March 22, 2021
SUMMARY: Shiny
Object Syndrome. The tendency to constantly chase the new, the buzzy, the
hip. And
many marketers have it bad. While
the newest technology and techniques can help nudge up your results,
sustainable success lies in getting the fundamentals right. And nothing is
more fundamental to your organization’s success than the value proposition. Yet
in the rush to chase quarterly numbers and new technology, there are many
misunderstandings about what a truly effective value proposition is and why
it is so important. So today we bring you answers to common questions we get
from readers about the value proposition. |
by Daniel Burstein, Senior
Director, Content & Marketing, MarketingSherpa and MECLABS Institute
This article was originally published in
the MarketingSherpa
email newsletter.
What is a value proposition?
Value proposition is a commonly used but oft-misunderstood term.
In writing this article, I asked for marketers’ and business leaders’
experience with value prop. I received 102 responses (the best of which you’ll
read in this article).
But the answers were all over the board. I hadn’t intended this
outreach as a way to find out how effective company’s value propositions were –
like most other MarketingSherpa articles, I was looking for successful examples
to spark your thinking. Nevertheless, I discovered a wide range in the
perception of value proposition – their value prop was described as everything
from their headline to their slogan to a feature of the product.
Often marketers and business owners were headed in the right
direction, attempting to communicate value, but seriously lacking in
credibility, clarity, and exclusivity – crucial elements to the effectiveness
of a value proposition in the marketplace. For example, “great customer
service” is not in and of itself an effective value proposition.
So what is a value proposition? Like most business terms that
don’t have an official scientific or government definition, it’s exact meaning
can vary based on who you talk to.
Michael Lanning invented the term in the 1980s and refers to it as
a strategic document that should answer five key questions.
MECLABS
Institute (parent organization of MarketingSherpa) conducted
historical research into the term value proposition dating back to the 1890s
(included preceding terms like Unique Selling Proposition and Basic Selling
Proposition) and developed a simplified and clear definition of the term – a
value proposition is the answer to the question “If I am your ideal prospect,
why should I buy from you rather than any of your competitors?”
According to MECLABS research, an effective value proposition has
appeal, clarity, credibility, and exclusivity. Which is why “great customer
service” is not in and of itself an effective value proposition. Is it
appealing? Absolutely. But is it very credible just to say you have great
customer service? Very few customers who haven’t experienced your company
firsthand will really believe it.
Exclusivity is often missing from many value propositions,
especially in industries where it is difficult to differentiate products or
service. Here is a great example of exclusivity created in the legal field.
“Clients appreciate how we focus on serving the specialized needs of startups
and entrepreneurs with reasonable flat-fee billing and 24/7 attorney access,
all of which is virtually unheard of in the industry. Once we developed that
specific value proposition it began taking on a life of its own as a key brand
attribute for our law firm, and we've seen exponential growth ever since,” said
William Scott Goldman, Managing Attorney/Founder, Goldman Law Group.
For more information about how to craft a forceful value prop, you
can take the MECLABS Value Proposition Development on-demand
certification course.
How important is the value proposition?
“In our business, our value proposition is at the heart of
everything we do for our customers,” said Michael Stahl, Chief Marketing
Officer, SERVPRO.
The value proposition is the fundamental reason a customer should
buy from your company. It is a single, clear statement that concisely
communicates the value your company creates in the world. So in a market-based
economy, a strong value proposition is crucial for a company’s success and
survival.
A clearly defined value proposition is essential for enabling your
entire business ecosystem to understand what value it should deliver – i.e.
product development, front-line service workers, customer service, etc. – and
what value it should communicate – i.e. marketing department, advertising
agency, etc.
But it is also crucial because it forces important business
conversations, such as how to target a product offering. “When you're a leader,
one of your most important jobs is to help your team say no to all the other
[customer] profiles, so they can say yes to the profile you serve the best,”
said Flint McGlaughlin, Managing Director and CEO, MECLABS Institute in 4 Keys to Creating a Compelling Value Proposition.
An effective value proposition can also power investing decisions.
