One of the vendors I’ve used for the last 20 years or so recently shipped a new release. With that comes a close-to-$1000 invoice. As always, the discussion in the community of users of this tool is “Should I upgrade?” Some will upgrade because they think their failure to buy will somehow cause the company go out of business. Others buy because there’s something important in the new release that they need. The bottom line to me is: “What’s the compelling reason to buy?” I mention this because YOU need to give your buyers a compelling reason to buy.
Whether you sell software, cars, gaskets, chainsaws, yachts, bow ties, or meat & meat by-products. Your chances of success are better when you meet someone’s needs and/or wants with a compelling offer. If you don’t, they’re as likely to do nothing as they are to buy what you sell.
I tend to talk about software – or at least use it for context. Don’t let that throw you. Think about your product / market when I mention software.
What does compelling mean?
When trying to figure out what’s compelling about your product or service, try these angles:- What improvement will repeatedly save money / pay for itself?
- What will save a substantial amount of time? An hour a week? 15 minutes a day? 5 minutes a day?
- Does this new thing protect my work, make it harder for me to make mistakes, or streamline a process?
- Will it transform a particular outcome in a way that makes it faster, more dependable, or otherwise “better”?
- Is it smaller, bigger, faster, slower, or more efficient?
- Has a long-standing flaw been fixed?
- On a 38 degree evening in the middle of a blustery rainstorm, will it get you off the couch & into the car to go buy “the thing”, despite the fact that you’re watching the last 10 minutes of a close ballgame or your favorite movie?