ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Customer Service

Engage Your Customer – Write About Benefits

Author : Glenn Murray
Think quick. In 10 seconds, can you list the 5 key benefits you offer your customers?



I bet you said “Yes”. But are you sure you listed benefits? If you’ll bear with me for another 10 seconds, I’d like to test out a theory on you.



Recap your answers – maybe even write them down. Now list the 5 main things your business does. In other words, what are your 5 core services? What are the 5 core features of your product?



If your first list looks anything like your second, chances are youÂ’re mistaking features for benefits. As a result, itÂ’s likely that your marketing materials arenÂ’t engaging your customer. Customers donÂ’t want to know what you can do. They want to know what you can do FOR THEM.



Don’t talk features – talk benefits.



Don’t be alarmed. You’re not alone. Most business owners and marketing managers are so close to their product or service that they have a lot of trouble distinguishing benefits from the features of their offering. Ask a web host “what are the benefits of your service?”, and you’ll likely hear something along the lines of, “we offer load-balanced server clusters.” But that’s not a benefit… that’s what they do. The benefit is superior uptime and performance.



In fact, so many people think features instead of benefits that it can work in your favour – to dramatic effect. If you can accurately identify your benefits, and convey those benefits to your market, you’ll be light-years ahead of most of your competition. You’ll be converting leads into sales while they’re still bogged down trying to promote features.



So if you’ve ever sat down to write a sales letter and wondered how you’re going to grab your reader’s attention, or you’ve ever gone ‘round in circles writing draft after draft of web copy without ever hitting the mark, now you know where you were going wrong.



The only question remaining is, how do you do it right? Advertising copywriters and website copywriters do it all the time – and most of the time, they do it with benefits. Benefits are the copywriter’s holy grail. But if you’re not a seasoned copywriter, how do you identify the benefits you offer your customers?



There are any number of ways to identify the benefits you offer. This article discusses just three:
1) Customer Research
2) Speak to Your Sales Team
3) Make it Easy for Your Customer to Get Buy-In



The method you choose depends on your time constraints, budget, and level of customer interaction.



1) Customer Research

The most obvious way to identify benefits is to ask your existing customers. They’re spending a lot of money on your offering, so you can be sure they know what benefit they’re getting from it. (In many cases, it can be handy to ask them what benefits they’d like to be getting from you too!) Unfortunately, like everyone else, your customers are busy people. In most cases, you won’t get useful feedback by simply sending an email enquiry. You have to make it easy for them to respond, and you have to make it worth their while. Think about questionnaires and surveys for quantitative data, and interviews and focus groups for qualitative data. These are the simplest techniques, but you still have to make sure you interpret the results appropriately. And always remember that they’re self-report methods. People will sometimes tell you what they think you want to hear. (That’s also why you have to word your questions very carefully – try not to ask leading questions.) Of course, there are plenty of other research techniques around. Do a bit of homework and find the methods which best suit your business requirements. But don’t get carried away by the possibilities. All the research data in the world is pointless if you’re not talking the language of your customer.



2) Speak to Your Sales Team

Sadly, not every business can afford to invest in market research. If your budget doesnÂ’t stretch far enough, try talking to your sales people. TheyÂ’re out in the field every day, talking to customers. And because their livelihood depends on their success in engaging customers, chances are theyÂ’ll be able to tell you what your customers want to know. (A word of warning, thoughÂ… Be careful not to make lofty promises. Unlike your sales team, written collateral doesnÂ’t generate a rapport with your customers. Customers wonÂ’t make as many allowances, so you can only stretch the truth so far in writing before your credibility suffers. WhatÂ’s more, if you do push the boundaries, youÂ’re more likely to be held to your word!)



3) Make it Easy for Your Customer to Get Buy-In

If you don’t have the budget for in-depth customer research, and you don’t have a sales team, a good tip is to imagine how your customer gets buy-in from their boss. Quite often, the decision maker is someone higher up the food chain than your direct audience. Your audience will probably be the key stakeholder – they’ll be the user of your product, or the recipient of your service. But when they find an offering they like, there’s a good chance they’ll have to sell it to someone further up the line. If you can make this sale easier, you’ll have a foot in the door. Don’t just appeal to the sensibilities of the direct audience. You also need to ask yourself what they need to know to convince the decision maker. If the decision maker is a CFO, think Return on Investment (ROI) and Total Cost of Ownership (TCO). If the decision maker is a CIO or MIS, think performance, technological sustainability, availability, manageability, and ease of integration. If the decision maker is a CEO, think liability, risk management, and ROI. And only use jargon to prove you know your stuff. Remember… jargon will probably have the ultimate decision maker scratching their head, not reaching for their cheque book.



