How to Combine Features and Benefits in Product Copy
You know the
size and color of your product, what it’s made of and what each little button
does. But none of this helps customers understand why they should buy it – that
is, unless you explain it to them.
Consumers are
being marketed to all the time, but they’ll only buy the things that save them
time or money or otherwise make their lives easier. That’s why your copy needs
to tout the features and benefits of
your product.
Features and Benefits: What’s the
Difference?
A famous urban
legend says the new CEO of a drill manufacturer told his sales team they were
no longer selling the drills, but the holes that the drills produced. That’s
the best way to differentiate features from benefits.
Features are the elements of a product that
the consumer can see, feel or measure. The benefits
are the end results of those features.
A cookware company, for example, could talk
about the features of green
cookware, including materials and cooking time; or it could talk about the
faster cooking time, ease of cleaning and environmental sustainability. Which list do you think matters more to the
consumer?
How do I Combine Features and Benefits?
The best sales
copy combines features and benefits to attract the consumer and make the
product seem indispensable. Try it for yourself by following these tips for
writing copy that sells:
Open with the End Result
People have a
need, and your product meets it. If you open your marketing copy with that
premise, you won’t have to work to keep your reader’s attention; they’re
already anxious to know how you’re going to solve their problem.
Open with the
end result and readers will stick around to learn how your product will achieve
it.
Show the Link between Features and Benefits
Every feature
produces a benefit, but the consumer won’t know it unless you make the
connection. The best way to do this is to make a bulleted list of the product’s
features and the benefit that comes from each. When mentioning the cookware
material, talk about how it cuts cooking and cleaning time. You’ll explain what
the product does, which makes it that much more attractive to the potential
buyer.
Don’t get too Technical
When talking
about your product’s features, make them easy to understand. Use simple numbers
and stay away from technical jargon. Otherwise, potential buyers will get
confused about what exactly they’re buying, and that will undercut the benefits
you’re trying to promote.
Spell Out the Benefits!
Your product
is meant to make your customers’ lives easier or more affordable, so spell out
how it does so. Talk about the end benefits of your product and watch it fly
off the shelves.
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