A value proposition is a promise of value to be delivered and acknowledged and a belief from the customer that value will be appealed and experienced.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Attention (your target market) !. Are you (their problem) ?
Advertisements

3.05 Employee Marketing-information to develop a marketing plan
MARKETING OCT 4 Instructions Delete this slide and the next one from your final presentation. Delete instructions from the remaining slides. If you need.
Reinventing Your Business Model
Scripts for Success.
Jeopardy Q$100 Q$100 Q$100 Q$100 Q$100 Q$200 Q$200 Q$200 Q$200 Q$200
Paint-the-Picture® Refine your Sales Process SRi, Sales Workshop on:
Elements of Brochure. Element # 1 - A great logo A great logo is not something to take lightly. A great deal of your success will rely on the type of.
BA 357 Operations Management
Business Models BA 560 Prof. Thomas Dowling Fall Term, 2005.
Welcome to lesson one in the Customer Service module
Food Truck Business Plan.
17 Tips to Write a Cover Letter that Will Get You Noticed! Mr. Endicott Job Search Class.
WF SEM II 4.05 C Employ marketing-information to develop a marketing plan.
VALUE ADDED LLC FLOOR HUANGPI SOUTH ROAD LUWAN, SHANGHAI 卢湾区黄陂南路 688 号 3 楼 E NG :E VA LEADERS.COM C HN: K VA LEADERS.COM W EB:WWW. VA LEADERS.COM.
Buyer Personas About This Document This document describes the personas that are involved in purchasing and using your products. A persona is a typical.
CUSTOMER SERVICE Diana Piraquive. CIS
UNDERSTANDING VALUE THROUGH VISUAL QUADRANT ANALYSIS BY ELIZABETH BOETTCHER, RED BRICK MARKETING, INC. An Exercise For Small Business Owners.
Proudly brought to you by YES Dragons’ Den How to Pitch your Business.
Michelle E. Messina, CEO Explora International LLC Tel: Creating and.
Dr. Ron Lembke, Ph.D. University of Nevada, Reno.
Session13: Portfolio Strategy and Unique Selling Propositions Dr. Mark H. Mortensen and 212 Tues &Thurs 2:00 to 3:15 3:30 to 4:45 Manning School.
Building your brand as a recruiter using social media tools Esther Riesenbeck
Marketing for Business Presented by: Helen Duncan
Basic Persuasion Skills in Employee Ownership Corey Rosen National Center for Employee Ownerships.
Designing a Good Brochure. Key Points for Effective Brochure Attention The most important thing for a brochure to be effective is getting the attention.
The Five Step Sales Process The Five Step Sales Process Step One: Plan and Prepare May 11, 2011.
1. 2 OVERVIEW First Impressions Content Purpose Design Distinction Closing.
KAREN PHELPS Spontaneous Sponsoring. Your Home Presentations “A Valuable Source for Recruits”
HOW TO MAKE YOUR MARKETING POP! Tips for improving s, brochures, web content and more. Presented by Gina Kellogg, CEO, Hott Cornflakes Communications.
14 th March 2015 Beatrice Dittrich DIY marketing - how to show your worth Practical steps to developing a compelling USP & value proposition Workshop for:
Objective 4.07 Unique Selling Proposition
Writing a Speech. Organize! Plan Your Speech Plan Your Speech Write Your Speech Write Your Speech Practice Your Speech Practice Your Speech Present Your.
Successful Interviewing. Objective Students will be able to anticipate and articulate key job skills and be prepared for a real job interview.
JFK-103B1W9 and JFK-103B3W9 This program is going to be used to learn about:  Decision Making Skills  Communication Skills  Team Building Skills and.
HOW TO AMPLIFY, MAXIMIZE MAKING YOUR LIFT-UP CONCRETE PROPOSITIONS IRRESISTIBLE.
Small Business Resource Power Point Series The Importance of GOOD SALES COPY on a Website.
Customer Service. Objectives What is the definition of customer service? What are the principles of good customer service? Who are our customers? What.
CSE 403, Spring 2006, Alverson Pitching Project Ideas Pragmatic Programmer Tip: It’s Both What You Say and the Way You Say It There’s no point in having.
Product Positioning. POSITION IN THE MARKET The location of a product or service alongside key competitors in the mind of the consumer The way customers.
What is the Value of a Value Proposition? John Cusimano Siemens.
By: Beverly Flaxington American Management Association.
Executive Focus 2007 Take Control of Your Career Tools to Jumpstart Your Stalling Career Executive Focus 2007.
E-Commerce Business Plans / Business Models Tony Stanco Director, SEAS Council of Entrepreneurial Tech Transfer and Commercialization
Presented by Mark Hendricks Internet Success System Master Mind Conference April 23-26, 2009 : Orlando, Florida © 2009 Mark Hendricks – All rights reserved.
Addressing Concerns and Earning Commitment Module Eight.
Robert J. Robbins (206) MEDIT 115 Competitive Advantage Mini Lecture Series.
5 keys to a great marketing strategy By David Cohen The Boomer Business Coach.
Strengthening Your Interpersonal Relationships. 1. Don’t criticize, condemn, or complain about people.  There’s no faster way create resentment toward.
Module -2. Situation Analysis Opportunity analysis: to spot and capitalize on favorable demand trends Competitive analysis: to achieve and maintain a.
Global Communication Skills Tosspon Agenda: Listening for Complete understanding Summarizing/Confirming Probing Skills.
1. Don’t criticize, condemn, or complain about people. There’s no faster way create resentment toward you than to criticize or complain about a person.
ITM 353 Final Project Demos. Your Last Assignment There’s one more fun presentation in store for you all: the Transition Readiness Review (TRR) aka your.
n Taking Notes and Keeping a Journal n Listening Skills n Working Together n Managing Your Time.
Tricks to Simplifying Social Media. Overview Building Resources Scheduling Posts Gaining Likes and Followers Being Social Extras.
Current value proposition Establishing engineering as a highly desirable career for women through an exciting array of programs, _________, _____, _____,
Introduction to business planning Practical tools, tips, and techniques for ongoing business planning Endorsed by University of Greenwich Business School.
Business Planning Top Ten Tips. Most small businesses fail because they have not researched their market thoroughly enough. You need to work out if there.
An objective Cashcrate Review. Can I make money with Cashcrate?
Loughborough University
10 Ways You'll Use Writing in Your Career. 1. Resume & C.V.
Business Model Competition
Enabling The Change Makers to bring our brand to life
How to Craft a Winning Elevator Pitch
Local Traffic Mastery Elevator Pitch.
Business Model Competition
Business Essentials, 7th Edition Ebert/Griffin
STRATEGIES AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR COMPETITION
Increasing Your Online
Brand promise guarantee
Presentation transcript:

