The Verbal Structure and Tactics of Explaining to Customers

written by: Patricia Terrone; article published: year 2006, month 08;



In: Categories » Business » Customer services » The Verbal Structure and Tactics of Explaining to Customers

The structure of explaining highlights the difference between the benefits of goals and the benefits of features. Start your explanations with customers' goals and they will value them more as they listen to how you connect features to them. Avoid leading with the features of products and making customers wait as you work your way back to their goals. It takes a little practice becoming comfortable starting explanations with customers' goals—not product's features. It is like visiting a country where they drive on the wrong side of the road (at least, according to Americans). The steering wheel is where the passenger sits from our perspective. Although it feels a little awkward jumping into the passenger seat, it is still the fastest way to get where you want to go.

In addition, you connect all the features and benefits of one goal before you proceed to the next one. These connections require concentration (fortunately driven by logic) when customers might have two or more goals, one goal might have two or more benefits, and one benefit might have two or more features that can connect to it. Again, the case studies give you plenty of examples of the explaining process.

Explaining consists of the following four-step process:

  1. Start with the customer's first goal (top ranked) and that goal's first measurable benefit.

  2. Highlight and explain which feature(s) of which product(s) achieve that first benefit.

  3. If there is a second benefit of the first goal, again highlight and explain which features of which product(s) achieve that benefit.

  4. Exhaust the benefits and features that achieve the first goal before proceeding to the second goal by following this same pattern.

Another sure-fire way to determine if customers accept your explanations is to let customers know that you accept responsibility for their understanding of what you said. A helpful question is: "Does that make sense the way I explained it?"

The Tactics Behind Crystal-Clear Explanations

In the course of explaining, use the fewest words possible to connect the features of your products to the benefits of the customers' goals. Your explanations take into account the following six guidelines:

  1. Simple. Use your customer's terms and jargon to explain technical features and benefits. Remember, your goal is to make customers feel smart about their business decisions, not dumb about technical details that might not have any impact on their decisions. Limit your technical knowledge to the features that produce measurable benefits, nothing else.

    Example

    Explaining the waterproof feature of a watch as being a "hermetically sealed chamber resistant to external pressures of seven atmospheres before liquid infiltration occurs" is technobabble. Explaining how it only leaks at 250 feet or deeper is plain English.

  2. Vivid. Use descriptions that create powerful images.

    Example

    Saying that the face cover of a watch is scratch resistant is boring. Explaining how the watch can land facedown after falling from a three-story building and still look brand-new is exciting. It may not work any longer, but it will look brand-new.

  3. No Return. Stay focused on one measurable benefit and its features, exhaust them, and then go to the next. To keep momentum building and to keep customer comprehension high, do not go back and speak about a benefit you have already covered.

    Example

    Explain all the features (construction, material, and warranty) of the watch that improve quality as a group. Mixing them with features that increase functions (stopwatch, countdown timer, and alarm) could confuse customers.

  4. Analogies. Provide everyday parallels that the customer can relate to. Typically, choose a unique strength to build your analogy around.

    Example

    Explain the watch's wireless connection to your e-mail as an electronic post office box on your wrist. You receive your mail anywhere.

    Note 

    Competitors' use of analogies tells you about how they try to sell value. An abundance of them indicates they are customer oriented (keep things simple)—a lack of them suggests a product orientation that rely on technically astute customers

  5. Power Words. Use terms that express confidence such as confident, convinced, or know and avoid using weak words such as think, feel, maybe, or might.

    Example

    Do not say, "I think you will be pleased with the watch's performance." Your display of enthusiasm will underwhelm customers and probably cast doubt on their purchasing decisions. Instead, boldly proclaim, "I know the watch will exceed your expectations." When you know measurable benefits of goals and conditional commitments, you know how much value your products provide. While the meek may inherit the earth, they do not get the sale.

  6. Do Not Use "Never" or "Always." You do not want to put yourself in an awkward position if exceptions exist—and exceptions always, oops, often, seem to surface.

    Example

    Do not say the watch never needs an adjustment. Rather, say that it should not. However, if it ever does, there is no charge for the service.

When selling technical products, take the responsibility to ensure that customers understand your features. Let customers know up front that if they do not understand something, it is because you did not explain it properly. You win when customers feel smart.

Two issues affect how smart you need to make customers feel.The first issue involves how easy it is for customers to accept that a feature produces the benefit the way you described it. For instance, it is difficult to accept on face value that 800 MHz computers process information 50 percent quicker than 600 MHz computers. After all, their 200 MHz difference suggests they would be 33 percent, not 50 percent faster. Yet, it is easy to understand how a computer with 128 MB of RAM has twice as much RAM as one with 64 MB.

The second issue is the technical expertise of the customers. The greater the gap between your technical expertise and that of you customers, the more you should explain concepts in their jargon. Conversely, if your customer has a strong technical background, you do not need to elaborate as much.

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