Is it wider distribution, provocative headline on a Facebook ad, play with price, or find a celebrity to endorse it for free???

It is not any of these, or many other options that probably sprang to mind.

The answer is both simpler, and way harder than any of these, and very few do it well

It is defining the problem you are solving in a way that adds value for a customer.

Unless you define the problem, how can you propose/define a solution that someone is prepared to pay for?

People buy solutions to the problems they see and feel, but often go unrecognised before they are pointed out. Those solutions to unrecognised consumer problems are always the outcome of deep research, creativity, and usually experimentation by the marketer.

Who knew we needed a better MP3 player before Apple produced one?

Often the challenges we face as marketers are hidden deep in our psychology

There are the functional problems we solve, which is where most of us stop.

Then there are the deeper psychological needs that are met in some way by the stuff we buy, that do not receive the same consideration, but they are the real drivers.

It is in that intersection of the functional and psychological that the gold lies hidden.

Who really needs a Rolls Royce to get from point A to point B?

Nobody.

Functionally we do not need the Roller, a battered up Hyundai will do the job. However, arriving in a Roller says something about us, it sets a frame by which many others will judge us, which fulfils deep psychological needs.

Food, shelter, community, reproduction, safety, status, these things all play a role in the things we surround ourselves with.

You go out and buy a Harley Davidson, you are making a statement, not buying a bike for transport.

Does the person who joins Weight watchers join just to lose weight, to fit into last year’s dress, or to feel better about themselves, to attract a mate, impress their friends and peers with the great new bod?

Untangling this can lead you to your value proposition, but it is a tough road, and not often travelled well.

How do you define the hidden problem that has your product as the only solution?

Combine the ideal customer profiling, the typical ‘who, what, where, and why’ analysis, with a ‘Pains, Gains, Jobs to be done’ analysis.

Then work, test, research, iterate, and with patience, you may end up with the profile of a customer that when they hear your pitch immediately thinks: ‘they are talking to me’.

2 examples from my personal experience.

Meadow Lea margarine. Meadow Lea was one of many margarine brands launched after the regulations dictating what could and could not be added to vegetable oils to make a spread, and production quotas, were finally removed in 1975.  Initially the brands concentrated on the obvious benefits of margarine: spread-ability, price, and a healthy low cholesterol alternative to butter, and the market expanded rapidly. Meadow Lea marketing management spent a lot of time and effort really understanding the drivers of the choice of brand, while competing with everyone else. In the mid 70’s, women were entering the workforce in large numbers for the first time, combining the paid work with the traditional roles of housewife, cook, cleaner and mother. The result was an exhausted and frustrated cohort of younger women wanting their effort to be recognised. ‘You ought to be congratulated’ expressed that psychological need exactly. It resulted in Meadow Lea rapidly going to market leadership by a very wide margin at premium prices.

Local bookkeeper. An acquaintance who ran a local bookkeeping service for small businesses was having real trouble gaining clients. He tried all sorts of tactics from local advertising, networking at every opportunity, to bashing the shoe leather door to door. Nothing worked. Over a coffee one day reflecting on this, we arrived at the conclusion that his service was not about book-keeping, but about saving the owners of small businesses the time and frustration they were expending on their books, that could be better used elsewhere. To him, this seemed like a revelation. The next time I saw him was at a local networking event, at which, when his turn came to spend 30 seconds spruiking his business, his opening line was ‘My job as a book keeper is to help my clients get more sex’.  Once the laughter died down, he explained that owners of SME’s had much better things to do with their time than book-keeping, so why not let him do that for them while they spent their time in other ways. He remains successful, although, sensibly, there is no reference to sex on his website.

When you need assistance digging down to the real motivators of activity, call someone who has done it before, successfully.