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6 C’s of Relevant Benefits

By: Scott Miller

 

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No matter what business you’re in, the way to succeed and get more customers is by providing great value. Consumers look at your product or service and decide that what you’re offering is worth paying you for it.

If something doesn’t provide value, then customers won’t waste money on it. Sure, you can get people to buy something once, but after a bad experience, they’ll decide there’s no value to them, and they won’t come back. And key to small business success is inspiring customer loyalty and word-of-mouth!

There are two sides to value. The first is relevant benefits, while the second is relevant differentiation. This article focuses on relevant benefits, which have to be the starting point for creating value. The most basic definition of relevant benefits is some characteristic of a product or service that fits into customers’ needs and wants.

In the One More Customer e-book, Fran Tarkenton and Scott Miller break down six categories of relevant benefits: the 6 C’s of Relevant Benefits.

Control

A product or service can provide a relevant benefit by offering consumers greater control over their lives—whether their personal security, the financial situation, or other decisions they will have to make.

Choice

Consumers are always looking for new choices. They want greater variety, a diversity of options.

Change

Related to the previous point, people are always looking for the new and novel. Being unique certainly is central to the idea of differentiation, but the idea of change is valuable to people on its own merit. We are drawn to things that are not just the same-old, same-old.

Customization

People like to know that what they are getting is right for their own situation, their own life. A product or service can provide a relevant benefit by personalization, getting out of the one-size-fits-all mold.

Connection

One of the most rapidly growing benefits is connection, as technology offers more and more ways for consumers to connect with each other or the business to connect with the customers. People want to be part of a community.

Convenience

It’s a fast-paced, constantly moving world. You can create relevant benefits for your product or service by making them extraordinarily convenient. You can make things available anytime, anywhere, and eliminate barriers between the consumer and the product, whether it is time, distance, or any other obstacle.
Creating relevant benefits is foundational to a successful business. When you’re offering something that helps people, that meets their needs and wants, then you are on the way to great value.
Published: December 17, 2012
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Scott Miller

After graduating from Washington & Lee University in 1967, Scott Miller began a career in advertising and political consulting. As Creative Director of McCann-Erickson in New York, he worked for such clients as Coca-Cola, Miller Brewing and Exxon, and won every major award for creative excellence in the advertising industry, including Clio Awards and a Lion d'Or from the Cannes Film Festival. In 1979 he founded Sawyer/Miller Group with David Sawyer. In 1988, Scott co-founded Core Strategy Group. At Core, he has worked on developing communications, marketing and branding strategies for a number of Fortune 100 clients. In addition, he provides commentary on political and corporate communications on the major television networks, and often lectures on communications, branding and insurgent strategies.

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