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Strengthening Your Value Proposition

Guest post by: Ben Benson

Article Overview: Running a business can be tough and it’s been especially tough over the last few years as companies all over the world struggle to come to terms with the new, down-sized and altogether more cautious economy.

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Strengthening Your Value Proposition

Managers and business leaders are under increasing pressure to keep costs down and find and maintain customers. However using price cuts to lure in new customers is and always has been a very risky and short-sighted strategy. So are there any alternatives in a fiercely competitive environment?
Yes! Forget about slashing prices; instead focus on strengthening your value proposition. Strategy guru’s Kaplan and Norton suggest that, "Strategy is based on a differentiated customer value proposition. Satisfying customers is the source of sustainable value creation."
In other words, if you want to win the game of business you need to identify what your individual customers need are, what is uniquely important to them and where possible differentiate your product or service to directly meet those needs. And that doesn’t just mean working out what your features and benefits are and creating a flashy brochure. It means looking at each customer as a unique entity with unique challenges and priority requirements.
Your value proposition is therefore based on a thorough review and analysis of your customer’s organisation not your own. Any self respecting business knows what they create and the benefits that their product or service delivers. Identifying your value proposition requires that you look at your customers business and work out how your product or service can most benefit that individual customers needs. Telling prospective customers, “We can save you money”, is not good enough anymore. You have to work out for them exactly how you will save them money, demonstrate the saving and identify that prevailing value. As such your value proposition will often alter slightly depending on who you are speaking to.
Your job is to those benefits, costs and value that your customer needs to achieve and present your product or service in those terms. Think of the foundation of your value proposition as:
Value = Benefits – Costs
And build from that starting point. Imagine you are a paint manufacturer; you produce high quality, high finish, fast drying paint. But you’re struggling to compete against an influx of cheap paint suppliers. Your customers are always complaining that your paint is too expensive and it’s always a sticking point with new clients. Re-iterating your quality message isn’t working anymore and you are losing business. You could reduce the price of your paint but that will just eat away at your profit and once you start competing on price it’s very hard to stop. You set price related expectations in the mind of the consumer and that’s very hard to change.
A far better solution would be to strengthen your value proposition and ensure you talk directly to the needs, aspirations and financial realities of your customers business. Every business must create value to survive – this is the foundation and where the 5th law of wealth begins. No money is made until a customer receives value, but often that value is implicit. It’s your job to make the value explicit and hone in on individual needs. By researching your prospective customer you might discover for example that their biggest expense in their business is labour costs. As large contractors they make money when their painters can get in and finish the job quickly. The cost of paint may be a significant cost in their business but this information gives you the opportunity to strengthen your value proposition and make a direct and relevant pitch for the business. By using poorer quality paint the company is using more labour time to finish the contract because the surfaces require three coats and not two and the paint requires longer to dry between coats. Your paint dries faster and requires only two coats so you can demonstrate a time and cost saving that more than offsets the increased cost of the paint. Your prospective customer is happy because their painters are completing more work and bringing in more money and you’re happy because you’ve just won a major new account without discounting the product and eroding your profit.
How to strengthen your value proposition:
1. Understand your customer – join industry associations and subscribe to industry magazines to greater appreciate the challenges your customers are facing.
2. Research each individual company to better establish their key challenges and how your product or service can help them. Focus on your strengths and your key points of difference from the next best alternative.
3. Wherever possible quantify the benefits your product or service would deliver over their current supplier or competitor.
Value means different things to different customers and your job is to find out what value proposition is most important to each customer and wherever possible quantify and communicate that outcome. Remember; in a transactional sale, the role is to communicate value, in a consultative relationship the role is to Create Value. Remember what you consider valuable about your product or service will rarely be what your customer considers valuable. Your charge is to identify what your customer wants and needs and strengthen your value proposition around that concern.

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Home > Leadership > Ben Benson > Strengthening Your Value Proposition >
Article Tags: economy, running a business, value proposition, world struggle

About the Author: Ben Benson
RSS for Ben's articles - Visit Ben's website

Ben doesn't just talk business; he's a self-made individual who started with nothing – twice. He built a multi-million-pound training consultancy, sold it and blew every penny. Starting again, he created a property empire that's now worth an estimated $100M. His property portfolio sits alongside finance, publishing and venture-capital interests in the UK and US. He is the author and architect of ‘7 Laws of Wealth – An Individual Stimulus Plan for Surviving in the New Economy’. His first book The New Rules of Wealth sold out on four continents plus Amazon ( .co.uk & .com) in 3 days. Ben is also a dynamic speaker who has given over 2000 seminars worldwide. He's consulted with companies such as Bank of America, Cisco, Federal Express, Hallmark, BMW, Kodak, Kimberly Clark, Ford and American Airlines. 7 Laws of Wealth has grown from a desire to identify the timeless traits of the world's most successful individuals, and turn accepted opinions of wealth and prosperity on their heads. His wants to educate individuals to realise a commitment to the ‘life of business and the business of life’, to help people understand wealth creation is a skill and a science that everyone can aspire to.

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Related Forum Posts
Re: This is Marketing Warfare! Re: This is Marketing Warfare! - Hey GT, I guess this was from a while back, and it'll test your memory a bit but could you possibly elaborate on Unique Selling Proposition? Can you give us some examples of good USPs?


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