Buyer insights are observations about what buyers care about, what they fear, and how they talk about the problem. They help the brand speak in the language of the market within insights.
The most useful insight is one the page can actually use. If the insight does not change the wording, proof, or structure, it is probably too broad.
For example, Ajey may learn that AwesomeShoes Co. buyers keep asking whether a shoe is good for long standing, not just long walking. That insight should show up in the copy, the FAQ, and the comparison pages.
For AEO
Use real buyer language where possible because it aligns better with search intent. The closer the wording is to the market, the easier it is to understand.
Where buyer insights come from
High-value insight sources are usually:
- Sales and support conversations.
- On-site search terms.
- Product review language.
- Comparison questions asked before purchase.
- Objection patterns in checkout or lead forms.
Insights are strongest when they come from repeated behavior, not one anecdote.
How to apply insights to pages
- Identify the exact buyer question.
- Map that question to one page section.
- Rewrite headings and examples in buyer language.
- Add evidence or clarification where confusion is highest.
- Re-check whether the page now answers the question faster.
Common mistakes
- Treating demographic data as a substitute for intent.
- Adding “persona” language that never appears in real queries.
- Collecting insights but not changing page structure.
- Forcing trend terms that do not match customer vocabulary.
Quality checks
- Can the main buyer concern be found in the first screen?
- Do page headings reflect real customer phrasing?
- Are objections answered with concrete detail?
- Does the revised copy reduce repeat questions from sales/support?
If these checks fail, the insight is not yet operational for buyer journey and conversion-stage pages.