How to Start Your Online Business or Grow an Existing One

Hundreds of step-by-step video tutorials and tools show you how to find profitable markets, get product ideas, source the best products to sell, build profitable websites easily, and drive qualified traffic. Plus, discover how to outsource it all.

Access Thousands of Instant Products You Can Sell

Everything you need to start or grow your own highly profitable web business — regardless of size or model.

  • Ideal for any skill level or business
  • Follow lessons at your own pace
  • No boring manuals or downloads
  • Apply what you learn in minutes
  • Learn anywhere, anytime, 24/7
  • Try it risk-free for a full 30 days

Want More? Click Here For Details »


The Oft-Confused Features And Benefits

The Oft-Confused Features And Benefits

DrllingIf you’ve been a stu­dent of mar­ket­ing for some time, then I’m sure you’ve heard of the say­ing: “Peo­ple don’t want to buy a quarter-​​inch drill, they want a quarter-​​inch hole.”

That quote by Theodore Levitt is prob­a­bly one of the most quoted pas­sages in mar­ket­ing in try­ing to explain the dif­fer­ence between fea­tures and benefits.

How­ever, I believe the quote is incom­plete and leav­ing out some­thing that, to me, is far more impor­tant. And that is, what’s the pur­pose of this quarter-​​inch hole? What does the reader plan on doing with it? Even bet­ter, what’s the end-​​result the reader wants to achieve with it?

The answer to that ques­tion is, in my esti­ma­tion, the real ben­e­fit. The ulti­mate benefit.

Not the hole. And cer­tainly not the drill that cre­ated it.

Sure, it is a ben­e­fit to some degree. But “ben­e­fit,” defined in the dic­tio­nary, is “some­thing that improves, enhances, or pro­motes well-​​being.” So let me ask you, how is one or one’s well-​​being enhanced by a quarter-​​inch hole?

To make offers truly irre­sistible, words should appeal to spe­cific buyer motives. Com­mon copy­writ­ing wis­dom dic­tates that the first rule in doing so is to stress ben­e­fits over fea­tures. Think ben­e­fits, ben­e­fits, ben­e­fits. Sounds sim­ple, right?

Not really. For if it were, a web­site would be suc­cess­ful sim­ply if it listed a product’s fea­tures and its sub­se­quent ben­e­fits. And we all know that is not true. Many benefit-​​laden copy have failed. So you need more than that.

In an attempt to pro­vide you with some guid­ance on how to dig deeper to find bet­ter, more com­pelling ben­e­fits, here’s a tool I’ve used to help you.

The Prod­uct Analy­sis Worksheet

One of the classes I used to to teach in col­lege was Pro­fes­sional Sell­ing. In it, the curriculum’s text­book was “Per­sonal Sell­ing: An Inter­ac­tive Approach,” by Ronald Marks, Ph.D., a pro­fes­sor of mar­ket­ing at the Uni­ver­sity of Missouri.

In this book, Dr. Marks dis­cusses the abil­ity to con­vey ben­e­fits over fea­tures using a tool he calls Prod­uct Analy­sis Work­sheet. The way it works is quite simple.

Prod­uct ben­e­fits usu­ally con­sist of four prin­ci­pal lev­els. They are fea­tures, advan­tages, motives, and ben­e­fits. Each layer has its own set of attrib­utes and char­ac­ter­is­tics, which varies depend­ing on the prod­uct type and the mar­ket to which the prod­uct caters.

To illus­trate, here’s a descrip­tion of each layer:

  1. Fea­tures — what prod­ucts have. For exam­ple, say you sell an account­ing soft­ware. You can say, “This account­ing soft­ware has a report­ing feature.”
  2. Advan­tages — what fea­tures do. To con­tinue our exam­ple, “Report­ing pro­vides real-​​time, on-​​demand, updated mission-​​critical infor­ma­tion to key personnel.”
  3. Motives — what motives do fea­tures sat­isfy. For exam­ple, “Cost-​​savings, greater con­trol, increased pro­duc­tion, bet­ter deci­sions, etc.”
  4. Ben­e­fits — what those fea­tures mean. This is where you attach the advan­tages you out­lined to spe­cific motives those fea­tures sat­isfy. To con­tinue our example… 

    With this pow­er­ful report­ing fea­ture, man­agers are able to keep their fin­ger on your company’s finan­cial pulse at all times, thereby reduc­ing costs by as much as 50%, main­tain­ing greater con­trol over expen­di­tures, increas­ing their out­put by 10–20 times at any given time, and avoid­ing mak­ing deci­sions that could cost them thou­sands if not mil­lions of dol­lars — all in just a few clicks.”

