The world’s most important
marketing concept
Incorporate this into your marketing and watch your sales soar
The world’s most important marketing concept. Wow, pretty grandiose
title. But this is one area where understatement just won’t do. If more
companies understood this one concept, their marketing would actually stand a
chance of doing its job.
Before we get to this big idea, though, let me define what the job of marketing
actually is. Ultimately, it should be designed to convince people to do business
with you. That’s it. Every thing else related to marketing should all be
done with that end result in mind, because that’s where it should all lead.
Product, pricing, placement, promotion, and people need to all point in this
direction. Every campaign aimed at increasing mindshare, raising product recognition
level, penetrating new markets, or any other specific short-term goal is designed
to convince people to do business with the marketer. Or at least it should be.
So how do you do that?
I’m not going to talk specific tactics in this article, but rather about
the common unifying concept, which if understood, will direct a marketing campaign
to success. The idea is actually so simple that you might be disappointed. But
it’s so powerful that it will determine the outcome of your marketing.
Here it is: everything you do in marketing should clearly and explicitly tell
the consumer how you will make his or her life quickly and dramatically better.
If you can communicate that concept in a way that the consumer believes, and
more effectively than your competition, you’ll never lack for business.
The problem that the overwhelming majority of businesses I work with have is
that they are approaching their marketing from the wrong end. They’re focused
on their company and their product rather than their customers. The ask questions
like “How can we show people how great our product is?” rather than “How
can we show people how much we can improve their lives?”
I often get initial disagreement from company owners and managers when I first
propose this. To most of them it’s a completely new concept. They have,
since the beginning of their business life, been trying to figure out how to
outshout the competition. The problem is, they’ve been shouting the wrong
thing. For those who disagree on this point, let me make this statement: the
consumer doesn’t care a bit about your product or service. They really
don’t. They care about what your product or service does for them. Or in
other words, how it makes their life better. The product or service is just a
means to an end.
Most marketers have gotten comfortable with the idea of selling benefits rather
than features. But let me take that one step further by introducing a concept
I call the Ultimate Life Benefit (ULB). The ULB goes beyond selling benefits.
It shows the consumer how his or her life will be quickly and appreciably improved.
And most products have many ULB’s. To get to this way of thinking, list
the benefits of your product or service and then ask yourself “And then
what happens?” For example: Feature: SPF 90 Benefit: Protection from sunburn
ULB: Your kids don’t suffer pain or skin damage. They are happy and healthy.
See what I’m getting at here? If you just go as far as selling the benefit,
you haven’t communicated to the consumer how his or her life will clearly
be better. The benefit is “Protection from sunburn.” Go ahead and
tell the consumer that they’ll be protected from sunburn. Repeat it as
many times as you like. Shout it loudly. You’ll get some results, but not
great results. Shift your message to showing the results of the benefit, and
the mental connection is made quickly and completely in the mind of the viewer.
Show them exactly how your product delivers the benefit and produces the ULB
and you’ve got them.
The trick here is to show exactly how your product or service leads to the ULB.
Don’t just say or imply that it does, but rather demonstrate it explicitly.
Don’t assume that the consumer will make the mental connection. I don’t
know about you, but most people are too busy to figure out what advertisers are
trying to say. Next time you’re watching television, pay attention to what
advertisers are showing you. Most national advertisers are showing ULB’s.
One of the most frequent and most obvious is commercials that show how using
their product will make you more attractive to the opposite sex. Use this razor
and get the girl. Use this mouthwash and get the girl. Drive this car and get
the girl. Wear these clothes and get the girl. You get the point.
The successful ads are the ones that make the connection clear. Car commercials
are another good example. They don’t just say that the car is fast. They
show you how you can enjoy unlimited freedom with that kind of horsepower. Jewelry
advertisers don’t just talk about the total carat weight of their diamond
jewelry. They show you the reactions of your friends when they see your new necklace.
A lot of advertisements miss completely, though. The advertiser is trying hard
to get us to associate their product with something. But they fail to communicate
it in a way that causes the viewer to make the mental connection. The commercial
makes no point and is quickly forgotten.
Even the most mundane product can benefit by incorporating a persuasive ULB.
Whatever you sell, there are benefits to it. Take copier paper for instance.
Your paper may cost less, or cause less jamming, or maybe it’s brighter
and sturdier. Whatever it is, it has a benefit. So then what happens? If it jams
less, then you can concentrate on the important things, instead of continually
fixing the copier. You get more work done, you make more money or get a promotion
or whatever you choose to show. The benefit is that it jams less. But the ultimate
benefit goes beyond that.
Every product has at least one ULB, most have quite a few. Find them and communicate
them to the consumer, and they’ll have no reason to resist. They’ll
see that it’s in their best interest to do business with you. And once
that happens, just make sure you’re stocked up.
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
Derek Fisch is founder and President of Velocity Media, a full service marketing
and advertising firm.
NOTE:
You’re
welcome to “reprint” this article online as long as it remains
complete and unaltered (including the “about the author” info
at the end), and you send a link to your reprint to design@velocitymediainc.com.
Back to Resources page