Install
openclaw skills install cb-user-persona-builderBuild foreign-market user personas that go beyond demographics in minutes. Get multi-dimensional persona cards, cultural value overlays, jobs-to-be-done maps, and validation loops — install and build your first persona in under 30 seconds.
openclaw skills install cb-user-persona-builderThis skill provides a research-backed method for constructing foreign-market user personas that go beyond simple demographic slices. It guides you through defining at least eight distinct persona dimensions, triangulating data from multiple sources, overlaying cultural value frameworks, mapping jobs-to-be-done across functional, emotional, and social dimensions, prioritizing segments, and building a validation loop to reduce stereotyping and keep personas grounded in evidence.
The output is a set of persona profiles you can use to align product, marketing, and sales decisions when entering a new market.
Try these real-world scenarios to see what this skill can produce:
Prompt 1: India Persona Validation
"We built three personas for the Indian market based on our Southeast Asia data. Help us validate them before we share them with our product team." → Output: Validation gap analysis for each persona (which dimensions are Confirmed vs Inferred vs Assumed), data-source triangulation guide (recommended primary sources: Indian ecommerce reviews, social listening on WhatsApp/Instagram, structured interviews with 15-20 prospects), cultural value overlay (India: collective decision-making, price-value sensitivity, trust in known brands vs new entrants), validation interview protocol with disconfirming questions, assumption tracking table with validation schedule.
Prompt 2: France B2B Persona Construction
"Our product is a project management tool for creative agencies. We want to enter the French market. Build personas that account for French workplace culture." → Output: Three complete persona cards built from scratch (e.g., "Sophie — Agency Director, Lyon" with 10+ dimensions), French workplace cultural overlay (importance of hierarchy with autonomy in execution, longer decision cycles, preference for written communication, resistance to English-first tools), JTBD map (functional: project visibility; emotional: maintaining agency creative reputation; social: peer recognition from French agency community), objections specific to French market (data sovereignty, French-language support, CADES/URA adaptation), segment prioritization matrix recommending mid-market agencies as entry segment.
Prompt 3: Japan Health-Tech Cultural Overlay
"We are a health-tech startup entering Japan. How do we overlay cultural dimensions onto our existing buyer personas without stereotyping?" → Output: Cultural value overlay framework applied to health-tech context (Japan: high uncertainty avoidance → trust in established medical brands, long-term orientation → prevention over treatment messaging, masculinity dimension → performance data emphasis), specific adjustments to existing personas (add dimensions for referral source credibility, insurance compatibility concern level, privacy sensitivity score), data-source triangulation guide for JP health market (medical professional association publications, Rakuten reviews for competitor products, pharmacist/doctor interviews), list of culturally-biased assumptions to test rather than assume.
👋 cb-user-persona-builder installed!
I help you build user personas for any overseas market that go beyond basic demographics — grounded in cultural context, evidence-quality labels, and validation plans.
Try this to get started:
"Help me build user personas for [product] in [market]. We want to understand who our buyers are and what drives their decisions."
Or just describe your target market and what you sell.
Personas are hypotheses derived from available evidence, not definitive descriptions of real people. They must be treated as working models and updated continuously with new evidence. Using personas to make broad cultural generalization or policy decisions without validation risks stereotyping and misallocation of resources. This skill provides a structured framework for building and validating personas; it does not replace primary research.