
Audience First: Why Your Prompt Needs to Know Who’s Looking
Here’s a truth most people miss when they’re typing prompts into Canva AI or ChatGPT: the audience changes everything.
You can have the perfect format specified, the right colours chosen, a clear purpose defined, but if you haven’t told the tool who you’re designing for, you’re still guessing. And guessing produces generic rubbish that might look fine on screen but fails completely in the real world.
Print Lord has seen this play out countless times. Two clients, same print format, same basic brief, completely different audiences. One design works brilliantly. The other falls flat. The difference? One designer understood who they were talking to. The other designed for nobody in particular.
Let’s fix that.
Why Audience Definition Changes the Design
When you tell Canva AI or ChatGPT to “create a poster for an event,” you’re giving it almost nothing to work with. What kind of event? Who’s it aimed at? What matters to them? What will catch their attention?
Without that information, the AI defaults to generic. Generic layouts. Generic stock images. Generic tone. And generic doesn’t connect with anyone.
But when you specify the audience, everything sharpens. The tone shifts. The imagery becomes more targeted. The language changes. The hierarchy adjusts to emphasise what that specific group cares about.
Print Lord can print perfection, but we can’t fix a design that’s speaking to nobody. That’s a planning problem, not a printing problem.
Three Audiences, Three Completely Different Designs
Let’s take a simple brief: an A3 poster promoting a workshop. Same format, same basic purpose, but watch what happens when we change the audience.
Audience 1: Targeting 25 to 40 Year Olds
Prompt:
“Create an A3 poster for a creative workshop targeting 25 to 40 year olds. Bold, modern design, bright colours, energetic feel, emphasis on hands-on learning and community.”
What you get:
Bold sans-serif fonts. Bright, punchy colour palette. Dynamic layouts with angles or overlapping elements. Language that’s casual and inviting: “Join us,” “Get creative,” “Connect with makers.” Images of people actively doing things, collaborative energy, diversity.
Why it works for this audience:
This age group responds to energy, authenticity, and social proof. They want to know it’ll be fun, relevant, and worth their time. The design reflects that.
Audience 2: Targeting Corporate Decision-Makers
Prompt:
“Create an A3 poster for a leadership workshop targeting corporate decision-makers. Professional, clean design, sophisticated colour palette, emphasis on ROI and strategic outcomes.”
What you get:
Serif or refined sans-serif fonts. Navy, grey, or muted professional tones. Clean, structured layouts with plenty of white space. Language that’s formal and results-focused: “Develop strategic leadership skills,” “Drive organisational performance,” “Evidence-based frameworks.” Images of boardrooms, confident professionals, or abstract concepts like growth charts.
Why it works for this audience:
Corporate decision-makers want credibility, clarity, and proof of value. The design signals seriousness and professionalism. Anything too casual or playful would undermine trust.
Audience 3: Targeting Families with Young Children
Prompt:
“Create an A3 poster for a family craft workshop targeting parents with young children. Warm, welcoming design, soft colours, playful but not chaotic, emphasis on fun and quality time together.”
What you get:
Rounded, friendly fonts. Warm pastels or primary colours. Approachable layouts with clear sections. Language that’s warm and reassuring: “Create memories together,” “Perfect for ages 3 to 8,” “Mess-free and fun.” Images of happy families, children engaged in activities, smiling faces.
Why it works for this audience:
Parents want to know it’s age-appropriate, safe, enjoyable, and won’t be stressful. The design needs to feel welcoming and manageable, not intimidating or chaotic.
Same Brief, Completely Different Results
Notice what changed between those three prompts? Only the audience definition. But that one change shifted the entire design: tone, colours, fonts, imagery, language, hierarchy.
That’s the power of audience-first thinking. It’s not about designing something that looks nice. It’s about designing something that connects with the people you’re actually trying to reach.
Print Lord has printed posters for corporate seminars that looked like they belonged at a student club night. We’ve printed family event flyers that looked like they were aimed at venture capitalists. In every case, the client looked at the printed result and realised it didn’t fit their audience. Redesign. Reprint. Wasted time and money.
All preventable by defining the audience properly in the first place.
How to Define Your Audience in a Prompt
You don’t need a marketing degree to define an audience. You just need to answer a few basic questions before you start designing:
Who are they? Age range, life stage, profession, interests.
What do they care about? What problems are they trying to solve? What benefits matter to them?
Where will they see this? A corporate reception area? A community noticeboard? A cafe window? Context affects how they engage.
What tone will they respond to? Formal or casual? Urgent or relaxed? Playful or serious?
What will make them take action? Social proof? Credibility? Fun? Value for money? Clear outcomes?
Once you’ve answered those, build them into your prompt.
