sábado, 5 de abril de 2014

Building a strong, compelling Value Proposition

“Silicon Valley entrepreneur and author Eric Ries calls startups “human institutions designed to create a new product or service under conditions of extreme uncertainty.”

With that apt description, he captures some of the challenges early-stage companies face:

Besides inadequate understanding of markets, competitors and customer preferences, startups often struggle to define what value their innovation brings to the market.
 Acknowledging and addressing this challenge is a critical first step in helping startups commercialize successfully; after all, how can you sell a product or service if you can’t articulate its value?
 It is an important tool in ultimately capturing your first customer. The point is to make use of that tool to engage potential customers and remove some of the uncertainty under which startups operate.

A value proposition is a short statement that clearly communicates the benefits that your potential client gets by using your product, service or idea. It "boils down" all the complexity of your sales pitch into something that your client can easily grasp and remember.
 It needs to be very specific: Simply describing the features or capabilities of your offer is not enough. Your value proposition must focus closely on what your customer really wants and values. 
Your customer wants to solve problems, to improve on existing solutions, to have a better life, build a better business or do more, better, faster.
Step 1: Know your customer: 
Who is he or she? 
What does s/he do and need? 
What problems does s/he need to solve? 
What improvements does s/he look for? 
What does s/he value? 
Tip: If you don't know, ask!
It's easy to try to second guess what your customers want. And very easy to get it wrong. So do some market research: This could be a simple matter of asking customers directly, or organizing a focus group or surveys. 'Market research' is not just for external customers, it works for other 'markets' too: Depending on your product or idea, your 'market' could be employees, colleagues, or even your spouse.

Step 2: Know your product, service or idea (more below). 
From your customer view point
How does the product, service or idea solve the problem or offer improvement? 
What value and hard results does it offer the customer? 
Tip: Include numbers and percentages.
To grab your customer's attention even faster in this financially-oriented world, your value proposition should also speak percentages and numbers: How much will your customer gain, save or improve? How much more efficient will he or she become? How much safer, smarter, faster, brighter will the solution be? And so on.

Step 3: Know your competitors. Keep on thinking from the perspective of your customer, and ask: How does your product or idea create more value than competing ones?

Step 4: Distill the customer-oriented proposition. The final step is to pull it all together and answer, in 2 or 3 sentence:
 "Why should I buy this specific product or idea?" Try writing from the customer viewpoint by completing the following, (and don't forget to include the numbers and percentages that matter!):
 "I want to buy this product or idea because it will...";
"The things I value most about the offer are...";
"It is better than competing products or ideas because..."


Step 5: Pull it all together: Now, turn around your customers 'answer' from step 4 into a value proposition statement. The final step is writing the value proposition statement. It should address what market you are targeting, what product or service you are delivering, how you are delivering it and why.

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Step 2 - Identifying customer benefits:
Brainstorming the benefits you believe your product or service offers to customers is as simple as making a list.
The leap for many entrepreneurs is to be able to distinguish between what excites them about the technology and what value the product actually brings to the customer.
Keep in mind that your customer and the end-user of your product or service might not be the same. Differentiating between what your customer and the end-user perceive as value can help you communicate your value proposition more effectively.
Broadly speaking, all businesses deliver value in one or a combination of three categories of differentiation: 1) cost, 2) technology and 3) service. 
These bases for differentiation include many value delivery mechanisms such as warranty, performance and accessibility. 
Identifying which of these categories your product benefits fall into allows you to effectively differentiate yourself from your competition.
You can map your company’s value proposition on a chart with three axes for each of the bases of differentiation. 
You can then identify where your strengths are.

Sources: link1, link2

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