There are many many more ways to identify benefits. This is just a very superficial snapshot of some techniques you might like to try. At the very least theyÂ’ll get you thinking benefits.



In the end, the message is simple. Forget all the fancy talk about complicated revolutionary marketing principles. Forget new-age hard-sell advertising quick-fixes. Forget looking to so-called “experts” for solutions. Just think benefits. And if you can accurately do that, the rest is just mechanics. Once you know what you want to write about, you just need to put pen to paper. And that’s a whole ‘nother story!



Happy writing!


Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com





* Glenn Murray is a website copywriter, SEO copywriter, and article submission and article PR specialist. He is a director of article PR company Article PR and also of copywriting studio Divine Write. He can be contacted on Sydney +612 4334 6222 or at glenn@divinewrite.com. Visit www.DivineWrite.com or www.ArticlePR.com for further details, more FREE articles, or to download his FREE SEO e-book.





Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. CRM = Customer's (don't) Really Matter
  2. Does Your Customer Talk Back To You?
  3. Are You Giving Your Customers Enough Reasons To Return To Your Business?
  4. Listening to Customers - 5 Tips
  5. Top Ten Strategies for Delivering 5-Star Customer Service
  6. Renewing Customer Loyalty
  7. Dissatisfied or Rude Customers Can Be Satisfied Customers
  8. Increase in Customer Sales = Increase in Customer Service
  9. Transforming Disgruntled Customers into Your Biggest Advocates
  10. My Child Has Opie Eye!
  11. Restaurant Scheduling for Success
  12. Don't Eliminate The Middle Man - Add One
  13. Service Equals Performance Equals Service
  14. Keeping Clients Happy Keeps them Coming Back
  15. Doors by Catering to Your Clients
  16. What's For Lunch?
  17. Improving Customer Service
  18. How To Build a Profitable Business
  19. Difficult Customers - There's No Such Thing
  20. The Death of the Loyal Customer
  21. Communicating Value
  22. Why Can't Microsoft Make "Soft" Packaging?
  23. Post Office, Incredible Lady Postmaster
  24. Your Number One Asset
  25. Handling Customer Complaints
More related feeds
How NOT to Write a Business Blog
Let’s wrap this up with a list of ways to use your business blog to actively engage prospective customers:. Write conversationally by picturing your reader/customer in your mind and just talking to them like they were right there with ...

Engage Your Customer - Write About Benefits
If your first list looks anything like your second, chances are you’re mistaking features for benefits. As a result, it’s likely that your marketing materials aren’t engaging your customer. Customers don’t want to know what you can do. ...

Top Ten Customer Service Tips for the 2008 Republican National ...
Engage your employees to find creative solutions to your customers special needs while they’re here for the convention. The Twin Cities can make this the best Republican National Convention ever. If we do, the benefits and goodwill will ...

Engage Your Customer – Write About Benefits
Don’t talk features – talk benefits.

Wiki Articles: Engage Your Customer Write About Benefits at www ...
ist the 5 key benefits you offer your customers Happy writing.

Top Adding: Engage Your Customer Write About Benefits at www ...
5 key benefits you offer your customers Happy writing.

Actual: Engage Your Customer Write About Benefits at www.actual.org.ua
benefits you offer your customers Happy writing.

Encyclopaedia: Engage Your Customer Write About Benefits at www ...
s can you list the 5 key benefits you offer your customers Happy writing.

Top Articles: Engage Your Customer Write About Benefits at www ...
uick. In 10 seconds can you list the 5 key benefits you offer your customers Happy writing.

A Primer on Blogs for EDA Start-ups
EDA software and consulting services both require an ongoing relationship for a customer to get full value out of the initial decision to engage. This means that a purchase decision, especially for start-ups, can look a lot like a ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved