Customers use subjective evaluations like emotions, prejudices, preferences, and experiences to assign value to benefits. Benefits with perceived value are hard to prove or disprove. ExampleDoes the Rocky Mountain flavor of Coors Light taste better than the Missouri Valley flavor of Budweiser? It depends on your individual preference. Therefore, taste is perceived value.
Measurable ValueCustomers use objective data to assign value to benefits. When benefits have measurable value, they require more efforts to calculate their worth. Yet, once calculated, the benefits of measurable value are easy to prove—and to sell. ExampleDoes a bottle of Coors Light have fewer calories than a bottle of Budweiser? Absolutely. You can look up the calories on the labels and calculate that Coors Light has forty fewer calories. The tables below illustrate how benefits and value type apply to the cellular phone and the bottle of hickory-flavored barbecue sauce.
Advantages of Selling Perceived ValueWhen you sell benefits with perceived value, you do not need to prove the logical connection between the features and the benefits. The benefits might be what you say they are; you just cannot prove them. Conversely, customers and competitors cannot disprove them. It is your word against theirs. Due to a high trust level, your long-term customers are more receptive to accept benefits with perceived value on face value than are new prospects and competitors. Therefore, use as many benefits with measurable value as possible when you sell to new prospects who cannot fully appreciate your trustworthiness yet. ExampleDoes pouring hickory-flavored sauce on fried chicken produce as tasty a meal as does barbecuing the chicken with wood chips? Kentucky Fried Chicken claims it does and taste tests prove it (according to KFC). Disadvantages of Selling Perceived Value
Advantages of Selling Measurable ValueThe value of measurable benefits is difficult to dispute or discount by customers and competitors alike. ExampleA salesperson explains how a digital signal (feature) requires 20 percent less power than an analog signal for processing. Therefore, its battery lasts 20 percent longer than the one in an analog phone. How this feature produces benefits is not only logical but also measurable to the customers. Grateful for the facts, they take the salesperson out to lunch. You use industry standards or reports by independent experts to support the validity of your measurable benefits. You also use them to refute competitors' benefits that depend on perceived value. You demonstrate to customers your knowledge of the industry. ExampleA salesperson furnishes a Federal Trade Commission (FTC) report that highlights how a digital signal uses 20 percent less power than an analog signal. This report supports his battery life benefit. It also refutes counterclaims by analog telephone competitors that there is no difference between the battery life of analog and digital telephones. Disadvantages of Selling Measurable ValueYou must prove that your standards of measurement are valid. An erroneous "fact" jeopardizes your valid claims. When you sell on measurable value, ensure that your information is infallible. You should have two independent and measurable verifications in case one becomes suspect. ExampleThe salesperson uses an outdated FTC report. He now needs another recognized authority (not counting his marketing manager) to substantiate the "20 percent less power" benefit. You contend with conflicting claims that have their own proof. You constantly test your technical expertise when you sell measurable value. You must be sufficiently knowledgeable to prove your benefits while disproving competitors' counterclaims. Example A salesperson hands out an industry report that shows average customers do not recharge their analog telephones more than digital telephone users. The digital telephone salesperson must now offer proof to refute this report's claims.
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