HOW GOOD DO
YOU HAVE TO BE?
What Prospects Look For When Choosing
Your Product, Service, or Idea.
by Dr. Kevin Nunley
Index
of Articles
How good does your product
or service have to before prospects start to notice? You
probably can point to several ways that your business is
better than your competitors.
But is that difference
in quality big enough for the general public to notice?
Marie spent a lot of time
learning how to design her own web site. The project had
its frustrating moments, but in the end Marie had a fine
looking site that promoted her business. Her friend George
had more money to spend and paid a web designer $4,000 to
design a web site for him.
Marie could see some big
differences in their sites. Just having spent a month getting
aquatinted with web design, she immediately noticed George's
custom graphics, forms, and nifty columns--features that
she could not figure out how to create.
Imagine Marie's amazement
(and secret delight!) when a customer noted her site looked
just as good as George's.
"Wow!," Marie thought.
"Customers don't notice the difference between my 'pretty
good' site and George's spare no expense' site. I just saved
$4,000!"
Psychologists spend many
research hours studying this sort of thing for major corporations.
They call it "Just Noticeable Difference." When researching
a new product or service, they ask, "How much better than
the competition do we have to be before people start to
notice?"
The answer, of course,
is that sometimes you have to be MUCH better than the other
guy before the average customer (who may not be an expert)
starts to notice the difference. One example of this are
the radio stations in your town. Chances are they're all
holding contests of one kind or another right now. To the
people who work at those stations, their contests are all
very different, some better or more exciting than contests
on other radio stations.
I'll bet that you, as an
average listener, don't really notice the difference. All
contests start to sound the same. Studies have shown that
the people who win those contests can't even remember which
station they won from a year down the road. There isn't
enough noticeable difference.
On the other hand, Just
Noticeable Difference can work the other way. It costs Marsha
$10 to produce a chair. I've just discovered that I can
make a chair not quite as good as Marsha's for $5. As an
expert on chair manufacturing, I know that my chair isn't
as good as Marsha's, but my customers don't really notice
the difference.
Guess who comes out ahead
on profits?
Now this whole concept
is very upsetting to some people. Even though American business
is smartly based on not putting any more quality into the
product than the customer demands, a lot of people will
claim that your customers somehow intuitively know the difference.
Not so! When developing
a new product or service, or revamping an old one, run your
own marketing test. Have a few unbiased, but honest people
compare your product with one that is better. Then have
them compare yours with one that is worse. At what point
does the customer notice the difference?
Keep these three points
in mind when thinking about Just Noticeable Difference:
1. If prospects
don't notice your improvements, then your improvements aren't
big or obvious enough. This is the case even if they seem
plenty big to experts in your field (like you and your associates).
2. Look for the
ways that your product or service is much better than your
competitor's. Make your marketing accentuate those better
features.
3.Also look for
ways that you can save by cutting back on expenses that
buyers don't notice or care about.
Keep an eye out for areas
you spend lots of time and money on, but those areas don't
attract comments from buyers.
Kevin Nunley provides marketing
advice and copy writing for businesses and organizations.
Read all his money-saving marketing tips at http://DrNunley.com/.
Reach him from his site via email.