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How to Market Benefits vs Features

How to Market Benefits vs Features

Do you really understand the concepts of benefits vs features? One of the most difficult concepts to grasp for online business owners who are writing their own sales copy is to write about the benefits of your product/service, rather than the features. Even though this skill is critically important, I would guess that less than 10% of business owners truly understand it.  Not surprisingly, it’s also the primary reason that so many marketing campaigns fail.

Think about the products and services that you buy.  Why did you purchase them?  One of the reasons I go to the local Firestone auto servicing center to buy my tires and get my oil changed and my car maintained (despite the fact that it’s 30 miles from my house) is because Dale, the customer service manager, told me when I first visited this center, “We take care of you so you don’t have to worry about breaking down on the side of the road.”  That sealed the deal for me — no other explanation was necessary.

I’m no different than you are.  It’s taken me a long time to begin to write about the benefits of what I offer, because, like you, I always assumed that prospects will understand why they should buy the product or service just because I’ve told them about it.  After all, isn’t listing the marvelous features of what I’m offering enough?  Unfortunately, the answer is no.

When you try to sell the features of your product or service, you’re making the customer do all the work to figure out why they want the feature. As the seller of your products and services, it’s in your prospect’s best interest to draw the connection for them. In order to do that, however, you have to know the results yourself.

So, then, what’s the difference between benefits vs features?

A feature is a factual statement about the product or service being promoted. However, it’s not the features that entice customers to buy. That’s where benefits come in. A benefit answers the question “What’s in it for me?”

The best way to understand the true benefit that your product or service offers is to focus instead on the results that your customer will receive when using said product of service. It is the customer’s perception of each feature’s result that will attract a prospect to buy a particular product or service.

So, for example, if you were selling a car, one of the features might be “all wheel drive.” While your advertising might include that information, you’ll fare better in your sale when you focus on the benefits of that feature, such as greater safety when driving on poor surfaces, ability to drive places other vehicles can’t, and minimizing the likelihood of getting stuck in the winter. If the prospect says “so what?” when hearing of an aspect of the product, then that aspect is a feature. The answer to the “so what?” question is a potential benefit.

Let’s play this out:

Car ad says: This car has all-wheel drive.

The customer reads and says: So what?

The salesperson responds: This means that you’re much less likely to get stuck in the snow in the winter.

Ideal customer response: I hate when that happens! That’s something I need!

If the response to the answer is another “so what?” or a shrug, then the answer did not nail a benefit for that customer (maybe they live in an area of the country where getting stuck in the winter isn’t an issue). Perhaps they would respond better to the “ability to drive places other vehicles can’t” or something else.  The key here is knowing and understanding your customers and what they need.

To help you create your list of benefits for your product or service, create a Features and Benefits Sheet. Take a piece of paper and draw a line down the middle. On the left-hand side write a list of the features of your product or service. On the right side write the corresponding benefit that goes with that feature. answering the “so what?” question (what problem are you solving) in the process. Once you have completed this exercise, share the sheet with colleagues who will give you honest feedback about your benefits listing.

Check out this article on Hubspot, Features vs. Benefits: A Crash Course on Proper Messaging, with some great examples of benefits vs features in some popular products.

Remember, success in sales and marketing in your business is all about the benefits to your audience rather than the features you’re going to deliver.  It’s all about selling the sizzle, not the steak.

 

About the Author Donna Gunter

Best-selling author Donna Gunter works with successful business owners who are experts in their fields and established in their industry and are seeking a way to stand out from their competitors. Using her Ideal Clients on Autopilot System©, she helps them determine the exact strategies to generate more qualified leads and better-paying clients with automated systems. This proven system makes all their marketing easier and more effective and they find themselves positioned as the only choice for their clients.

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