A value proposition is a promise of value to be delivered and acknowledged and a belief from the customer that value will be appealed and experienced. A value proposition can apply to an entire organization, or parts thereof, or customer accounts, or products or services. Value proposition - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

FROM “VALUE CUSTOMER PROPOSITION” … TO “VALUE BUSINESS CHAIN” & “VALUE MARKETING STRATEGY” VALUE PROPOSITION VALUE COMMUNICATION (“Promotion/Media”) VALUE CREATION (“Product/Brand”) VALUE DELIVERY (“Place/Channels”) VALUE COSTING (“Price”) OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT & MARKETING (“Throughput”) COMPANY VALUE-ADDED OUTBOUND LOGISTICS (“Output”) CUSTOMER VALUE RECEIVED INBOUND LOGISTICS (“Input”) SUPPLIER VALUE RESOURCES THE “VALUE CHAIN”

Creating a Value Proposition Communicating the Benefits of Your Product, Service or Idea, Simply and Clearly Imagine a world where everyone is in sales. Well, the fact is, everyone is in sales, in some fashion. It's not just the salesman at the car lot or computer reseller who qualifies: Maybe you are trying to sell your spouse your ideas for the next holiday; Maybe you're pitching a new project to your boss; Maybe you are headhunting someone to join your firm. It's all selling, and, whatever your offer (product, idea, project or job) it's important to have a really strong value proposition. 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. and so on. Creating a value proposition is a useful marketing technique that had wider application than product marketing. Whatever you are 'selling' and to whom, a value proposition is useful, if not essential, tool. Whether your 'customers' are external customers, employees, co-workers or even your family, the idea is to help them see the specific value your offer brings to them. And by doing so, you will grab their attention in such a way that they know: "Yes, that's right for me". Creating a Great Value Proposition "Why should I buy this specific product or idea?" asks your customer: And your value proposition must answer this, in a compelling way. In creating a good value proposition, the trick is to know your product or idea well, know how it compares with those of your competitors and, very importantly, put yourself in your customer's shoes to find the answers. Your value proposition can be created step-by-step, by answering a series of questions. Once you answer these, you have the ingredients to create a value proposition that answers your customer's question: "Why should I buy this product or idea?"

Creating a Value Proposition Communicating the Benefits of Your Product, Service or Idea, Simply and Clearly (Continued) Step 1: Know your customer Thinking from the perspective of your customer, ask the following: 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 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? Tip: This can be quite difficult. See our articles on USP Analysis, Core Competence Analysis and SWOT Analysis for useful tools for doing this.USP AnalysisCore Competence AnalysisSWOT Analysis 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, (also 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.

Creating a Value Proposition Communicating the Benefits of Your Product, Service or Idea, Simply and Clearly (Continued) Example Here's a simple example. Let's say that you sell lawn mowers, and your customer is someone with a large back yard. Step 1: Know your customer Your customer is a businessman with quite a large house, who likes the "meditative feeling" of cutting his own lawn, but gets bored by the job when it takes too long. He's looking for a good quality of cut, for the job to be done quickly and enjoyably. Step 2: Know your product or idea The product is a ride-on mower with a 25 horsepower (powerful) engine and 45 inch (wide) cutting blades. Step 3: Know your competitors The mower goes faster and cuts wider than the competition. Step 4: Distill the customer-oriented proposition "Our mower cuts your grass in 50% of the time of 'big brand' mowers in its class. And it leaves the lawn looking beautiful too!" If you haven't already looked at our USP Analysis article, do so now – it will show you how, with a little research, you can identify how your product or service is unique. It's also worth understanding the various strategic positioning options that will underpin your value statement: our article on Porter's Generic Strategies explains these.USP AnalysisPorter's Generic Strategies This site teaches you the skills you need for a happy and successful career; and this is just one of many tools and resources that you'll find here at Mind Tools. Click here for more, subscribe to our free newsletter, or become a member for just $1.herefree newsletterbecome a member