What makes your product or service uniquely better than all others in the market? What is the precise problem your product or service solves? Who is your ideal customer? What are the specific benefits your customers will experience should they choose to do business with you? Why should customers do business with you, rather than a competitor? You must answer all these questions in your value proposition – i.e., one short, clear statement that explains precisely what your brand offers that no other competitor can, and how your product or service fulfills a need that no other company is able to fulfill.
The Importance of the Value Proposition
Arguably, your business’s value proposition is the single, most important element of your entire marketing messaging strategy. Why? Because for many customers, your value proposition is the first message they encounter when exploring your brand – and first impressions count. In addition, some studies estimate most Web visitors remain on a site for less than 15 seconds – so that’s how much time you have to capture their attention and convince them they’ve arrived at the right page, and what you are offering will solve their problem and add more value than any similar offerings.
Your value proposition must do it all – cleanly, clearly, concisely and quickly. As such, it must be straight-to-the-point and appeal to your potential customers’ strongest decision-making drivers. It also must be displayed prominently on your homepage, and be visible at all other major entry points to your site.
Structuring Your Value Proposition
Many of the best value propositions consist of fewer than 30 words – sometimes even fewer, though some will exceed that word count. Considering you must communicate relevancy (how your product/service solves a specific problem); value (how it delivers specific benefits); and differentiation (why your solution is better than the competition) – you must cram much into a very small statement, so every word must count.(Image source: quicksprout.com)
While there’s no absolute set formula for creating a compelling value proposition, your goal at the very least is an attention-grabbing, memorable headline that communicates the delivered benefit to the customer, followed by a short sub-heading that expands on the headline’s explanation of delivered value. Sometimes, a short paragraph or bullet-pointed list can be included that highlights significant and differentiating details. A visual element is necessary, too – an image or short video that reinforces your core message.
Here are some examples to stimulate your thinking as a first step creating your value proposition.