“I can say this with certainty: as an investor, a startup’s value proposition
is the first place I look,” said Zain Jaffer, Founder and CEO, Zain
Ventures. “It’s important that a new company spends a lot of time
developing their value proposition. That first value proposition will determine
their positioning with their investors and help us understand their ultimate
aim. As a word of advice to new founders coming to market: you can’t spend too
much time on your value proposition, and you don’t have much time to waste.”
How do I get CEOs and high-level decision
makers on-board with the importance of the value proposition?
A key role of the marketer is to be an advocate for the customer
and help business leaders avoid self-deception. If you can get your CEO and
other high-level decision makers on board with clearly defining your company’s
and products’ value proposition – for example, by being active participants in
a value proposition workshop – you will
naturally bring to the surface many issues you will face when attempting to
market the product.
In other words, it’s easy for business leaders to walk around in
the four walls of your company headquarters and think you have the best product
ever and the marketing should be easy. By being forced to clearly explain and
explicitly justify exactly what about that product is so great, business
leaders may find opportunities for improving value delivery to the customer and
creating unique, clearly differentiated value in the marketplace.
One way to get business leaders to understand the importance of
the value proposition is to send them this article. That’s why we wrote
it. 😊
Here is some data that shows satisfied customers are much more
likely to believe that a product does its intended job…in other words, lives up
to the value proposition promised in marketing – Marketing Chart: The importance of making the right promise
with your marketing.
And, of course, this wouldn’t be MarketingSherpa without sharing a
few case studies:
Customer-First
Marketing: How The Global Leadership Summit grew attendance by 16% to 400,000
Value Proposition: Marketing examples for each of the 4
essential levels of value prop
But the most compelling argument – like any real conversation – is
to first understand your audience. What is most important to CEO? Where is the
CMO making the biggest investments? And then show how a clearly defined value
proposition helps her achieve those goals and get a better ROI from those
investments.
For example, the investment made with any advertising agency will
provide a higher return if the agency’s creative work is based on a forceful
value proposition. The product expansion your leader is planning has a higher
probability of being successful if everyone on the launch team fully
understands the value proposition of the new efforts. And, of course, the
company is more likely to show a higher profit when it has an effective value
proposition in the market because it can sell products and services with a
higher margin and not have to compete exclusively on price.
My company already thinks it is using value
propositions well but it is using them poorly. How can I get them to change?
“A value proposition is NOT a slogan or a tagline. We fell into
this trap ourselves and spent the first two years marketing what we are, rather
than marketing the results that we produce for our buyers. [When we changed],
our client count quadrupled and our revenues soared,” said Liz Lathan,
CEO, Haute Dokimazo.
Frankly, change is very hard and it is rare for people and
companies to change proactively unless a specific problem is identified. An
organization is just like a human being in that sense. Few people find religion
when things are going well, they usually only find religion when things are
going bad. If the current flawed process seems to be working for your
organization – they are getting enough business – leaders may simply not be
motivated to change and it might not be a high enough priority for them at the
moment.
So you have to – wait for it – create a value proposition for why
they should change.
And you have to identify the right micro-yes. Can you get them to change the
approach straight out of the gate? Likely not. So what is a small step they can
say yes to, to build trust and move in the right direction? Maybe try testing
the new approach on a minor product launch and document the results and the
team’s experience? Maybe launch a pilot project? Here’s a free template that
can help you build an internal value prop for changing how your company uses
value propositions – Free Template to Help You Win Approval for Proposed
Projects, Campaigns and Ideas.
“What a lot of business owners get wrong is choosing a value
proposition that does not truly solve a problem. At Felix Homes, our initial
value prop was making the home-selling process as cheap as possible. We were
missing a key piece of the value proposition which was the fact that home
sellers don't just want to save money, they also want a great service,” said
Tyler Forte, CEO, Felix Homes.
“After learning this, we pivoted our messaging from being the
cheapest option for selling a home to being the most financially responsible
way to sell a home. The key distinction is that being financially responsible
means you are getting the highest price for your home while paying lower fees.
