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If I Were a Realtor
Technology is irrelevant unless it makes our lives better.
Keep things simple & appeal to peoples real needs & desires - that's what makes them tick.
Thank you for reminding me that benefit is what the consumer really use instead of the feature. So many features but none of it bring any benefit to your customer will only cost you a lot instead of bringing more profit.
Social media is about adding a set of business tools to an organization rather than been seen in the latest fad.
This also allows people to start seeing that social media tools are not a collection of pre-existing social networking sites, rather the right tools should be used according to an organizations structure, culture, objectives and in accordance with their entire organizational plan.
Twitter's model is great, however large organizations should not only be talking about using twitter to connect and collaborate with customers. They should be thinking of using the same toolset to engage in organizational collaborative, searchable conversations.
Approaching a social media strategy through looking at the benefits allows you to go beyond the tools and to look to ways of integrating your social media into the very fabric of your organization. Combining social media tools with your CMS. LMS, measurement, analytics etc provides purpose built powerful business tools.
However - so many times we live in a bubble of tech savvy people. We get enthusiastic about tech features because we tend to talk to a lot of techies.
And yes, we tend to forget that for the majority 'how' it works is not as important as 'what' it does... (damn, I feel a blog post coming on)
Sometimes less features are also a benefit.
Great post.
This is a good reminder for those that have not gone through any form of sales training. I like to paint the picture for my clients, let them visualize what it looks like after making an important decision and enjoying the benefits that come from that decision . No Benefits typically equals No Value.
Thanks for the reminder, Chris. I have been evangelizing and I needed a boot to remember what hooked ME in the first place!
Thanks for spreading the word.
Sorry, I was busy hearing a lot of cool stuff from folks
on Twitter and able to engage.
What were saying? Something about benefits?
I heard your voice coming from this blog.
Now listening.
FWIW, my take on the difference between Features and Benefits is illustrated by the "So What" Test.
Take a given products feature or benefit and say it out loud. If you can say "So What?" to it and not sound like an idiot it is a benefit; otherwise it's a feature.
Product X will save me £100,000 a year over my original supplier. So what? You're an idiot.
It's a benefit
Product X has blue blinken lights. So what? Well, they're prettier than red ones.
It's a feature.
See - try it yourself. You will be AMAZED how many "proper" companies confuse features with benefits...
With VendorCity, we are trying to work hard on the benefits side and not focus so much on individual features when describing our offering. Oh, and thanks again for mentioning us in the Deb Works interview (http://tinyurl.com/5t98uc).
If we ever have a hope for transforming the way that businesses communicate with online tools, we have to start by skipping the specs and moving straight to the "what problem is this going to help me solve" issue. Lingo sucks.
We keep begging for people to take all of this seriously, but we're not yet succeeding in putting it in terms that translate into meeting goals and objectives. Sometimes that means starting with the end in mind, and working backwards. What do we want to achieve? Then, what's going to help us do that? Then, and only then, are the implements fair game.
http://www.morningstarcomm.com/LuminaryBlog.asp...
keep up the great work, Chris!
Craig
www.budgetpulse.com
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/5_ways_to_...
If she presents the benefits : you'll sell faster, your property will get the attention it deserves, the buyer will contact you directly then it's ok. And this method is much more successful then, for example, presenting the differences between our product and others.
Joel Roberts offers this great course called the Language of Impact - worth checking into if you struggle with articulating the benefits of anything you are offering.
Thanks.
Hit it right on the head Chris.
Great advice!
Telling me that others are doing it and hence I should do it as well holds good only if you can tell me what business benefits others gained - I need real proof from real buyers and not from analysts.
Couldn't agree more. Again, this is a strategy vs tactics comparison. If you can identify WHAT you want to do and WHY, you then get to the HOW.
Especially when new ways of HOW are popping up every day, it's crucial to focus on the WHAT and WHY more.
Cheers,
Kate
I think the true challenge here is depth of knowledge and experience. When you are new to a tool (or anything else for that matter) it's common to see the features - the wow factor stuff. But as you begin to understand the tools better, gain some real experience using them as well as practical application ... you then begin to see the benefits more clearly. That takes time!
Keep the excitement about the features, keep using, exploring, testing & messing up ... eventually you land on true benefit ... or you figure out there is none and move on :)
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