How to not suck at communicating the value of your product or service

How to not suck at communicating the value of your product or service

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Explain “why now?”🚫 Your

Explain “why now?”

🚫 Your customer isn’t only thinking: “Is this product helpful?”

Most folks might AGREE your product is good–but they still won’t buy.

✅ What they’re really thinking: “Do I need this enough to pay $ right now? Or can I do this later?”

Later = never

Use both brand and

Use both brand and performance marketing tactics.

Focus on performance marketing:

✅ Better short-term conversion
🚫 Worse long-term brand equity

Focus on brand marketing:

🚫 Worse short-term conversion
✅ Better long-term brand equity

https://t.co/9tQ5xd8Ipt

Focus on what your

Focus on what your customer wants to hear, not what you want to talk about.

This is an easy way to decide what to trim from your pitch.

Ask yourself: What would change your audience’s behavior?

Focus there.

I call this Strategy, Not Self-Expression.

https://t.co/iZcg7vEInY

Appeal to “people like

Appeal to “people like us.”

“People like us” refers to whichever groups your customer might identify with.

Create a situation where it seems like everyone they know is already using your product.

To feel like they belong, they should too.

All the best brands do this.

Don’t jump right to

Don’t jump right to the solution.

Explain:

• How much $$$ the problem is costing
• The frequency and magnitude of the problem
• How it’s making your customer’s life hard

THEN talk about your product as the solution & how you’ll make their problem go away.

Increase desire, don’t just

Increase desire, don’t just decrease friction.

People jump through hoops for things they want.

Did you pick your spouse because they were the most convenient option?

Of course not.

You picked them despite needing to overcome obstacles.

https://t.co/9POWUFywng

Most companies suck at

Most companies suck at communicating the value of their product or service.

Here’s how to instantly show your value:

Consider overhauling.If you’re struggling

Consider overhauling.

If you’re struggling to describe your product’s value, figure out if the problem is

A) the marketing
B) the offer itself

If your underlying offer isn’t good, no amount of improving the positioning will help.

Use before-and-after.An effective before-and-after

Use before-and-after.

An effective before-and-after skips all the boring parts. It’s like a jump cut in a movie.

It emphasizes *contrast*. This heightens drama and interest.

The best before-and-afters make you say wow.

Be/Do/Have.This is a classic

Be/Do/Have.

This is a classic framework in coaching, but applies to marketing.

✔️ What does your product let your customer *be* that they weren’t before?

✔️ What can they *do* now that they couldn’t do before?

✔️ What do they *have* now that they didn’t have before?

Aim for “no-brainer status.”You

Aim for “no-brainer status.”

You need to aim for an instant yes.

Not a yes after 100+ touchpoints of nurturing.

Think about what features, benefits, and value would get that reaction.

You likely won’t get an instant yes. But if you aim for it, it’ll speed up getting there.

We tend to focus

We tend to focus on removing friction because it feels comfortable. There’s a checklist of ways to do it.

There’s less of a formula for increasing desire–which makes it all the more worthwhile.

There’s upside potential that fewer people attempt to tap into.

Show, don’t tell.I came

Show, don’t tell.

I came across AI-driven software that reduces background noise on Zoom calls.

Their website has a toggle “on” and “off” button where you can hear a sound sample without vs with their tool.

It instantly sold me.

That demo was worth 10,000 words.

Do what makes their

Do what makes their eyes light up (ELU).

You can tell when people listen to be polite.

But there are moments when a spark of aliveness flashes in their eyes.

You just said something they care about.

Watch for ELU. It’s data on what to do more of.

https://t.co/SNzso1DKtR

Avoid backstory scope creep.This

Avoid backstory scope creep.

This applies to showing your value via email, pitches, or calls.

It’s easy to get carried away sharing background info that’s boring & not helpful for customers.

Remove 90% of it. You need less backstory than you think.

https://t.co/tTCNtM9OJo

Pour salt on the

Pour salt on the wound.

No pain, no sale.

People will only value your solution if they value their problem.

If they don’t think their problem is that bad, they won’t pay you to solve it.

When in doubt, emphasize the pain.

Painkillers sell better than vitamins.

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