Training a persona on your tone, offers, and context

Written By Simon from Replaiy

Last updated 19 days ago

Training is where your persona becomes useful. The better the input, the more natural and effective the output tends to be.

If your persona sounds too generic, too aggressive, or not like you, the training setup usually needs to be improved.

What to include in persona training

When training a persona, focus on the inputs that actually shape conversations:

  • Who you are.

  • What you sell.

  • Who you want to speak to.

  • What pain points you solve.

  • How you normally write and talk.

  • What kind of CTA or next step makes sense.

How to train your persona well

  1. Start with your offer.
    Explain clearly what you do and who it is for.

  2. Define the audience.
    Be specific about the type of lead, buyer, founder, team, or company you want to reach.

  3. Add tone of voice guidance.
    Describe how you want the persona to sound, such as direct, warm, sharp, calm, consultative, or no-hype.

  4. Add context that matters.
    Include positioning, objections, use cases, and what makes your offer relevant.

  5. Save the persona.

  6. Test and refine based on output.

Signs your training is strong

Your persona is probably in a good place when the output feels:

  • Close to your natural voice.

  • Relevant to the right audience.

  • Clear instead of vague.

  • Helpful instead of pushy.

  • Consistent across conversations.

Common mistakes

  • Being too broad about the target audience.

  • Describing the tone in vague terms only.

  • Forgetting to explain the real offer.

  • Expecting perfect output without testing.

  • Leaving out objections or context that matter in real conversations.

Best practice

Train for reality, not for fantasy. The best personas are grounded in your real sales process, real audience, and real value proposition.