Key Message Blunders - Part 3: Promoting Features Not Compelling Benefits Log in    Monday, March 15, 2010
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Glenn Harrington

Glenn Harrington
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Occupation:
Principal Consultant, Articulate Consultants Inc

Profile:
Glenn Harrington is the Principal Consultant of Articulate Consultants Inc. Since 1996 he has specialized in consulting on authentic key messages as the basis for effective marketing, brand management, and client loyalty. www.articulate.ca /

Location:
British Columbia, Canada

Website:
Articulate Consultants Inc.

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Key Message Blunders - Part 3: Promoting Features Not Compelling Benefits

by Glenn Harrington  RSS Glenn Harrington
 

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Key Message Blunders - Part 3: Promoting Features That Do Not Provide Compelling Benefits

In promoting their company or its products and services, many people choose to present their achievements rather than how they solve their market’s problems. In doing this, they place unimportant distractions where a simple, relevant key message would be more effective at advancing their promotional efforts.

Consider these examples:

* 'Award-winning graphic design' – on all stationery and promotional collateral of a design agency.
* 'Proud of what we do' – in the advertisements of an accounting and management-consulting firm.
* 'Laboratory tested' – on the package of a skin-care product.

The unimportance of such statements is intuitive to anybody but their authors.

For instance, a prospective client for the renewal of a website might respond to example 1, “How does your having won awards address my needs?”

The same would apply for people who would respond to example 2, “Does your pride somehow lead to me getting a good deal?”

When encountering example 3, one might ask, “Shouldn’t I assume the laboratory testing of any skin-care product before it appears on store shelves?”

The crux of the problem is that many businesses are proud of their accomplishments and lose focus away from clearly communicating how their market can rely on them to provide great value.

Unless a promoter can present to their market a simple, relevant, compelling promise to satisfy their market’s needs, then they should not promote features that do not provide sought-after benefits.

The awards you’ve won or the professional designations of your key people might provide reassurance after the buying decision has been made. Yet, for any enterprise to acquire new clients and earn the loyalty of its market, the focus of key messages ought to be on providing solutions to challenges that the ideal client faces.


- Glenn R. Harrington, Articulate Consultants Inc.
http://www.articulate.ca/

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Glenn Harrington, British Columbia, Canada - November 20th, 2009
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