How
can you get people to take a chance on your new business and become loyal
customers? The trick is helping customers overcome their initial hesitation and
making your new item speak to customers in a creative way. Here are five ways
to help your product sell itself in a crowded marketplace:
1. Broadcast your
advantage
What
makes you better than everyone else in the industry? Be clear with customers
from the start. Perceived advantage is built on factors like greater prestige,
more convenience, superior effectiveness or better value for the money.Even
cleaning products, the most mundane of all consumer necessities, can win using
this theory. For example, Mr. Clean Magic Erasers solved the problems that
previous spray-on liquid cleaners claimed to, with the added advantage of not
damaging the paint on walls as competitors' products did. The brand made this
ability to remove touch marks without damaging walls clear through a TV ad
campaign that demonstrated the product at work. This provided positive
reinforcement to consumers before they made their purchase.
2. Fit into your
customer's routine
How
much effort is required for customers to make the transition from a current
product to yours? If the cost is more than its relative advantage, most people
won't try the new product. Febreze seems like one of those success stories --
and it is -- but even P&G can make mistakes with their branding, as was the
case with Febreze Scentstories. In 2004, the company launched a $5.99 scent
"player" that was reminiscent of a CD player with five scent discs
that changed every half hour. Consumers were confused. They couldn't tell if
the product played music, freshened air or did both. Not knowing how or why
they would use it, they didn't.
3. Work right out
of the box
When
building new products, don't add work for the buyer. Make your product work as
intended the first time out and every time thereafter. A kink-free garden hose,
for example, should be kink free the first time and the hundredth time; a
children's toy should be easy to assemble; and you should never expect a busy
mom to spend more than five minutes figuring out how to use a new slow-cooker.
4. Make benefits
easy to spot
The
more evident the perceived advantages, the more your product will market
itself. For example, the clear plastic packaging of 3M's Command line of removable
hooks allows you to see and understand how the product enables you to hang and
remove a hook without leaving a hole in the wall.
5. Let customers
try it out
Tea
bags were first used as giveaways so that people could sample tea without
buying large tins, vastly improving the "trial-ability" of brewed
tea, and eventually tea bags. Samples, giveaways and store demonstrations are
tried-and-true techniques for risk-free experimentation. If you can't afford to
give your product away, offer a tempting discount or "buy one get
one" deal. Depending on your product and core customer, you can use sites
like Gilt.com or Travel Zoo to make enticing offers. Local products or services
benefit from actual social interaction: an informal gathering in a home where
guests can "play" with the product or try the service, a farmer's or
open-air market where consumers can touch and taste what you're selling and
meet you. The easier something is to try, the faster customers will want to buy
it.
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