Features vs. Benefits – A Hallmark of Effective Copywriting
By
Michael Fortin did an excellent job of explaining Features and Benefits in his blog post, The Oft-Confused Features And Benefits. This is a must read for anyone with a small business website. This practice is probably contrary to what you see all around you and what you’ve always done, but it works.
Remember, your website should not be all about you…it should be all about your prospect or client. Use language that speaks directly to them, not to a general group of people.
Another important point that Michael makes is to make sure that your language is suitable for your target audience, not your colleagues. Avoid techno jargon, acronyms and expressions that only the people in your industry are familar with. It may be helpful to ask a friend in a different industry what he would enter in Google’s search bar if he was searching for information about your company’s products or services. Ask another friend to describe your products or services and listen to the words that he uses.
Unfortuately, many of us are afflicted with the curse of knowledge that the Heath brothers discuss in Made to Stick. In a nutshell, it means that once you know something, it’s difficult to imagine what it is like to not know it. The consequence is you cannot effectively communicate your ideas to people who don’t have that knowledge.
However, you must get help and overcome that curse so that it doesn’t have a negative effect on your business success.
Here’s an excerpt from Michael’s article, but you should read the entire article to truly understand the concept:
… 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.
No related posts.
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.
Leave a Comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.
2 Comments
January 29th, 2009 at 5:37 pm
Thank you so much for your support and rave. I appreciate it a lot. And yes, your article is right on the money. Especially where you said, “Remember, your website should not be all about you…it should be all about your prospect or client.”
Well said.
January 29th, 2009 at 6:59 pm
Thanks!