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Is Your Marketing ‘Solution’ Your Biggest ‘Problem?’

Have you had current or potential customers tune out on you
while you’re speaking to them? You’re giving them this
outstanding description of your process and capability and its
going bing, bong, kazoom over their heads. Want to know why
this happens? Read on because you’ll find the whole problem is
actually your ‘SOLUTION.’

by Sean D’Souza MarketingProfs.com

Doesn’t make sense? Don’t worry. Within the course of this
article, you will find out just what it is that gets your clients
attention and how to keep that attention by shifting from solution
to problems.

The problem with solutions
When you ask someone what they do, they usually spit out their
process that they see as a solution to your problems. So a
person who cuts trees and mows the lawns would say, "I cut
trees and mow lawns."

I have a lawn mower, so that eliminates him completely, doesn’t
it?

Bringing the problem to the fore, however, triggers a totally
different response altogether. If the same person said, "Do you
have a less than immaculate garden?" My response to the query
would be, "Yes, maybe I do."

Having established the problem, he now is a position to know that
I have a need for his service. Even better, he has brought to my
attention a problem I didn’t realize I had.

Always work with a problem
If you notice people around you, all of them are beset with
problems. If you were to stand up and say, "Who has a cold that
they just can’t fix?" you will get about 6-7 hands going up
instantly.

This happens because you’re attacking a problem. Obviously,
they assume you have the solution, but by bringing their
attention to the problem, you are targeting their specific needs.
Once you’ve got their attention, it’s now time to make your pitch
and give the specific target audience the solution.

The beauty of problems
Solutions fall far short of the mark. Problems however go the full
distance and more. If you noticed in the previous example I had
two target audiences. One was the immediate target–the people
with a cold. The other was the people who were going to get the
cold (no doubt from their illustrious colleagues). The secondary
audience has no need for my product because it doesn’t have the
problem. But in a week or so, as the germs move ‘homes,’ the
second audience too will be potential customers.

A solution, on the other hand, does less than a quarter of the
job, if at all. It has been proven time and time again that you
cannot sell to anyone who doesn’t want to buy. The only reason
someone would want to buy a product or service from you is
because it is solving some problem that is not being tackled
currently.

Your first task to is to therefore qualify the problem
Find out what your current client’s problem is and then get their
attention by reconstructing your statement in a
problem-solution-target audience sequence.

Problems tend to perk up the ears of your target audience. Once
you’ve achieved that you then give them the solution (sometimes
one crafted specially to their needs), and they understand the
concept and respond to it.

Be aware of your specific target audience
Ask anyone who their customers are, and they usually say
everyone. Then take a look at the newspaper classifieds.
Businesses are always looking for specific positions to hire, people
are always specifying exactly the kind of person they would like
to meet in the personals.

Yet, you look at major advertising and the target is everyone…So
which advertising actually works better? I don’t think I’d be too
off the mark to state that dollar for dollar, the classifieds (thanks
to their positioning) achieve far, far more than huge
multinationals.

An example that you can learn from…
One of the recent advertising campaigns that has done well via
the concept of sacrifice is "Jeans West." They have sacrificed
color, style and any other tags that competitors are running.
They focus totally on their positioning, which is ‘Fits Best.’ The
ads go on to demonstrate the price of time. One woman says,
"These jeans cost me 2 hours." Another says, "These jeans cost
me 45 minutes."

Can you see the target audience here? It’s specifically people
who have a problem getting the right fit. Simple, isn’t it?

Most people would look at that and say, "Isn’t that too small a
niche?" You think so? Think again. By getting their tiny little
niche, they have stamped themselves very clearly in the minds of
customers.

It’s quite clear how Jeans West (and their really smart ad
agency) have done their homework.

Problem: Wasting time finding the right fit. Solution: Finding the
right fit in no time at all. Target Audience: Jean lovers that need
the right fit.

Empower me, don’t tell me!
I get e-mail from a travel agent every now and then. In the
e-mail he gives me information that I could get just about
anywhere. It has prices of airfares, new destinations and other
such things that I could find with a little help from the
newspapers or the Internet. Notice there’s no problem there. It’s
all about solution, solution, solution.

I don’t have any need to travel right now and so I delete the
email because it provides me with no tangible solution. When I
decide to travel, the situation will have changed and none of
their wonderful solutions will apply to me.

On the other hand, do you have trouble getting large
carry-ons past the check-in counter? Or would you want to know
of a foolproof way to beat jetlag? Or would you like to know the
tricks to get upgraded on your flight?

Most of us would answer yes to almost all these questions
because they present problems that need to be solved. The
travel agent has spent years in the business and knows stuff that
you and I haven’t got a clue about. Important tips that we could
carry around in our heads for years to come and use them as and
when the problem presents itself.

How people respond
Every problem is a trigger and when people run into that situation
they respond to your solution. Be sure, however, that the
solution is not a passing fad, here today and gone tomorrow.

Also remember, when you empower people it adds to their
knowledge. If you’re selling an expensive computer to a company,
it’s not worth it telling the purchaser about the technical
specifications and how it runs.

Figure out the problem and tell him how the technology will solve
that problem. Remember he has to report to his boss and the
boss has to report to the shareholders.

When you empower them with the problem and the solution, they
can relay that on further, thus giving the whole process a sense
of legitimacy.

It doesn’t matter, however, whether you sell computers, air
tickets or wine. The same principles apply and you will find that
not only your sales, but your thought process and alertness
increases in leaps and bounds simultaneously.

Your action plan
1) Find the unique solution you provide.
2) Differentiate it from all your obvious ‘competition.’
3) Find out the problem it answers.
4) Target your audience very carefully.
5) To stay top of mind, give out information that answers
problems for which you provide solutions.

Hungry? Try the $.85 McDonald’s Burger!
See the problem? See the solution. Great communication in
advertising comes from great marketing. And great problems!

Go out there and find yours!

Sean D’Souza uses age-old psychology and marries it to modern
technology on his website http://www.millionbucks.co.nz/.
Ok, the website name looks like puffery, but we guarantee it isn’t.

http://www.marketingprofs.com/perspect/dsouza13.asp

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