Solve Your Client’s Problem

by: Lisa J. Lehr

Your customers are the reason you’re in business. They buy your products and services because they have a problem. For this reason, it’s important to tell your potential customers in all of your marketing efforts how you’re going to help them solve their problems.

For example, let’s suppose I have a sore back, and I’m thinking of getting a massage. I’ve opened my phone book and looked at a few ads for massage businesses. They all look pretty similar; I see these same words over and over:

Reiki, hot stone, Swedish, deep tissue, acupressure, trigger point, and shiatsu. Now, if I’ve never had a message, I may not know what any of these words mean. So I go online and look up one example: Reiki.

I find that Reiki can be used for many ailments, including stress reduction, relieving pain, headaches, back problems—aha! Now we’re getting somewhere.

Your next step is to tell me how Reiki is going to relieve me of my back pain.

I keep reading and learn that there is no pressure on the body; sometimes the massager’s hands are even held away from my body. The energy flows wherever it is required and can be felt as a warm sensation or tingling. Reiki is a very relaxing and soothing experience.

Wow. I feel better already.

If you’re in the massage business, your customers come to you with a problem—stress, pain, headache, backache, whatever. Your job is to solve this problem.

Whatever business you’re in, you’ll be a giant step ahead of the competition if you tell them how you’re going to solve their problems. Remember, my phone book shows a number of ads for massage businesses, and not one of them offers this information.

Take a look at how you inform your prospective clients of your available products and/or services. Is it a list of things you offer, similar to every competitor’s? Or is it a convincing description of your solution to their problem? To attract prospects and clients, start with client problems for writing your marketing materials.

Bonus idea: Do a survey among your clients to learn what problems they’re having with your competitors. Then solve that problem, and see your sales rocket above theirs.

In his 1983 classic How to Make Your Advertising Make Money, John Caples reminds us, “There is an old saying: ‘An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.’ True enough! But, with human nature being what it is, you will often find that a pound of cure is easier to sell than an ounce of prevention.”

So, what are you currently doing to promote your product or service?

What kinds of results are you getting?

Can you do better? Start by solving your client’s problem.

About The Author:

Lisa J. Lehr is a freelance writer with a specialty in business and marketing communications. She holds a biology degree and has worked in a variety of fields, including the pharmaceutical industry and teaching. She is also a graduate of American Writers and Artists Institute (AWAI), America’s leading course on copywriting. Contact Lisa J. Lehr Copywriting www.ljlcopywriting.com, Lisa@ljlcopywriting.com for help with your business writing needs.

This article ©Lisa J. Lehr 2006.

lisa@ljlcopywriting.com

March 2006

previous article next article

 



Google
 
Web www.bizbud.com

Disclaimer: The information presented and opinions expressed in these articles are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of BIZBUD.com and/or its partners.


Unless otherwise stated, the contents of this site are
Copyright © 2006 BIZBUD.com - All rights reserved.

Articles are copyright materials of their respective authors.

Articles
  Advertising
  Business and Finance
  Credit
  Ecommerce
  Foreign Exchange
  Home Business
  Incorporating
  Insurance
  Investing
  Joint Ventures
  Loans and Mortgages
  Marketing
  MLM
  Online Business
  Real Estate
  Sales
  Stocks Trading

Tools
  Amortization Calculator
  Compunding Interest
  Calculator

  Currency Converter
  Debt Investment
  Calculator

  Lifetime Savings
  Calculator

  Loan Comparison
  Calculator

  MLM Commission
  Calculator




Site Menu
  Privacy Policy
  Contact Us
  Home