The Internet is not a broadcast medium. It's much more than that. Of course,
the Internet is a medium. But it's not a broadcast medium in the same sense as TV
or radio. It is a direct response medium. It is interactive and dynamic.
It is user-driven. That's a big difference.
I'm not alone as even the government thinks the same way I do. For example, my country's
telecommunications watchdog -- the Canadian Radio and Telecommunications Commission
(or the CRTC, which is comparable to the American FCC) -- officially declared so
in 1999.
In the wake of rumored proposals to regulate the Internet, the CRTC ruled out the
possibility by declaring that the Internet is not a broadcasting medium.
It based its decision on the fact that the web is interactive with its audience
-- unlike the television, radio and other media one-way media. As a result, regulators
concluded that the Internet could therefore police itself.
However, my point here is not a political one but a marketing-related one.
It is based on the premise that many webmasters and online business owners look
at online marketing as a mere communications process. And often, they do so by turning
their web sites into billboard-littered graveyards. They tend to forget that their
electronic "brochures" are sales tools as well.
The greatest limitation of ecommerce is the lack of touch and feel online -- for
example, people cannot physically inspect the products they are buying.
Moreover, the Internet is cold, faceless and impersonal. The lack of human interaction
takes away the emotional element in the sales transaction, as well as the ability
to persuade visitors individually and overcome their objections.
Understandably, a salesperson's enthusiasm for, and belief in, his or her product
are easy to convey in person. That person's unique set of sales skills, product
knowledge, personality and expertise is equally advantageous in offline selling.
Most of all, her ability to slant presentations in order to meet specific client
needs, goals and desires are also easier in the physical realm.
But online, these abilities are virtually nonexistent.
That's why copy has a much greater job online than offline.
Like a salesperson, a website must communicate emotions that empower people to buy.
But then it must also direct visitors to take some kind of action. And in both cases,
the responsibility boils down to the words.
Radio or TV may or may not use direct response. But online, there's no choice.
Online, you must use words that drive your readers' actions and compel some
kind of response. Even if it's to simply keep reading. However, dealing with this
issue in greater depth requires an entire article on its own.
So for now, let's stick with the biggest challenge we face with online copy, even
before we elicit some kind of response from our readers. And that is: benefits.
Why? Because before we compel some kind of response, words should appeal to specific
buyer motives and make offers truly irresistible. Common wisdom dictates that the
first rule in doing so is to stress benefits over features.
Sounds simple, right?
Not really, for if it were the Internet would be literally filled with successful
websites. So in an attempt to provide you with some guidance, here's a tool to help
you in developing compelling benefits.
The Product Analysis Worksheet
In "Personal
selling: An interactive approach," Ronald Marks, Ph.D., a professor
of marketing at the University of Missouri, discusses the ability to convey benefits
over features using a tool he calls Product Analysis Worksheet.
Product benefits usually consist of four principal levels. They are features, advantages,
benefits and motives. 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 brief description of each layer:
- Features -- what products have
For example, "This accounting software has a reporting feature."
- Advantages -- what features do
For example, "This reporting feature provides real-time, on-demand, updated mission-critical
information to key business managers."
- Motives -- what motives do features satisfy
For example, "Cost-savings, greater control, increased production, etc"
- Benefits -- what those features mean
For example, "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, and increasing their output by 10-20 times at any given
time -- in just a few clicks."
Obviously, benefits are essential to successful online selling. But describing them
in a way that's appropriate for, and directly related and targeted to, specific
audiences is a difficult process.
For example, a common problem among webmasters is to develop content using a language
their users will understand, when often they end up using words that only they
can understand -- or "technolese."
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 and talk like our
readers. And this is where much of the copy I see fails, in my estimation.
We're too married to our product, or we're too disconnected from how and what our
readers think, feel and communicate. We often can't see the forest for the trees.
If this is you, then use the "product analysis worksheet."
First, list all of the features of your product or service, including standard,
technical, supportive or abstract features. Then, with each feature, develop a subsequent
list of relative advantages.
This is where most business owners and copywriters fail.
They assume an advantage is a benefit, when it's not. The
"benefit" is much too broad or one-sided. For instance, you were probably taught that a feature is what a product has
and a benefit is what that feature does. Right? But...
... A benefit is what that feature means.
A benefit is what a person intimately gains from a specific
feature. 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.
Therefore, turn it around. don't focus on a certain feature's benefit. Rather, focus
on how those features specifically benefit the individual.
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 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 results in the process.
- Motive: Reduces the learning curve, the risks, the effort and the costs involved
in trying to do it all yourself.
- Benefit #1: This means you get real-world examples and actually see
the process done before you, instead of plain textbook theory or swipe files that
leave you scratching your head.
- Benefit #2: Using real-world examples means you can appreciate and
understand what goes into world-class copy, so you can easily repeat the process
on your own, in the future.
- Benefit #3: Repeating the process on your own also means you
don't have to pay an expensive copywriter to do a rewrite.
- Benefit #4: Not having to pay for a copywriter means you save money
and get it done faster by learning proven, tested strategies you can apply immediately
-- without having to wait 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 -- without 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 and then ask:
- "Did I cover all the benefits that a specific feature has? Did I go deep and specific
enough?" (To help you, just keep asking, "what this means to you, is," and
work it until you run out of reasons. Once you're done, you then move onto the next
feature.)
- "Did I use benefits that truly reflect and cater to the situations, problems, needs
and desires of my target market? Was the language chosen easy for them to understand?"
(To help you, think of expressing benefits in terms
that relate directly to each individual in that market.)
Nevertheless, remember that "features tell but benefits sell."
And contrary to popular knowledge, benefits are not vehicles for creating hype or
puffery. As illustrated above, they are effective tools you can use to get your
readers to fully understand and appreciate your product's true purpose.
Remember, 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, personal and emotional level.
About the Author
Michel Fortin is a direct response copywriter, author, speaker and consultant. His
specialty are long copy sales letters and websites. Watch him rewrite copy on video
each month, and get tips and tested conversion strategies proven to boost response
in his membership site at http://TheCopyDoctor.com/
today.