Example structure:
“Create a [format] for [purpose] targeting [audience description]. They care about [key benefit or concern]. Tone should be [describe tone]. Use [colour/style guidance]. Emphasise [what matters most to them].”
Real example:
“Create an A4 flyer for a yoga retreat targeting stressed professionals aged 35 to 50. They care about relaxation, mental health, and quality time away from screens. Tone should be calming and reassuring. Use soft greens and blues. Emphasise peace, simplicity, and proven wellness benefits.”
That’s a brief Canva AI or ChatGPT can actually work with. And more importantly, it’s a brief that will produce a design that connects with the actual people you’re trying to reach.
Print Lord Examples: When Audience Matching Works
Over two decades, Print Lord has printed for every kind of audience you can imagine. Here’s what we’ve learned:
Hospitality targeting locals vs tourists:
Locals respond to familiarity, insider knowledge, and community feel. Tourists respond to bold visuals, clear directions, and reassurance about quality. Same restaurant, different audiences, completely different menu and poster designs.
Events targeting students vs retirees:
Students respond to energy, affordability, and social proof (“everyone’s going”). Retirees respond to clarity, accessibility information, and cultural credibility. Same event format, different posters entirely.
Professional services targeting startups vs established businesses:
Startups want agility, relatability, and modern thinking. Established businesses want proven track records, stability, and industry credibility. Same service offering, different brochure tone and imagery.
In every case, the print that worked wasn’t the prettiest or the cleverest. It was the print that understood its audience and designed accordingly.
What Works on Instagram Doesn’t Always Work in Print
Here’s a trap Print Lord sees constantly: clients design something that performs brilliantly on Instagram, then try to print it for a completely different context and audience.
Instagram audiences scroll fast, engage briefly, and skew younger. Print audiences often have more time, engage more deliberately, and span a wider age range.
What works on Instagram:
– Minimal text
– Trendy fonts
– High contrast for small screens
– Emojis and casual language
– Vertical or square formats
What works in print (depending on audience):
– Enough text to inform without overwhelming
– Readable fonts that work at scale and distance
– Colours that reproduce well in CMYK
– Professional tone if the audience expects it
– Standard print formats (A6, A5, A4, A3, DL)
You can design for both, but you need to adapt for each. And that adaptation starts with knowing who’s looking at the print version, not just who double-tapped the Instagram version.
Print Lord has reprinted Instagram-style designs that looked stunning on screen but baffled the 50-plus corporate audience they were handed to. Wrong tone. Wrong format. Wrong medium. All because nobody asked, “Who’s actually receiving this in print?”
The Audience Checklist Before You Prompt
Before you write a single design prompt, answer these:
✓ Age range or life stage? This affects tone, imagery, and cultural references.
✓ What do they value? Cost, quality, speed, credibility, fun, community?
✓ What’s their context? Are they busy, relaxed, stressed, curious?
✓ What will they respond to? Data and proof, or emotion and storytelling?
✓ Where will they encounter this print? Handed to them, on a wall, through the post?
✓ What do they need to know or feel? Informed, excited, reassured, intrigued?
If you can answer those, you can write a prompt that produces a design tailored to real people, not just a vague notion of “the public.”
When You’re Not Sure Who the Audience Is
Sometimes the audience isn’t immediately obvious, or it’s broader than you’d like. That’s fine. But you still need to make a choice.
If your print genuinely needs to appeal to multiple different groups, pick the primary audience and design for them first. You can’t design for everyone at once without ending up with bland, generic mush.
Alternatively, ask ChatGPT to help:
Prompt:
“I’m creating a poster for a community festival. The audience includes families, young adults, and older residents. What are the key design considerations to appeal across that range without losing clarity or impact?”
ChatGPT will help you identify the common ground: clear messaging, approachable tone, inclusive imagery, readable fonts, broad appeal colours. You won’t design three different posters, but you will design one that works for a range of people.
Print Lord has printed plenty of community and public-facing materials. The ones that work best are inclusive without being generic. They understand the breadth of the audience but still have a clear, confident voice.
The Bottom Line
Audience isn’t a detail. It’s the foundation.
You can get the format right, the colours right, the technical specs right, but if you haven’t designed for the people who’ll actually see and use your print, it won’t work.
Define your audience before you prompt. Tell Canva AI or ChatGPT who you’re designing for. Be specific. Be thoughtful. And watch how much sharper, more effective, and more successful your designs become.
Print Lord will print whatever you send us, and we’ll make sure it’s technically flawless. But we’d rather print something that works in the real world, something that connects with your actual audience, something you’re proud to hand out or put up.
That starts with knowing who’s looking.
Plan your audience first. Design for them second. Print perfectly every time.
Ready to create print that actually connects with your audience? Print Lord is here to make sure it’s done right. Get in touch.