It doesn’t matter that they
perfectly fit your “ideal customer” persona.
It doesn’t matter that your
solution is full of features built especially for them.
It doesn’t even matter that you’re
sure it’ll be a huge help to their business.
Despite all that, they’ll still
ignore you.
They don’t care about your
features, your user interface, your expert training and support, your
attractive price, or anything else you’re just dying to show them.
At least they’re not interested yet.
Identify the pain
Before prospective customers will
pay any attention at all to your solution, they first need to recognize that
they have a problem. So first it’s your job to show them that
problem.
You need to make them see that the
way they’re doing something right now is the wrong way. The tool or
process they’re using is hurting their organization.
·
It’s costing money.
·
It’s losing customers.
·
It’s wasting time.
·
It’s risking penalties.
·
It’s losing them good candidates.
·
It’s costing market share.
·
It’s keeping them from control.
·
It’s blinding them to opportunities.
In fact, you not only need to show
them that there’s a problem. You need to point out that it’s an urgent
problem and it needs immediate attention.
A reminder: most prospects for SaaS
solutions have a lot of other things on their plates. They are not
assigned the full-time job of evaluating technology. They spend most of their
time managing HR, Finance, Sales, Marketing, or whatever function they’re
responsible for. (See “Your prospect has a day job.”)
In other words, they’re always
looking at a long list of problems to be dealt with. And only the two or
three at the top of the list get any attention. If the problem you solve
is way down on that list, the prospect just doesn’t have the time.
When do we get to talk about our
product?
I can hear you whining right now (I
worked in tech marketing for a long time before I started this
blog.):
If I need to spend so much time
talking about the prospects’ urgent problems, when do I get to talk about my
wonderful product?!
After all, when a prospective
customer visits your website, watches your video, looks at your email, stops in
your trade show booth, or picks up your phone call, all you’ve got is maybe a
minute or two of their time. How much of that can you give to hearing
about the prospect’s problems?
My advice: give most
of that time to talking about problems– maybe all of it.
Because until the prospect
recognizes that they have an urgent problem – until they’re nodding their head
thinking “this is something I need to fix ASAP” – they won’t be paying
attention to anything you’re saying about your solution.
-->