Sonia's marketing dictionary: benefits, not features
This just might be the best-known and most overlooked piece of advice since "eat right and get regular exercise." If you know about focusing on benefits in your marketing already, this lens will help you figure out how to actually do it.
And if you're new to the term, it's one of the most important ideas you'll find to help you promote your small business. Lucky you, you don't have a lot of bad habits to unlearn.
Getting into the heads of your customers
You know how hard you work every day. You see how hard it is to find customers, and the fact that you've found any at all is pretty exciting. You worked like a crazy person to create a product or a service that is as good as you can make it.
Customers don't care.
It would be great if they did, but they just don't. Essentially, they're toddlers. They only care about their own needs, and any sacrifices you make for them are invisible.Is your offering slightly hard to use? They don't want it. Slightly complicated? They don't want it. Too many steps to go through your shopping cart system? They don't want it.
Your customers will never know how much sweat and heartache went into creating your business, and they will never care. That's not their role.
It's not about you.
It's about them. How you will help them solve a problem, how you will make their lives better, and most of all, how you will make them feel good.
Launch your small business
How to get started when you're feeling overwhelmed
But starting a business from scratch is intimidating. I put together a post for you on the first steps that will get you moving toward success.
14 Must-Have Resources to Get Your Small Business Off the Ground
And if you're not sure this is the right time, read my post on why this is the best time to finally break free.
What went wrong?
Someone at Compass Bank was very jazzed about how many great services they offer, and thought it would be cool to create a configurable package of them for a checking account. They have 17 features, and you get to pick which ones you want.
If you're the bank, this sounds great. So flexible! So cool!
But like the hapless guy in the ad, their customers may have another take. "This sounds like homework. I don't have time to balance my checkbook, when am I going to feel like sitting down and making decisions about 17 different checking features? What if I pick the wrong ones? Why can't I just have all of them?"
The bank got caught up in thinking about how neat they were, instead of thinking about what would be great for customers.
For a more positive example from the same company, this commercial shows a clear benefit of the program. It's a short, interesting story that demonstrates something cool the bank will do for you. Customers instantly understand how it benefits them.
Three must-read advertising classics
If you read these three classic books, and re-read them every six months or so, you'll know 85% of what you need to know about effective advertising. Cheap and easy!
What problem are you solving?
But once they find out that they can put whatever photo they want on their check card, they might have a "no picture of my hot boyfriend on my check card" problem.
You have to solve customers' problems in order to market to them. You don't always have to stick with the problems they already know they have.
All benefits are emotional
Different people feel good about different stuff, and that's where it gets interesting. You need to know what makes your customers feel good, and what about your product creates good feelings.
- Alarm systems sell because people want to feel safe and secure.
- Marketing advice sells because people want to feel proud of their success and relaxed about their finances.
- iPods sell because people want to feel a sense of belonging by taking part in a powerful trend.
- iPods also sell because people want to feel smarter than at least one piece of technology in their lives.
- El Rey paintings sell because people enjoy the way it feels to laugh without knowing why.
- Leonard Cohen albums sell because people want to feel brainy and neurotic in an attractive way. They also sell because a certain level of wallowing in misery is, in fact, quite pleasurable, especially when it's someone else's.
For more about how to market using emotional benefits, check out a pair of posts I wrote for Copyblogger:
Why Emotional Benefits Are the Key to Reader Response
13 Emotion-Based Headlines That Work
Communicate remarkably
When you're showing, you want to look out for the verb to be. Compare the following:
I am happy / I dance with happiness. Our customers are satisfied / Our customers rated us the #1 Tire Dealer with Heart ten years in a row. Your family will be happy / Your family will vote you mom of the year. Read more >>
Dan Kennedy's Ultimate series on marketing
Just remember, you don't actually have to be as crass or as abrasive as Dan Kennedy to benefit from his stuff.
Does this apply at all to nonprofits?
Smiletrain.org is a great example. They promise the feeling of knowing that you, individually, have saved one child from social isolation and malnutrition. That will cost you $250. They pay for overhead out of their foundation grant, so your entire donation goes to cleft palate surgery for a child somewhere whose parents can't afford it.
After you make a donation, you get the "reward" of seeing marketing materials that feature children after surgery has restored them. (Their "pre-donor" materials all feature children before the surgery.)
The benefit to the children is very obvious. The benefit to their donors, though, isn't saving the life of the child, it's the feeling donors get knowing that we have contributed to that. I can tell you from experience that that feeling is addictive.
If you found this useful, check out my site and other lenses!
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Fast, cheap, and very much in control: 21st century techniques to grow your business
More on using the web, blogs, email newsletters, and other Internet tools to promote your business.
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- Carennedy Carennedy Jan 10, 2008 @ 3:05 pm
- Boy did you nail it on the head!!!! See I'm stalking ya.
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- Caseyfern Caseyfern Aug 27, 2007 @ 10:21 pm
- A big 5 star applause - and an invitation to join and grab an IMAD badge from I Make A Difference
by sonia_simone
Writer, marketer, tinkerer, parent, human being, meditator, gardener, obsessive, bookworm, smartypants, idiot, knitter, bleeding heart, analyst, and w...
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