Quality Marketing - Marketing 201.5

Sep 25, 2007
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Hi all,At the REIN A.L.I.F.E. conference last weekend the presentation on Landlording Secrets consisted of two booklets, the first of which was, "Marketing 201". Don`s and the booklet`s emphasis was/is to impress upon us the critical difference between Features (tell) and Benefits (sell). A few days ago, the content of one of the daily newletters I receive was called, "The Oft-Confused Features and Benefits". As it is directly related to one of the economic fundamentals it might be of interest to some of you too. This article can be forwarded in whole or part as long as it is accompanied by the following Attribution Statement:

Attribution Statement:
This article was first published in The Total Packagehttp://www.makepeacetotalpackage.com/ [sup][7]. To sign-up to receive your own FREE subscription to The Total Packagehttp://www.makepeacetotalpackage.com/ [sup][7][/sup] and claim four FREE money making e-books go to http://www.makepeacetotalpackage.com/.

Keith

The Oft-Confused Features And Benefits

Posted By Michel Fortin On June 30, 2009 @ 8:48 am In Michel Fortin | 7 Comments

Theodore Levitt [1][/sup] once said, "People don`t want to buy a quarter-inch drill, they want a quarter-inch hole." This is one of the most quoted passages in marketing in trying to explain the difference between features and benefits. However, the quote is incomplete and leaving out something that, to me, is far more important.

And that is, what`s the purpose of this quarter-inch hole? What does the reader plan on doing with it? Even better, what`s the end-result the reader wants to achieve with it?

The answer to that question is, in my estimation, the real benefit. The ultimate benefit.

Not the hole. And certainly not the drill that created it.

Sure, it is a benefit to some degree. But "benefit," defined in the dictionary, is "something that improves, enhances, or promotes well-being." So let me ask you, how is one or one`s well-being enhanced by a quarter-inch hole?

To make offers truly irresistible, words should appeal to specific buyer motives. Common copywriting wisdom dictates that the first rule in doing so is to stress benefits over features. Think benefits, benefits, benefits. Sounds simple, right?

Not really. For if it were, a website would be successful simply if it listed a product`s features and its subsequent benefits. And we all know that is not true. Many benefit-laden copy have failed. So you need more than that.

In an attempt to provide you with some guidance on how to dig deeper to find better, more compelling benefits, here`s a tool I`ve used to help you.

<H2 class=TTP_subheadrebbold>The Product Analysis Worksheet</H2>One of the classes I used to to teach in college was Professional Selling
. In it, the curriculum`s textbook was Personal Selling: An Interactive Approach
by Ronald Marks, Ph.D., a professor of marketing at the University of Missouri.

In this book, Dr. Marks discusses the ability to convey benefits over features using a tool he calls Product Analysis Worksheet. The way it works is quite simple.Product benefits usually consist of four principal levels. They are features, advantages, motives, and benefits. Each layer has its own set of attributes and characteristics, which varies depending on the product type and the market to which the product caters.To illustrate, here`s a description of each layer:

[list type=decimal][*]Features – what products have.
For example, say you sell an accounting software. You can say, "This accounting software has a reporting feature."[*]Advantages – what features do.
To continue our example, "Reporting provides real-time, on-demand, updated mission-critical information to key personnel."Motives – what motives do features satisfy.
For example, "Cost-savings, greater control, increased production, better decisions, etc."Benefits – what those features mean.
This is where you attach the advantages you outlined to specific motives those features satisfy. To continue our example… "With this powerful reporting feature, managers are able to keep their finger on your company`s financial pulse at all times, thereby reducing costs by as much as 50%, maintaining greater control over expenditures, increasing their output by 10-20 times at any given time, and avoiding making decisions that could cost them thousands if not millions of dollars – all in just a few clicks."[/list type=decimal]What does this do? By digging deeper and communicating what benefits really mean to your audience, it adds weight, purpose, meaning, relevancy, and power behind the benefits you initially come up with. It gives your benefits legs.

Obviously, coming up with a list of benefits may be easy if you know your product well enough. But describing them in a way that`s appropriate for, and directly related and targeted to, specific audiences is not an easy process.

Market research helps to solve that challenge. In fact, researching your market before you put pen to paper or electron to screen is the most important component of good copywriting. Not the headline, not the offer, and not the price.

The market.

The market is the single most important component of your sales copy. The more you learn about your market, the better and more effective your copy will be.

For example, a common problem among marketers is to develop content using a language their readers will understand. Sure, readers may understand what`s being said to some degree. But comprehension of a message doesn`t mean they will relate to it.

The problem is, marketers often use words that only they
can relate to.

This is quite normal as we write in the way we think or talk.

However, the goal in writing good, compelling copy is to think like our readers, talk like our readers, and connect with our readers. This is where much of the copy I see fails.

Even yours truly is guilty of this from time to time. We`re too married to our product, or we`re too disconnected from how and what our readers think, feel, and communicate. This is where the "product analysis worksheet" can become very helpful.