What does this do? By dig­ging deeper and com­mu­ni­cat­ing what ben­e­fits really mean to your audi­ence, it adds weight, pur­pose, mean­ing, rel­e­vancy, and power behind the ben­e­fits you ini­tially come up with. It gives your ben­e­fits legs.

Obvi­ously, com­ing up with a list of ben­e­fits may be easy if you know your prod­uct well enough. But describ­ing them in a way that’s appro­pri­ate for, and directly related and tar­geted to, spe­cific audi­ences is not an easy process.

Mar­ket research helps to solve that chal­lenge. In fact, research­ing your mar­ket before you put pen to paper or elec­tron to screen is the most impor­tant com­po­nent of good copy­writ­ing. Not the head­line, not the offer, and not the price.

The mar­ket.

The mar­ket is the sin­gle most impor­tant com­po­nent of your sales copy. The more you learn about your mar­ket, the bet­ter and more effec­tive your copy will be.

For exam­ple, a com­mon prob­lem among mar­keters is to develop con­tent using a lan­guage their read­ers will under­stand. Sure, read­ers may under­stand what’s being said to some degree. But com­pre­hen­sion of a mes­sage doesn’t mean they will relate to it.

The prob­lem is, mar­keters often use words that only they can relate to.

This is quite nor­mal as we write in the way we think or talk.

How­ever, the goal in writ­ing good, com­pelling copy is to think like our read­ers, talk like our read­ers, and con­nect with our read­ers. This is where much of the copy I see fails.

Even yours truly is guilty of this from time to time. We’re too mar­ried to our prod­uct, or we’re too dis­con­nected from how and what our read­ers think, feel, and com­mu­ni­cate. This is where the “prod­uct analy­sis work­sheet” can become very helpful.

Here’s how it works…

First, list all of the fea­tures of your prod­uct or ser­vice, includ­ing stan­dard, tech­ni­cal, sup­port­ive, even abstract fea­tures. Then, with each fea­ture, develop a sub­se­quent list of rel­a­tive advan­tages. Write down what each fea­ture listed does.

Some peo­ple think that what a fea­ture does is the ben­e­fit. But this is where most busi­ness own­ers and copy­writ­ers fail to relate those ben­e­fits to their readers.

They assume an advan­tage is a ben­e­fit and stop there, when those ben­e­fits are too broad or one-​​sided. Instead, the feature’s func­tion or pur­pose, not how it actu­ally serves, relates to, and ben­e­fits the reader, is merely an advantage. 

While a fea­ture is what a prod­uct has and an advan­tage is what that fea­ture does

… A Ben­e­fit is What That Fea­ture Means.

A ben­e­fit is what a per­son inti­mately gains from a spe­cific fea­ture. It’s the ulti­mate end-​​result. When you describe a fea­ture, say this: “What this means to you, Mr. Prospect, is this…” Fol­lowed by a more per­sonal gain your reader gets from the feature.

Turn it around. don’t focus on a cer­tain feature’s ben­e­fit. Rather, focus on how those fea­tures specif­i­cally ben­e­fit the indi­vid­ual and what those ben­e­fits truly mean.

Here’s an exam­ple using my pri­vate mem­ber­ship web­site, where mem­bers get access to videos of me tear­ing sales copy apart, and reveal­ing copy­writ­ing tips, tricks, and actual, tested con­ver­sion strate­gies in the process.

  • Fea­ture: Watch a top copy­writer in action as he writes killer copy, all recorded on video, using real saleslet­ters and real web­sites from real clients.
  • Advan­tage: You get to learn how to write copy faster by under­stand­ing the logic behind suc­cess­ful copy (not just how to write it), and also learn copy­writ­ing tips, mis­takes, short­cuts, and proven split-​​test results in the process.
  • Motive: What you want is to reduce the learn­ing curve, risks, effort, and costs involved in try­ing to do it all your­self. There­fore, what this fea­ture means is this… 
    • Ben­e­fit #1: This means you get real-​​world exam­ples from real case stud­ies and actu­ally see the process done before you, instead of plain text­book the­ory or mere swipe files that leave you scratch­ing your head.
    • Ben­e­fit #2: Using real-​​world exam­ples means you can under­stand what goes into world-​​class copy and appre­ci­ate how they’re being used, so you can eas­ily repeat the process on your own, in the future.
    • Ben­e­fit #3: Repeat­ing the process on your own means you don’t have to pay an expen­sive copy­writer to write it for you or fix it if it’s not per­form­ing well.
    • Ben­e­fit #4: Not hav­ing to pay for a copy­writer means you save money and get it done faster by learn­ing proven strate­gies you can apply imme­di­ately, with­out wait­ing for some­one to do it for you or explain it to you in some “how-​​to” course.
    • Ben­e­fit #5: And learn­ing proven, tested strate­gies means you elim­i­nate the need to search for, find, test, and learn every­thing your­self, and avoid mak­ing costly mis­takes by hav­ing to fig­ure out what works and what doesn’t on your own.

