| 
							   
							 | 
							
							
							
							 
							
							A friend that works at a car dealership was recently 
							discussing a sales technique with me. "We're not 
							allowed to let customers leave...until they take a 
							test drive," she said. "If they take a test drive, 
							the chances that they'll buy really improve." 
							 
							What does this have to do with today's topic? The 
							car dealership's policy clearly illustrates the 
							difference between selling features and selling 
							benefits. 
							 
							So what's the difference? 
							 
							Feature: The structure, physical 
							description, or attributes of your product or 
							service. 
							 
							Benefit: The emotional reasons or 
							connections your prospect makes with your product or 
							service. 
							 
							At a car dealership, putting the consumer in the 
							driver's seat changes the way they view the vehicle. 
							No longer are they looking at the "features" of the 
							car, they are experiencing the benefits. (Hence the 
							increase in sales.) 
							 
							So what can you do to make sure your message is 
							speaking to your prospect's heart and not their 
							head? Ask yourself a series of questions: 
							 
							How will their life be better, easier, or more fun 
							with my product or service? 
							Why will they want to tell their friends about my 
							company? 
							Without my product or service, what will the 
							prospect be missing? 
							How will the prospect justify this purchase to 
							themselves or their spouse? 
							 
							By answering these questions, you will discover the 
							benefits that will attract your prospects. No matter 
							how tempted you may be to point out the incredible 
							"features" of your product, sell with the prospect 
							in mind. 
							 
							When you constantly put the prospects emotions 
							first, you will create marketing messages that drive 
							sales like you've never seen before.  
							 | 
							  |