Convince the customer by products
Answers
By giving her or his more scheme and discount and giben her good qualtie of cloth or product this are the ways a customer may be convience
SALES
6 Ways to Convince Customers to Buy
You'll sell more if you talk about your product using language your customer understands.
By Geoffrey JamesContributing editor, Inc.com@Sales_Source
CREDIT: Getty Images
Customers never buy because of product features. They buy because they perceive some "benefit" to those features.
Unfortunately, most sales and marketing messages talk about features and let the customers try to figure out the benefits. That's asking your customer to do your heavy lifting for you.
You'll get more customers, more quickly, if you communicate the benefits of using your product rather than the features it possesses. Here are six rules for doing so, based upon a conversation with one of my favorite sales gurus, Barry Rhein:
1. Know the difference between a benefit and a feature.
A feature is something that a product or service "is" or "does." A benefit is something that the product or service "means" to the customer. For example:
Wrong: "This car has a reinforced safety roof." (feature)
Right: "This car keeps your family safe." (benefit)
2. Use vivid but plain language.
Customers will remember a benefit longer and more easily if it's expressed using simple, strong words that evoke emotion.
Wrong: "This roof provides protection in the event of a rollover accident."
Right: "If this car rolls, there's a good chance you'll walk away unharmed."
3. Avoid biz-blab and jargon.
Nothing leaches a benefit of emotion more than the use of tired business cliches or overly technical terminology.
Wrong: "Robust implementation of 80210 protocols!!!"
Right: "You can connect virtually anywhere."
4. Keep the list of benefits short.
Most people can only hold two or three thoughts at one time in their short-term memory. Long lists of benefits just cause confusion.
Wrong: "Here are the top 10 benefits of using our product:"
Right: "The two most important things to remember are..."
5. Emphasize what's unique to you or your firm.
Benefits that are generic to your product category can convince a customer to buy... but not necessarily from you! Use benefits that differentiate you from the competition:
Wrong: "Our software makes you more productive."
Right: "Our customers report an average 30% decrease in costs, about twice the industry average."
6. Make your benefits concrete.
Customers ignore benefits that are abstract and expressed using vague adverbs and adjectives. Benefits that are concrete and specific are more convincing and "stick in the mind."
Wrong: "We can radically reduce your inventory costs."
Right: "We decrease inventory costs by an average of 25%."
PUBLISHED ON: SEP 28, 2012
Like this column? Sign up to subscribe to email alerts and you'll never miss a post.
More from Inc.
These 10 Short Words Contain the Essence of Market Targeting
7 Ways to Make Customers Love You
Get Customers to Read Emails: 7 Tricks
Cold-Calling Fail: 6 Cheesy Phrases to Avoid
Sponsored Business Content
Dianomi
CHANNELS
STARTUP
GROW
LEAD
INNOVATE
TECHNOLOGY
MONEY
INC. 5000
VIDEO
MORE INC.
EVENTS
NEWSLETTERS
MAGAZINE
INC. RADIO
BRANDVIEW
PODCASTS
SUBSCRIBE
SUBSCRIBE
MAGAZINE
DIGITAL EDITION
FOLLOW INC.
© 2018 Manuseto Ventures
Help Center
Advertise
Privacy
Sitemap