… And on and on.

Can You See The Difference?

Now, once achieved, look at your worksheet.

Did you cover all the ben­e­fits that a spe­cific fea­ture has? Did you go deep and spe­cific enough? Don’t just resort to appar­ent or obvi­ous ben­e­fits. Dig deeper. Think of the end-​​results your read­ers get from enjoy­ing your prod­uct or service.

Com­ing up with the first batch will be easy because they will be at the top of your mind. But forc­ing your­self to dig deeper and come up with stronger, more inti­mate ben­e­fits, although it will be more chal­leng­ing, will pro­vide you with some of the best ones.

To help you, here’s a sim­ple exercise.

Once you’ve listed one ben­e­fit tied to a spe­cific fea­ture, just keep ask­ing, “What this means to you is this…” And work it until you run out of reasons.

Or use what copy­writer Peter Stone calls the “so that” tech­nique. Same idea, but add the words “so that” at the end, like, “With this fea­ture, you get [ben­e­fit], so that [deeper ben­e­fit], so that [even deeper ben­e­fit],” and so on until you can’t go any further.

Once you’re done, you then move onto the next feature.

Remem­ber that fea­tures tell but ben­e­fits sell.

Above all, make sure you com­mu­ni­cate those ben­e­fits in a way that truly reflects and caters to the sit­u­a­tions, prob­lems, needs, and desires of your tar­get mar­ket. Express ben­e­fits in terms that relate directly to each indi­vid­ual in that market.

Some peo­ple shy away from describ­ing ben­e­fits because they assume they gen­er­ate hype or puffery. Not so. As illus­trated above, they are effec­tive tools to get your read­ers to fully under­stand and appre­ci­ate your product’s true pur­pose, mean­ing, and relevancy.

After all, dif­fer­ent words mean dif­fer­ent things to dif­fer­ent people.

In other words, for­get fea­tures and what they do, which is what most peo­ple think are ben­e­fits. Think of what a fea­ture means to the cus­tomer and the words that com­mu­ni­cate this mean­ing at an indi­vid­ual, inti­mate, and emo­tional level.

Because the more inti­mate your ben­e­fits are, the more real, vivid, sig­nif­i­cant, and mean­ing­ful they will be. And sub­se­quently, the more sales you will gen­er­ate, too.

About the Author

Last 5 Posts By Michel Fortin

Other Related Posts


Share
Category: Articles
This post was written on Tuesday, June 16th, 2009. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Copywriting Crash Course

The Copywriting Crash Course

New! How to use the secret behind the single most successful piece of copy in the history of the world to write ads that make you wealthy. Click for more »

  • jimackerman
    Couldn't have said it better myself, Michel. There are so few in the marketing world who understand features and benefits, as evidenced by the other cliche in marketing, "Sell the sizzle, not the steak." They don't realize that "sizzle" is not a benefit. It is a feature, and that what people are buying is the pleasure of a satisfying, perhaps exhilarating dining experience. One suggestion for your followers, when they combine their features and benefits into marketing statements to be used in advertising or sales, I recommend they put the benefit first, then use the feature as proof that they can deliver the benefit.
  • Oh, I love that Jim. "Put the benefit first, then use the feature as proof." That underlines the notion that people buy on emotion first, then justify their decision with logic. Well said.
  • Excellent explanation of a topic my students struggle with - sometimes even my clients. I do a variation on Peter's "so that" technique. I set it up as a challenge and force a "So what?" through the process of moving from feature to benefit to deeper benefit to uber, life-changing and fulfilling benefit.

    But hey, whatever works, works for me.
  • I use the "so WHAT" as well, but more when it applies to developing my five "reasons why," such as "why you, why me, why this, why this price, and why now."

    Thanks for stopping by, Roberta.
  • Excellent article Michel - thank you - it's much clearer to me now.

    :-)

    Jane
  • Thank you very much for distinquish between feauture and benefit.

    I would also want to study the copy writing and would like to do freelance copywriter.

    I will contact you again.

    Best Regards
    Aung
  • This is a great explanation. I am going to share it with my readers. Thanks a lot!
  • Very analysis as usual on how to turn features into more motivational and detailed benefits. This will be my first reference to write benefits driven bullet points. Thanks.
  • As always, a great meaty article, full of tasty goodness... which means we're getting thorough copywriting nourishment. :)

    I love simple formulas that are easy to remember... "What this MEANS to you is..."

    Great stuff.
  • Thanks, Paul.
  • Goposy
    Damn it Michael,

    Isn't it time for you to sell us something... lol

    Good stuff.

