Great Product - Now What Do We Do With It?
Benefits and Features in Marketing
It's a way of thinking and it is something you hear constantly
in marketing circles. Highlighting the benefits of a product
more than the features will always attract more potential
clients, keep them reading and sell more. It's all in the words.
Though I am not (and never have been) a software developer I had
the good fortune of working with several brilliant young
software developers in Paris for two years. Schlumberger is one
the world's largest oilfield service companies with research and
development facilities second to none in the industry. As an
integral part of overall oilfield services Schlumberger
routinely create software solutions which simulate oil drilling
and production downhole conditions with uncanny accuracy. It
takes brilliant minds to create such solutions, but brilliant
techies do not necessarily make good marketers.
Techies and Features
Schlumberger's aim was to develop a software program to provide
state-of-the-art support for the company's drilling fluids
division. Every year Schlumberger scours major universities all
over the world to snare the best of the best graduates into
their fold and the batch of IT graduates I was assigned to work
with were brilliant "techies". Make no mistake, these people
invariably know the features of their product inside-out, they
created them and are proud of them so of course they would know
the "nuts and bolts"
It is one thing to develop a brilliant technology, create a
stunning product, conceive a service, a franchise deal or a
ratchet the world absolutely can not do without; it is quite
another to sell the concept, idea or product to those who
matter. Your backers, bankers, bosses and most important of all,
the buyers.
My job in Paris was to create copy explaining why the software
technology we developed was unique, accurate, saleable, and
absolutely necessary for Schlumberger engineers to provide the
superior service their clients expected. I couldn't have done
this without having the product in the first place but it may
well have languished, unused and a wasted technology, if our
message wan't clear.
What's in it for me?
The single major question potential buyers will always ask
themselves when reviewing a product with a possible intention to
buy is "how will I benefit from owning this" or put another way
"what's in this for me?"
If you can't convince a potential client of what the specific
benefits are to him/her then you will very quickly lose their
attention and the sale, without a doubt.
Perhaps the technically minded will want to know some of the
details (or features) of your product, software or concept. How
it works, how many gizmo's it has, at what light-speed it
operates, and the fact that it is a zillion times faster than
someone else's gadget.
But what the vast majority of your potential market wants are
answers to questions like: - How will this make my life easier?
- How will this increase my standing among my peers? - How will
this save me money or time? - How will this give me an edge over
my competitors? - How will this improve my understanding of my
studies? - How will this help me impress my family or friends? -
How will this make me more at peace or make a difference? - How
will this change my life for the better?
I'm sure you get the message. If readers are convinced that your
product, service, massage, DVD, book or wotnot will provide the
answers to as many of the above questions as possible you will
have a sale.
Accentuate the Positive
This is not about positive thinking, though that certainly
helps, it's more about highlighting the benefits people really
care about and what triggers them to buy. You could go on for
pages listing endless "features" of your product, and, while
some would make their own evaluations of what's in it for them
as they recognise the benefits, most would not.
Your client needs each and every real and potential benefit
spelt out clearly and enticingly.
PC Builder Example
I had a recent project re-writing website content for a UK based
DVD producer who has an excellent set of computer learning
tutorial video's and DVD's.
The company CEO asked me to review his website and promotional
materials and provide professional recommendations as to how
they could be improved. When I visited the website I found a
great layout aesthetically and word content that listed all the
features of his DVD's brilliantly.
What was missing were the vital words on why his potential
clients should learn how to use computers and what benefits each
module would bring to them specifically. In other words, the
very reasons most would buy in the first place.
I had the DVD's sent to me so I could review them first hand and
I worked on all aspects of the company's marketing data.
My client's comments below tell the story as it is today.
"I am more than happy with the copy and professional marketing
services Ron has provided our company. RAW Power Writing's copy
has greatly improved our website marketing message. Ron is now
responsible for our complete marketing materials and I have
recommended his services to all of my business associates"
Fitzroy Lawrence CEO PC Builder
You can review the outcome of our work on PC Builder's website
via my website at:
http://www.rawpowerwriting.com/article.asp?id=13
The benefits make the difference.
Ron A. Welsh Brisbane