Share This Post

Startup

Why you should sell the superpower! ( & not the magic potion)

 

 

tn_tuesday15_macworld2008_keynote127

 

Image Credit: www.worldofapple.com

 

The story of features v/s benefit is an age old discussion. A lot of articles have successfully defined both. Feature is ‘something that your product does’ and Benefit is “why your product provides value to users’.

 

 

People don’t want a laptop that is lightweight, has xxx memory, can be carried anywhere. They don’t want a macbook air … They want to possess the superpower of using a laptop that they can carry in their envelope!

 

People want to be superheroes, and they will pay for a product that makes them one.

 

 

 

There are several articles focussed on correctly framing features vs benefits. One of the best images that I have come across is this one. (One of the inspirations for writing this blog!)

 

mario1

 

If you take a look at the magic potion analogy from Asterix comics. The magic potion gives the person drinking it amazing super powers. The person becomes invincible and unbeatable till the potion wears out. That is what people are looking for. Imagine a case where such a potion was available, users would not really care what the features of the potion are, as long as its making them invincible, people will be willing to pay for it.

 

Older people sit down and ask, ‘What is it?’ but the boy asks, ‘What can I do with it?’.

 

– Steve Jobs

 

 


Telling users that the iPhone will have a 24 hr battery life really doesn’t create an impact.

 

Is 24 hrs battery better than others? Do I want to pay more for this? I’m happy to charge my battery. after 8 hours if it saves me couple of hundred dollars.

 

But if you tell users that they can now use facetime to see their grandchild who stays in another country using the latest iPhone, then that makes them a superhero!

 

Here is an article from Hubspotthat addresses this point.

 


There are several such products that aim to make superheroes out of their users.

 

1) Slacksays “Be less busy“. They make superheroes of their users by assuring them that using slack means they have more free time at hand.

 

slack

 

Image Credit: www.slack.com

 

2) Buffer makes their users smarter by providing a ‘Smarter way to share’ on social media.

 

buffer-app

 

3) Meerkat has a simple line – “Tweet Live Video”

 

meerkat

 

Image Credit: https://meerkatapp.co/

 

This fundamental fact can be leveraged during the product building stage and also in the product marketing stage. In the product build stage and marketing stage, you should identify the following:

 

a) What is the one super power that our product will provide?

 

b) Is the product or the specific feature something that will simply make life easier for people or will it drastically improve it?

 

c) Can we eliminate the features that are useful but not giving super powers to users, and only focus on building the ones that are? (MVP)

 

d) Are we communicating the ingredients of the magic potion or are we successfully communicating to the user the superhero that they will become when they drink our magic potion?

 

What more questions can be asked? Please write them in the comments section!

 


Original Article here

 

Connect with me on @shwaytaj / Try @getsokasu 

 


Sokasu – Social Content categorised by your favourite topic

Follow us on twitter @getsokasu

 

 

Comments

Share This Post

2 Comments

  1. nice! loved your examples and the headline rocks!!!

    shwaytaj – have you tried periscope and meerkat? how’s your experience been? we should try using them for our events naa?!

  2. Iv tried Periscope. It takes a lot of time to buffer the videos when you view it. But we should definitely try it. Should be exciting.

Comments are now closed for this post.

Lost Password

Register