• Innovative Strategies That Create More Profits

Customer-Centered: How Can I Help You?

In today’s world, most people realize that you have to put the customer, not the product first. But, does that mean that you accept everything the customer tells you? NO,

 According to David Stucer, in a Sales & Marketing article, you believe the customer when he is talking about his issues. You do want to pay attention when they tell you their needs when they tell you what’s broken in their lives. And when they say why where they are hurting?

The reason a customer comes to you or wants to do business with you is that he wants you to solve his problem. Therefore you have to show him how you can solve his problem or issue. As David would say: “we hear you, we can help you; here is how.”

Solving the problem is easier said than done, however. You can grasp the problem conceptually, but most people have difficulty conceptualizing the solution. Make it easy for them to see how you can solve the problem,

Most often, people jump to talking about their company and their product or services. That’s undoubtedly not customer-centric. The customer doesn’t want to hear about your business; he wants to hear about how you are going to solve his problem. 

The wrong way to go about it is to put the spotlight on your company. The longer you talk about your company, the less time you have to listen and speak to them about their problem, And there is a good chance that after a short time they will stop listening and turn you off,

You  will get a better reception if you focus on how your business can help him improve his business, As David would say, “People are far less concerned with doing business with an awesome company then they are about whether the company can solve their problem”, You will also begin to build a relationship with that client,

That’s customer marketing, getting the attention of people who have a need you can meet.

How To Develop Your Business Model For Better Results

 

In contrast to the usual product development model, Steve Blank, in his book, The Four Steps To The Epiphany,”

describes his new approach to developing an efficient and effective path

on how to develop your bu for better results and gives your startup a real chance of success. 

 

Most startups lack a process to create, develop, and validate their business.

They start by developing the product first because they know it’s such a good idea.

They don’t realize that there are millions of needs and wants in the market, and their view of needs may not match the market’s needs or wants.

If you want to succeed, you can’t be founder-centered; you must be customer-centered.

 

His model has four steps:

 

One: Customer Discovery. Focuses on finding product-market fit by determining if

the product solves the customer’s needs and wants.

Two: Customer Validation: Develop a sales model that is repeatable.

Three: Customer Creation: Creates and motivates end-user demand,

Four: Company Building: The move from the learning phase to the business execution phase.

 

This model flips the “development model” on its head. Rather than developing the product

and then finding the market, you do the opposite because it takes several iterations to get it right..

Plus, it’s a frugal way to determine if you have a viable, sellable product.

It also keeps you from hiring sales, marketing, and other company development people too early.

 

Here is a little more on each strep

Customer Discovery

Based on your hypothesis, you need to go into the market and find out if the problem,

your product and your solution match what the customer wants. 

This combination will take several attempts and several iterations to your hypothesis.

You can’t do this with focus groups; you need the interaction with the customer,

Also, this has to be done by the founder and the founding team.

 

You can’t send out a salesperson to do this.

You have to read the customer and determine if what the customer

is telling you is correct and if you should modify the product as a result. 

 

Don’t start the conversation with your product vision. First, find out what the customer needs, 

why he wants it, and what he doesn’t like.

You are there to learn from the customer, not sell him something now.

 

Customer Validation

In this step, you are trying to build a repeatable sales roadmap for the team that will follow.

This step proves you have found a market and customers willing to buy your product.

It also  validates, through field testing, that your sales process is repeatable,   

This step also confirms your business model, your market, and customers,

identifies your buyers and establishes pricing policies and channel strategy.

Once all of this checks out, you can move to the next step, crossing the chasm into the mainstream market.

 

Customer Creation

The goal here is to create end-user demand and drive that demand to the sales channel.

But don’t try to scale so quickly that you deplete all your financial resources.

Crossing the chasm is a difficult step and can take some time. 

 

Also, how you plan to do customer creation will vary with the type of startup and market type you are entering.

For example, a new market with a new product or an established market,

or are you entering an established market with a low-cost product or coming with a new product in a hybrid market.

Each of these has significant revenue and time considerations. See the discussion on market types.

 

‘Customer Building

Customer building is the step where you transition from a “learning company” into a formal “operating company.”

With appropriate departments, each department becomes mission-oriented within the overall corporate strategy.

 I would love to hear what you think of this approach.

If you used it and how it worked. Email me here. Thanks.

 

 

Why Customers Not Products Drive Successful Companies

 

Before getting into the details of Value Proposition, we need to take a more general look and value proposition and customers first.

Do you know why customers will buy your products or services? Most entrepreneurs think it’s because of their product or service and its features, functions, and benefits. That is what entrepreneurs ask potential customers about, and that is what established, competitive
companies fight over. This attitude is a short-term, transactional mindset.

Successful companies know what their potential customers want. They are customer-focused rather than product or company focused. They know that customers want to buy products and services from companies whose products and services were created for them. When that happens, they become long-term, loyal customers.

For example, Apple said they wanted to design computers that would empower individuals and be easy to use. That purpose drove the company to make computers that a segment of customers wanted and was willing to pay a premium to get it. Customers believed what Apple
believed. This outward, customer-focused approach led to long-term, loyal customers.

Here is an example of the opposite inward product looking approach. Honeywell started a computer division in the 1960s and claimed they were “The Other Computer Company,” taking the assumptive position that they were second only to IBM. But customers didn’t see it that way.
They didn’t believe it. Honeywell’s computer features, functions, and benefits were not broad enough to displace IBM. They only had short-term, transactional customers and were forced to sell the computer division after several years of losses.

Startups need to start with what the customers want, not what the founders want. You still need to ask critical questions about your value proposition and determine the importance of each feature, function, and benefit. And you have to ask about every aspect of your product offering, including quality, functionality, packaging, service features, ease of use, reliability, and more.

It would be best if you also had a lot more than demographic information. You need to get into the market and talk with prospects so you can get into the minds of buyers, users, influencers, decision-makers, and even people who could kill the sale. And you need to classify these potential customers by
the reasons they buy.