home
Search the site:
search

Marketing Strategy - Spell Out Your Unique Value


I attended a "Sales Focus" seminar a few years back in which the speaker asked this key question. "Why, based on all the competitive alternatives available to me, would I want to buy from you?" What a great question.

Most of the participants in the room couldn't come up with anything beyond - "We've only got experienced professionals on staff."; "We use proven methodologies."; "We've got a reputation in the marketplace for delivering value-added services." or "We're totally committed to our clients' success."

To which the speaker replied, "Excuse me, but who's not saying those things?"

You must be able to clearly define what differentiates you from your competitors in the marketplace. If you're not clear, how can you expect your clients and prospects to be clear? In essence, you might as well be saying, "Please buy from me what you might otherwise buy from someone else. Give me your money."

Your long winded description of who you are, what you do for a living and why you're so great will rarely attract your ideal client. If fact, you're probably more likely to drive them away.

We all know a lot of service providers who are "out there" trying to use this approach. Most of them are standing around commiserating with each other that "it's tough out there", and "people just aren't buying right now." What they don't understand is that without clearly articulating their unique value they're not giving prospective clients, who actually want and need their service, a chance to find them.

If you haven't spent the time to get straight on this concept for your business, then stop what you're doing and do this now. Trust me when I say that you're better off to skip the next networking meeting or postpone that next sales meeting to work on this step rather than continue on without it.

When done correctly, clear definition of your unique value becomes one of the most potent weapons in your marketing and sales arsenal.

How do you do this? Here's an idea. Start by truly defining who your ideal client is. Not some vague description of various types of clients you've worked with in the past. Develop a solid profile of what your favorite, best, most ideal client looks like. Next, clarify what success in working with you would look like from the client's perspective.

Now answer this question, "Why do you work?" What is it that you are uniquely doing and why does that make it a better deal for the client? What do you do better, different, faster, more economically, with higher quality, with added benefits, with lower risk, or with a different spin? Be as specific as you can. Don't generalize or be vague.

If you really want to get tremendous value from this exercise then sit down with a handful of your ideal clients and share your results with them to get their input. Oh by the way - just by doing this, you will be differentiating yourself from your competition because you're including your clients.

Once you've got this clear definition of your unique value, you can use it throughout all of your marketing and sales efforts. To be effective, it must be authentic and real. Don't go overboard where you might over promise and under deliver. That could kill your business faster than anything else.

The more you're able to communicate your unique value, the more you'll be working with your ideal clients and providing them your services.

(c) - Kevin Dervin, KPD Marketing

About the Author:

Kevin Dervin is focused on helping small businesses that are ready to grow, but struggle with how to consistently attract more clients. Visit http://www.proven-small-business-marketing-solutions.com for more great marketing information you can put to use in growing your business today.

Find Kevin's Kansas City based KPD Marketing practice at http://www.ABCDgrowth.com and subscribe to his free ezine called ABCD Grow.


MORE RESOURCES:

The ROI of Marketing Events: How to Get the Most from Your Marketing Budget
TechRepublic
If getting more high-quality leads from your marketing events spend is a top priority, then it pays to know the return on investment of your marketing ...

and more »


Reuters

Burger King's Marketing Plan Bad For Diversity?
The Atlanta Post
According to the New York Times, The King's plans are in response to new marketing trends suggesting that young consumers, one of BK's target markets, ...
Under New Owner, Burger King May Spend More on MarketingAdAge.com (subscription)
Business digest: Marketing firm earns four state awardsThe News-Press

all 1,678 news articles »


TopNews New Zealand

Maker of Botox pays state in improper marketing settlement
Baltimore Sun
The state of Maryland will get $152547 for its Medicaid program under a settlement with the maker of Botox for marketing the drug for unapproved uses, ...
Allergan, Department of Justice reach agreement over sales and marketing ...OSN SuperSite
Botox-maker pays $600M to resolve investigationThe Associated Press
Botox manufacturer: $600 million poorer, but closer to new usesTIME (blog)
CBS News -ABC News -Kansas City Star
all 773 news articles »


AutoWeek

Tim Allen to be voice of crucial GM ads
Detroit Free Press
Chevrolet has lacked marketing consistency for about a year. The brand's marketing turmoil started last summer, when the brand began publicly looking to ...
Tim Allen is new voice of ChevroletOne News Page
Chevy Cruze ads get BuzzDetroit Free Press
Movie Star, Car Buff Tim Allen New Voice for ChevyWard's Auto (subscription)
The Detroit News
all 281 news articles »


Martinton: Stirling elected chairman of corn marketing board
Kankakee Daily Journal
Scott Stirling, of rural Martinton, has a pretty unusual background for someone just elected chairman of the Illinois Corn Marketing Board, ...
Business: CornBelters a hit for agKankakee Daily Journal

all 3 news articles »


Three Rules of Social-Media Marketing for Large and Small Businesses
Inside Self-Storage
This shift in the “power of the press” carries with it these three rules of social-media marketing for businesses: The first story told is the story most ...

and more »


San Francisco Chronicle (blog)

Sex tape snafu causes lost Reebok marketing deal for Patriots' Brandon Spikes
USA Today
Terry Watson, the agent for the rookie from Florida, confirmed to the Boston Globe that Reebok had yanked an offer for a marketing deal. ...
Reebok yanks offer to Brandon SpikesBoston Globe

all 169 news articles »


Wicked Samsung Galaxy Tab advert gives Apple's marketing machine a run for its ...
Geek.com
The Galaxy Tab slate is finally a reality. A new advert Samsung created to push the device into mainstream gives Apple's iPad commercials a run for their ...

and more »


Kansas City Star

Symantec's “Hack Is Wack,” And Cybersecurity's Most Embarassing Marketing ...
Forbes (blog)
This is just sad,” ”#nortonantivirusstillsucks” and ”sounds like a clueless government marketing dept from 1982 made up that slogan.” Forgive Symantec. ...
Symantec Can Blame Apple For Snoop DogForbes (blog)

all 376 news articles »


Web ads that follow you are the latest marketing technique
Denver Post
"It is a pretty clever marketing tool. But it's a little creepy, especially if you don't know what's going on." People have grown accustomed to being ...
Web advertisers track consumers from site to siteMemphis Commercial Appeal

all 2 news articles »

Google News