    Rich
  • What would you like to buy? ;)
  • Great article. The examples really help to show the meaning
    thanks
    Diane
  • Very cool, I need this as I am about to review a new product.
  • Great article even though copywriting is abstract skill fro me :-)

    As I was reading it reminded me an eBook I read that was released a while ago by Ken Evoy and some direct copy wizard - Make Your Words Sell. I think the "so that" process you mentioned was slightly turned and approached from different perspective but produces nearly identical result.

    Thanks for sharing! I think even I might be able to use some of that ....
  • Well put Michel. FAMB, I'll have to remember that
  • Well done -- I have been working on communicating the benefits of a new approach to time management, and this has already helped -- thanks!
  • Great point Michael -

    I believe most of us have seen a sales letter that was muddled in its message to the point of being nondescript.

    No perceived value that was either logically or emotionally compelling.

    This article on benefits you provided was a brilliant and beautiful exposé of that.

    I immediately forwarded this information to my PR person -

    "Because practice does not make perfect - perfect practice makes perfect..."

    - Glen

    Glen B. Stewart
  • This is a fantastic post, thanks Michel! You have perfectly explained the importance of highlighting benefits in marketing.
  • It's all about context (to summarize your explanation :) ) No context - no meaning. No meaning - who cares?

    This is why it's so important to get inside the head and heart of your audience as a copywriter. What makes them get up in the morning? What makes them want to stay in bed? So easy to miss yet so critical to writing copy that matters to people in a very crowded digital space.

    Cheers.
  • Veronica
    Sure I knew all this - but repetition, repetition, repetition is vital to learning and
    then implementing!!! Thank you for bringing it to mind in such a structured
    useful format. I appreciated the wake up call!!
  • Yes, I've been an advocate of this for years. By asking so what" or "what's in it for the reader/viewer/buyer etc, you can arrive at what I call "the story behind the story"--a place from which powerful copy seems to flow very easily.
  • Great post and thought Michel. You know, the first time I heard this analogy was through Mike Dillard, and it stuck with me ever since and it is a BIG lesson not only in internet marketing, but in everything, it's instant satisfaction.

    It's just like if your using it in your business, it's as saying, people didn't by your product just to buy and read, they bought it because they wanted to solve their problem on "how to" do a certain thing, and after they get that sense of understanding, they get that fullfilment.
  • Excellent advice - I'll print a copy and give to my job hunting class today...most of them are telling, very few are selling!
  • Excellent article Michel! I'm going to share this with my agency. I completely agree that most marketers stop at the 'advantage' stage and fail to delve deeper.

    From an agency perspective, your emphasis on market research is valid, but difficult when you have smaller clients with miniscule budgets and no desire to spend funds on the initiative.

    I suppose it is our duty as partners to try and persuade them but it's certainly a challenge!
  • chrisinprague
    This is very similar to what I tell my students: "People like to think that they are logical creatures but they make decisions on the basis of emotions, then justify those decisions with logic."
  • That was a very prolific post. Oftentimes, we forget that we owe it to our clients. We must always give value above all else. :)
  • I've known of this concept for years, but for whatever reason it didn't sink in 100%. It's amazing the simple 1/2 inch hole quote made it all come together for me. So simple, but memorizable. This is quite a moment for me! And it was quite bad-ass of you to take it a step further by explaining that it's not really about the 1/2 inch hole either.

    Thank you kindly,
    Shane
  • Great article, as always.

    I used to think that if I point out the features, people would see the benefits. But it is much better to spell it all out because people often do not really know what all those features really mean. Features tell, benefits sell.

    What makes it confusing is that the quarter inch hole can be used in a hundred different ways, so you have to know exactly how your market would use that hole so you can point out the correct benefits.

    Thanks Michael. always a treat to take the time to read your blog.
    Lorraine G.
  • HollyMann
    I really appreciate your post here Michel. It clarifies some fundamental issues I was having in clarifying benefits and features for a sales letter I was asked to write. I was wondering if you have an type of outline of how a sales letter should be crafted - in general, or if you recommend any resources for that? I will browse around more as I am new to your site - I am sure you probably have a book I could get to help with this. I'm a bit intimidated at the moment as I have this sales letter to be written and this is my first time doing this for someone else - an established marketer, millionaire online. I've only written copy for my own product and I think your website is just so full of useful resources and information - thank you. If you have any specific recommendations I would also appreciate that. Thanks again for everything!
blog comments powered by Disqus
One-Hour Salesletter Secrets!

One-Hour Salesletter Secrets!

New! Programmer and uber-geek Robert Plank discovers the secrets to writing stunning sales copy in just a few hours or even less! If you hate writing copy and want to save money paying a high-priced copywriter, this is for you. Click for more »