It also signifies that we are not just saving folks money but we are offering
them a full-service selling experience. After making this simple change, we
noticed a higher conversion on our landing pages and our sales team had better
conversations with qualified prospects. If there is one thing to get right when
starting a business, it is focusing on a unique value proposition that solves a
core problem that your customers are having.”
How can I measure the effectiveness of a value
proposition?
According to MECLABS methodology, an effective value proposition
consists of four elements:
·
Appeal – How much do I
desire this offer?
·
Exclusivity – Where else
can I get this offer?
·
Credibility – Can I
trust your claims?
·
Clarity – What are you
actually offering?
You can measure the potential force of your value proposition by
ranking these elements on a scale of 1 to 5.
Once you have used that internal ranking to settle on a few
potential value propositions, you can measure their effectiveness in the
marketplace with pay-per-click ad testing or with email testing, for example.
This internal evaluation and external testing can help your team
decide which value proposition to focus on. Once you release it into the world,
your business results will be the true measure of value prop success.
“Your value proposition should be measurable through conversions,
an uptick in market share, and deal acceleration through more targeted
messaging to attract more qualified buyers. We have seen a tremendous change in
our inbound requests since we made the value proposition shift. Leads come to
us generally pre-qualified and ready to spend money with us, rather than going
through the whole funnel where we explain who we are, what we do, and how we
can help. Now our problem is scaling internally to keep up with demand!” Lathan
said.
Where should a company use a value proposition?
Your company’s value prop should be infused in every customer
touchpoint from first introduction to final product delivery. It should also be
communicated internally to any person or company involved in creating and
delivering value to the customer.
However, not every situation calls for communicating the overall
value proposition of the company. There are four levels of value proposition and each
situation can require a different level. For example, investors will need to
understand the overall company value proposition but a PPC ad may only need to
communicate a process-level value prop to get a customer to act.
“According to the landing page optimization report from 2011,
the headline has very significant impact on landing page performance. Your
company’s value proposition should be featured above the fold on your homepage,
just as your product’s value proposition should be featured above the fold on a
sales page,” said Stephen Gagnon, Founder, CodeWeb.
This also brings up the distinction between the value proposition
itself (an internal document) and expressing the value proposition (communicating
it to an audience.)
For example, an element of the value proposition of Blendtec
blenders is that it can easily blend hard items like ice, frozen fruits and
veggies, and nuts. It didn’t just take out an ad saying “Our blender can blend
things that are hard to blend.” Instead, it made a video series called “Will It
Blend?” where potential customers could see its product at work on ridiculous
items like an iPad and crowbar. This shows the potential customer the value prop
in action. The customer comes to her own conclusion that the blender can make
easy work of ice and nuts.
Bright Productions biggest client by billing
volume is Bubbies Fine Foods. A key element of Bubbies’ value proposition is
‘authenticity.’ “We define authenticity in terms of what the company namesake
‘Bubbie’ – a Jewish diaspora grandmother characterized by her integrity,
intelligence, humor, and resourcefulness – would do in any situation, e.g.,
‘what would Bubbie do?’” said Brian Petro, Owner/CEO, Bright Productions.
“In addition to the website (now on its fifth iteration), we
created a popular YouTube video channel, a well-subscribed monthly newsletter,
as well as Instagram and Facebook [accounts],” he said.
Creative Sample #1: Video for food company
“Bubbies’ aggregate social media numbers (the total of Instagram,
YouTube and Facebook) constantly outpace all competitors in the naturally
fermented foods category,” Petro said.
And remember, the value prop should be infused in every customer
touchpoint. So on social media, that extends beyond a promoted video or ad to
the very way customers are treated.
“Before social media was a thing, we responded to every
hand-written ‘love letter,’ or genuine concern. Today, it’s a prompt and
personal response to every social media engagement. What's not changed is the
brand’s commitment to the value proposition of authenticity – in the culture
that Bubbie grew up in, the food she created, our approach to every aspect of
business, and – most of all – our appreciation of our customers,” Steve Rustad,
Owner, Rustad Marketing, another marketing vendor for
Bubbies.
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