likely to see its value and, ultimately, make a purchase. Itâs much easier to convince a filmmaker to sign up for Milanote when theyâre shown a pre-production storyboard than when theyâre bombarded with features that might only apply to a graphic designer. Itâs also a powerful tool for understanding their audience better. As more users select their persona and explore the tailored pages, Milanote can gather valuable insights into how different groups are using their product. This helps them not only market more effectively but also refine their product to better suit the needs of their core customers. Should I? Why This Works - Converts better: Personalized experiences resonate more with users because they see how the product fits their specific needs. When potential customers feel like a solution is tailored for them, they are more likely to engage, leading to higher conversion rates. - Builds a better understanding of your audience: As users select their personas, Milanote gains valuable insights into their customer base. This data can help refine marketing strategies and even influence product development to better address the needs and pain points of different user segments. - Enhances user experience: By offering relevant, targeted content, Milanote simplifies the decision-making process for visitors. Users donât have to sift through irrelevant informationâtheyâre immediately shown how Milanote can solve their unique challenges, which improves overall satisfaction and engagement. - Minimizes information overload: Trying to appeal to everyone on a single homepage can lead to clutter and confusion. By segmenting users and providing persona-specific content, Milanote avoids overwhelming visitors with too many features, instead focusing on what's most important to each type of customer. How to Apply It - Donât make it optional: Make sure users are guided to select the persona that matches their needs early in their visit. Use clear, engaging prompts that encourage visitors to self-segment. This helps ensure they immediately find the most relevant content, improving their experience and your chances of conversion. - Use data from your personas to shape your product: As customers self-segment, collect data on how different personas interact with your site. Use this information to understand which features are most important to each group and prioritize product development based on those insights. This will help you build a product that truly fits the needs of your audience. - Test different messaging and visuals for each persona: Donât just change the wordsâtailor the entire experience, from the visuals to the tone of your copy. A filmmaker and a graphic designer might both use your tool, but they will resonate with different imagery and messaging. A/B test different versions of these persona-specific pages to see what drives the most engagement and conversions. - Avoid spreading yourself too thin: While itâs tempting to create a page for every possible user type, start with your core personas. Focus on refining the copy and design for a few key segments before expanding. This ensures that each page delivers high-quality content that truly speaks to its intended audience. - Leverage persona-specific pages for marketing campaigns: Use these tailored landing pages as destinations for targeted marketing efforts. For example, if you're running ads aimed at filmmakers, send them directly to the filmmaker-specific page on your site. This ensures your ad clicks lead to a more relevant and personalized experience, improving the chances of conversion. Yes, But - Time-consuming to set up: Creating tailored landing pages for each persona takes time and effort. Youâll need to design unique layouts, craft specific messaging, and choose relevant visuals for each user type, which can be a resource-heavy processâespecially for smaller teams or startups with limited capacity. - Risk of overwhelming your audience: While personalization is great, too many options can confuse or overwhelm visitors. If users have to sift through a long list of personas to find their match, they may get frustrated and leave. Keeping the process simple and intuitive is crucial to avoid losing potential customers. - Maintaining and updating multiple pages: As your product evolves, youâll need to update each persona-specific page regularly to ensure the information stays accurate and relevant. This can create ongoing maintenance challenges, especially as your product grows and you add new personas to the mix. - Not all users fit neatly into a persona: Some customers may not see themselves fully represented in the personas youâve created, which could make them feel alienated. If users canât identify with any of the options, they might disengage or feel that your product isnât for them. Keep Learning Others Playing It This choose-your-own-adventure style of website navigation isnât unique to Milanote. Other companies, like [Clipt](, are adopting similar strategies. As soon as you enter Cliptâs homepage, you're greeted with illustrations representing all of Cliptâs personas, allowing you to choose the one that best matches your needs. Refer Failory, Get Rewards Share Failory Chances are you have some more friends who would enjoy Failory as much as you do. Share Failory with these friends and cash in on premium resources and swag. You currently have 0 referrals, only 1 away from receiving my Pitch Deck Airtable. [Share Failory â]( Or copy and paste this link to others: Help Me Improve Failory How Was Today's Newsletter? If this issue was a startup, how would you rate it? [ð Launches to the moon!](
[ð¤ Room for a pivot](
[ð Crashes and burns]( Thatâs all for this edition. Cheers, Nico Update your email preferences or unsubscribe [here]( © 2024 Failory 1309 Coffeen Avenue
Ste 1200, Sheridan, Wyoming 82801, United States of America [[beehiiv logo]Powered by beehiiv](
[Terms of Service](