- Below The Waterline
- Posts
- Demonstrating Value. Are Your Features A Royale With Cheese? š
Demonstrating Value. Are Your Features A Royale With Cheese? š
Or Are We Eating From The 99c Menu?
I have lost count of the times Iāve abandoned a product or service. Left for dead, discarded, shot in the head. Pulp Fiction style.
I have no remorse. I am unforgiving. I am a consumer and a buyer. Just like you and your customers.
Yet, so many companies donāt seem to get it. They talk the talk, but unlike John Travolta and Samuel L Jackson, they do not walk the walk.
Are they a Royale with Cheese? No, they are more like the 99c menu. Barely satisfactory when it comes to demonstrating value.
In this newsletter, I will discuss the following:
Why features in themselves are not valuable.
The different ways we can demonstrate value.
Why you should never, ever stop demonstrating value.
The F Word Is More Than A Dirty Word
Inside most tech companies, the features conveyor belt keeps churning out new things to launch at an alarming rate. Product marketers canāt keep up, the market canāt keep up, and your customers canāt keep up.
No one can keep up!
As a result, the messaging volume becomes a visceral semi-automatic assault on our senses. Nobody wins. Fortunately, there is a better way.
As we learn about positioning, we understand that it is the value that customers want; that value is defined by the benefit it delivers, enabled by features, in that order.
Features are merely a delivery vehicle, an Uber for delivering your benefit
The benefit ladder is the simplest way to understand the effectiveness of what customers find most valuable.
The illustration is taken from my LinkedIn post about value
Letās use the Product Marketing Allianceās Pro Membership plan as an example to explain working from the bottom rung (least valuable) to the top rung (most valuable):
Product: Good old plain product
Product features 100ās tools and templates and 100ās videos on demand of crucial content for product marketers
Product benefits: Get the job done with best-in-class product marketing assets available nowhere else
Customer benefit: Youāll be a better product marketer because you have insight and assets that elevate you above your contemporaries
Emotional benefits: Feel more confident and authoritative in your role
The higher you can position your product on the ladder, the more effective your proposition will be.
So ask yourself, do you want to be at the bottom of the ladder? Unfortunately, by design or by default, too many of us are. Look up and start thinking about how to climb the benefit ladder, one rung at a time.
I hear it all the timeā¦ āHey Harvey, weāre being asked to launch 50 features a week, week in and week out, argh!!ā
I get it, donāt be depressed. There are some wonderful examples of how value is demonstrated, so letās dive in.
Let The Product Demonstrate The Value - Grammarly
I am on a massive content creation bender and will be for the next six months or more. The amount of writing Iāll be doing is more than Iāve ever done in a concentrated timeframe, and I need help.
Creating so much written collateral started taking its toll on me.
Proofreading, feedback loops, and re-writes for high volumes and frequencies are a burden but an essential part of the process. But, oh my, itās tedious! The Pulp Fiction Travolta would not doubt pop a cap in it and be done!
I got a recommendation to try Grammarly from some copywriters I have tons of respect for.
Within 5 minutes of using it across all my written outputs, from texts to Slack messages, articles (like this), and future course creation, I benefited from its input, which helped me learn about my writing competency and style as I went.
Grammarly has analysed 16 million of my words = 1 million a month!
However, the special sauce was its spontaneous periodic switch to the premium mode, adding more value as I worked.
Some premium benefits, such as clarity-focused sentence rewrites, tone adjustments, and word choices, would signal themselves to me.
I benefited from something that would help me with correctness and efficiency in the face of my content bender. I could not ignore the benefit as I worked, then had the FOMO! In less than a week, I was a Premium user, and I consider it one of the best value subscriptions I have.
The customer benefit on the ladder is simple: be a better writer
The emotional benefit on the ladder: feel more confident and empowered as a writer
The value shows itself, not just in real-time as I write, but weekly. I learn about my writing each week! Check out my numbers š
The team at Grammarly nailed the intersection at which and how Premium sells itself. š
Leverage Onboarding To Demonstrate Value - Evernote
Evernoteās onboarding is best in class and not just for me, but why? In two words:
Simplicity
Focus
Evernote has excellent data and research that shows the critical things in five steps that derive success with the product for its users and thus value.
Day 1 Welcome Email
Day 3 Onboarding Email No. 1 (create your first note)
Day 10 Onboarding Email No. 2 (all your stuff everywhere)
Day 17 Promotional Email No. 1
Day 19 Onboarding Email No. 3 (accomplish more with checklists)
Day 27 Onboarding Email No. 4 (how to email into Evernote)
Day 29 Did you know?
Day 31 Promotional Email No. 2
Day 33 Milestone Email
Day 36 Onboarding Email No. 5 (how to find anything)
The focus on value is clear. But the cadence and momentum are focused - one simple onboarding message with one key action over the first month.
Evernote knows they have a one-month window with users in which to create a dependency on the product. If the user is not getting value by then, they are unlikely to be users much longer.
When Drinking From The Firehose, You Must Manage The Complexity To Deliver Simplicity
āI am Winston Wolf; I solve problemsā
(Actor Harvey Keitel, Pulp Fiction)
As Quentin Tarantino and the cast wade through the soup of features your companyās kitchen keeps on serving up, letās get practical about how we can manage the volume, frequency, and quality of the features you are being inundated with.
There are three key objectives:
Make the benefit and value understandable for your customers in a way they can process
Make the work manageable for you
Reduce the chaos. For everyone
I often recommend my private consulting clients ācluster and themeā in this use case. What the heck is that? I hear you say! Simply cluster the features together to create a time-bound theme.
Letās say you have quite a few new features that support one particular area of your product, they are dropping from the product team each week, and you are drinking them from the firehose.
The controversial part is not to release them as they drop but to put them together, say next quarter and create a customer-oriented theme that your marketing, sales and company communications can rally around.
What you are communicating is the theme; the features are a vehicle to ladder up to benefits that are the constituent parts of the theme.
You can rally around quarterly customer-oriented themed releases with Webinars, PR, pitches, and marketing; thereās no shortage of things you could do here. Be creative!
The key is delivering the three objectives listed above and putting your customers at the centre of your comms with something they care about, not a myriad of features that they donāt.
Thereās so much more to this than I can share here.
Internal resistance and the fact that not all features are created equal, for starters, only scrape the surface of the work you need to do with the product team to sell the value to them, but I hope I lit the touch paper on your thinking.
As The Fleetwood Mac Classic Song Goes: āDonāt Stopā
Value can be demonstrated and communicated in many ways. Which way is best is very much a case for you to answer.
However, companiesā biggest mistake is that they think their job is done once launched. Looking at the campaign data from some of the best-executed campaigns, you are only about 20% done at launch.
You need to ensure you have more wood to put behind your offering and once youāve made that sale, Donāt Stop demonstrating valueā¦your paying customer constantly needs to be reminded of the value of your offering.
Once they fail to get value, it is just a matter of time before you are eating from the 99c menu.
How Can I Help You With Your Objectives? šÆ
How are you enjoying the newsletter so far? Please do let me know your thoughts, all feedback is a gift. š
I recently opened my book of business. Iād love to hear how I can help you meet your objectives. Here are some of the areas I work in:
Fractional or consulting [Learn More]
Career Coaching [Learn More]
Speaking [Learn More]
Read my award-winning #1 book [Learn More]