Here`s how it works…


First, list all of the features of your product or service, including standard, technical, supportive, even abstract features. Then, with each feature, develop a subsequent list of relative advantages. Write down what each feature listed does.

Some people think that what a feature does is the benefit. But this is where most business owners and copywriters fail to relate those benefits to their readers.

They assume an advantage is a benefit and stop there, when those benefits are too broad or one-sided. Instead, the feature`s function or purpose, not how it actually serves, relates to, and benefits the reader, is merely an advantage. While a feature is what a product has and an advantage is what that feature does…<H2 class=TTP_subheadrebbold>… A Benefit is What That Feature Means.</H2>A benefit is what a person intimately gains from a specific feature. It`s the ultimate end-result. When you describe a feature, say this: "What this means to you, Mr. Prospect, is this…" Followed by a more personal gain your reader gets from the feature.Turn it around. don`t focus on a certain feature`s benefit. Rather, focus on how those features specifically benefit the individual and what those benefits truly mean.Here`s an example using my private membership website, where members get access to videos of me tearing sales copy apart, and revealing copywriting tips, tricks, and actual, tested conversion strategies in the process.

[*]Feature:
Watch a top copywriter in action as he writes killer copy, all recorded on video, using real salesletters and real websites from real clients.[*]Advantage:
You get to learn how to write copy faster by understanding the logic behind successful copy (not just how to write it), and also learn copywriting tips, mistakes, shortcuts, and proven split-test results in the process.[*]Motive:
What you want is to reduce the learning curve, risks, effort, and costs involved in trying to do it all yourself. Therefore, what this feature means is this… [*]Benefit #1:
This means you get real-world examples from real case studies and actually see the process done before you, instead of plain textbook theory or mere swipe files that leave you scratching your head.[*]Benefit #2:
Using real-world examples means you can understand what goes into world-class copy and appreciate how they`re being used, so you can easily repeat the process on your own, in the future.Benefit #3:
Repeating the process on your own means you don`t have to pay an expensive copywriter to write it for you or fix it if it`s not performing well.Benefit #4:
Not having to pay for a copywriter means you save money and get it done faster by learning proven strategies you can apply immediately, without waiting for someone to do it for you or explain it to you in some "how-to" course.Benefit #5:
And learning proven, tested strategies means you eliminate the need to search for, find, test, and learn everything yourself, and avoid making costly mistakes by having to figure out what works and what doesn`t on your own.… And on and on.

<H2 class=TTP_subheadrebbold>Can You See The Difference?</H2>Now, once achieved, look at your worksheet.

Did you cover all the benefits that a specific feature has? Did you go deep and specific enough? Don`t just resort to apparent or obvious benefits. Dig deeper. Think of the end-results your readers get from enjoying your product or service.

Coming up with the first batch will be easy because they will be at the top of your mind. But forcing yourself to dig deeper and come up with stronger, more intimate benefits, although it will be more challenging, will provide you with some of the best ones.

To help you, here`s a simple exercise.

Once you`ve listed one benefit tied to a specific feature, just keep asking, "What this means
to you is this…" And work it until you run out of reasons.

Or use what copywriter Peter Stone calls the "so that" technique. Same idea, but add the words "so that" at the end, like, "With this feature, you get [benefit], so that [deeper benefit], so that [even deeper benefit]," and so on until you can`t go any further.Once you`re done, you then move onto the next feature.<H2 class=TTP_subheadrebbold>Remember that features tell but benefits sell.</H2>Above all, make sure you communicate those benefits in a way that truly reflects and caters to the situations, problems, needs, and desires of your target market. Express benefits in terms that relate directly to each individual in that market.

Some people shy away from describing benefits because they assume they generate hype or puffery. Not so. As illustrated above, they are effective tools to get your readers to fully understand and appreciate your product`s true purpose, meaning, and relevancy.

After all, different words mean different things to different people.

In other words, forget features and what they do, which is what most people think are benefits. Think of what a feature means
to the customer and the words that communicate this meaning at an individual, intimate, and emotional level.

Because the more intimate your benefits are, the more real, vivid, significant, and meaningful they will be. And subsequently, the more sales you will generate, too.

Michel Fortin is a direct response copywriter, author, speaker, and consultant. Visit his blog and signup free to get tested conversion strategies and response-boosting tips by email, along with blog updates, news, and more! Go now to http://www.michelfortin.com [sup][2]. While you`re at it, follow him on Twitter [sup][3].

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Attribution Statement: This article was first published in The Total Package
http://www.makepeacetotalpackage.com [7][/sup]. To sign-up to receive your own FREE subscription to The Total Package
http://www.makepeacetotalpackage.com [7][/sup] and claim four FREE money making e-books go to www.makepeacetotalpackage.com [7].Article printed from The Total Package: http://www.makepeacetotalpackage.comURL to article: http://www.makepeacetotalpackage.com/miche...d-benefits.htmlURLs in this post: [1] Theodore Levitt: http://www.makepeacetotalpackage.comjava script:exitBox(`http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Levitt`);

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[6] Click here for our archives.
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