2/ There’s typically an information asymmetry between what sellers know about their products and what buyers know.
3/ From buyers’ perspective, while engaging in a potential purchase, they never have enough information to know whether what they’re getting is worth the cost (in time, money, effort) that has been asked from them.
4/ Even when the seller gives information about the value the buyer will get, buyers suspect because both honest and dishonest sellers say similar things.
5/ So for new products, as buyers can’t tell good products from bad products, they typically end up wanting to pay (in time, money, effort) much less than what the seller demands.
6/ In many markets, this drives away good, honest sellers leaving only dishonest sellers (which further aggravates the mistrust).
The most famous example of this is used cars market, but some version of this plays in all markets.
12/ For example, most people will avoid taking a bet where there is a 50% chance of winning $20,000 but a 50% chance of losing $10,000 even though the expected reward is positive (0.5*20k – 0.5*10k).
13/ But almost everyone will probably take a bet where there is a 50% chance of winning a million dollars and a 50% chance of losing $1000.
This shows that in order to make a decision, people expect benefits to be much more than costs.
14/ During repeated interactions with the seller (starting right with the initial pitch to the experience of the product), people are continuously estimating their benefits.
15/ At any moment, when their estimate of costs (that they know for sure – fill a form, talk to sales, $299/mo cost) seems to be higher than the evidence of current and future value, they drop off from the interactions with a brand and abandon their journey.
16/ Good salespeople understand this dynamic and start the conversations that put people at ease and only at the very end ask something tangible from them (like a request for another meeting or a trial implementation).
17/ Your interactions with customers should be a dialogue (and not a monologue) where you’re delivering more value to them than what you’re asking for.
If you make a big ask from them before they’ve gotten enough value from you, they’ll drop off.
18/ If you deliver value first and then ask for something later, they’ll oblige.
Look at the diagram again to understand this better.
19/ Popular examples of brands that do it right are freemium products such as @Dropbox that let people get benefits first and only ask for money later.
20/ For many consumer products like an iPhone, before people purchase, they have already gotten psychic benefits from imagining how their life will change with that new shiny phone.
21/ And that is what good marketing does for a product – convince customers of the benefits before asking for an investment from them.
22/ Remember 🧠
marketing at all times has to deliver more (actual or anticipated) benefits to the customers than the investments it requires them to make.
23/ That's it!
I'm posting ~1 new mental model for entrepreneurs every week.
Thanks to new sponsors, we're awarding grants to three more winners who want to:
- Train underprivileged kids in 🏉 Rugby
- Starting a school for kids suffering from ⚧️ gender dysphoria (first-of-its-kind in India)
- Supporting 🥻handloom artists from Odhisa
1/ It’s mind-blowing that we humans are able to talk about what happened in the first 3 minutes of The Big Bang.
This book was written in 1976 which was quite a while back but while there have been extensions in the ideas presented, I’m not aware of any idea being rejected yet,
2/ This should perhaps be unsurprising because most scientific ideas that are accepted as truth are consilient, i.e. they’re supported by multiple lines of evidence.