7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content

measuring value 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content

Understand how people learn, think and communicate is the key to create effective marketing. In fact, communication is the core of your marketing and if you know how to leverage it, you will be able to elevate the perceived value of your products and services so people are willing to pay higher price for as soon as they see it.

However; it’s often much more counter intuitive than you think. It all comes down to what you say and then how you say it via your communication.

So what is communication?

According to Wikipedia, “…Communication requires that all parties have an area of communicative commonality. There are auditory means, such as speech, song, and tone of voice, and there are nonverbal means, such as body language, sign language, paralanguage, touch, eye contact, through media, i.e., pictures, graphics and sound, and writing.”

In other words the only way to open up the communication channel is by having a common medium, a means to understand and relate the information that’s being communicated.

The problem is everyone has a different style of communicating and learning thus the goal of marketing communication is to eliminate misunderstanding.

For example, when I say the word “car” what kind of car are you picturing in your head? A big SUV or a small sedan? A red sports coupe or a family minivan? Is it a Cadillac or a Lexus?

This is one of the biggest content marketing challenges in today’s attention fighting world especially with barriers such as information overload and attention deficit resulting in loss of concentration and focus on an ongoing basis.

There is a high chance that you’re losing your audience as you speak because everything is moving so fast and people can’t help but want instant information gratification.

As it turns out, in marketing you need to create crystal clear communications that are as specific, tangible, measurable and external as possible.

That’s exactly what great copywriters do, they write compelling stories that builds trust and use words that describe real world situations, things you can see, feel, touch and experience.

And since most purchase decisions are made by the emotional part of our brain, ineffective communication will never result in a sale so it is up to you to position the purchase in his minds.

Here are seven ways to help you build influence by mastering the basics of high perceived value communication:

1. Communicate Like How You Would Speak

If you want people to like and trust you, start by communicating like a normal person in a one on one plain English.

The key is to make your communication frictionless and easy to understand since everyone is not your customer so speak to people about what they want to talk about, in the way that they want to talk about it.

It’s not about being perfect but being authentic and on target to appeal to one market at a time.

2. Create Self-Contained Concept of Your Content

By making your content self-contained, you can reduce complexity while maximizing understandability especially when introducing a new product or a new idea.

This type of content should be modularized, to the point and does not take a lot of time to consume.

First introduce it by bringing the concept to the table then explain it in a practical way that conveys the outcome that your prospect want and finally connect the dots for them and wrap it up.

3. Look For Pain And Urgency

When people have unmet needs they become more idealistic about their situation.

Not only will they believe that they know what they need to solve the problem but will start to think in simple terms to get to their solution.

Focus on delivering simple action steps that would provide the result they want predictably and consistently with as little risk and hassle as possible.

Do you know what thoughts, emotions or pictures pop up in their head when they encounter that exact pain or problem?

Connect on high pain and urgency values will instantly grab their attention.

4. Translate What You Do With What They Value

Realize what motivates your customers is one of the most effective way to get them to take actions. You must be able to communicate the value of what they want and realize the meaning of their desire outcome and its direct impact to their lives.

Translate it in all 3 currencies they want: monetary value, time investment value and labor/workload value.

5. Use Powerful Reframes To Increase Understandability

Leverage psychologies, histories, insights and stories to frame your content into high perceived value formats. Involve their situation in multiple perspectives will dramatically increase the specificity of your communication.

It will also likely increase the memorability and appeal of your products by structuring and organizing them into alternative frameworks that eliminates misunderstanding. It’s saying the same thing in many different ways.

6. Provide The Why, What and How To’s

In order to do that you must be on top of your customer’s emotional drivers knowing what benefits they’re looking for and what value meanings to them.

Incorporate the why, the what and how into your stories.

Explain to your customer why they should pay attention to you right now then introduce what it is, the actual product or services they’re going to get, and finally how to get the result they want with what they get, the step by step recipe.

7 Minimize Risk Maximize confidence

Getting customers to take the action to buy is about making everything “believable.” It is not simply about taking all the risk out but just enough that it doesn’t seem too good to be true.

It’s leading with the giving hand, earning trust over time and building reputation slowly via social proof.

Allowing your prospects to come to their own conclusion that leads to their own decision is a very powerful confident booster.

It’s both emotional and psychological commitment.

The take away: People want stories, techniques and someone that “gets them.” High perceived-value communication should include all those ideas. Then you roll them up in an easy to digest package full of incentives with the promise of great value.

Give your market what they want and you will be rewards with brand loyalty and market share.

At the end of the day it’s ok that you don’t speak to everyone, you only need to resonate with those that get you that you get them.

Effective marketing is not about manipulation, it’s about being human, it will multiply your sales.

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  1. November 13th, 2010 at 13:37 | #1

    It is always an advantage if you provide The Why, What and How To’s to customers. If you can provide answers to them, they will take interest to what you are offering. For me, customers will always go for the one that is the most convenient to them.

  2. November 13th, 2010 at 23:28 | #2

    Great point Samantha, it’s all about eliminating miscommunication by connecting on emotions. People don’t care what you know until they know that you care.

  3. December 21st, 2010 at 13:00 | #3

    RT @designdamage 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content Marketing http://bit.ly/dvIxEJ

  4. February 20th, 2011 at 19:15 | #4

    Nice one, Eric.

    It’s both emotional and psychological commitment.

    There is a theory that people decide with their heart and then justify the decision, which I think is what you’re saying here.

    I see this when I go shopping with a certain person, ‘I don’t need this right now, but maybe I deserve it. What do you think?’

    How can you say No?

    Regards,

    Ivan

  5. February 21st, 2011 at 08:44 | #5

    Thanks Ivan…you’r right, people want to feel good about the decisions they’ve made.

  6. March 10th, 2011 at 22:03 | #6

    Great piece, as always from @designdamage: 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content | http://ow.ly/3srF6

  7. March 10th, 2011 at 22:12 | #7

    RT @marketingwizdom: Great piece, as always from @designdamage: 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content | http://ow.ly/3srF6

  8. March 10th, 2011 at 22:19 | #8

    RT @marketingwizdom: Great piece, as always from @designdamage: 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content | http://ow.ly/3srF6

  9. March 10th, 2011 at 23:48 | #9

    RT @marketingwizdom: Great piece, as always from @designdamage: 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content | http://ow.ly/3srF6

  10. March 24th, 2011 at 12:12 | #10

    RT @designdamage: 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content http://t.co/lnmc2GA

  11. September 7th, 2011 at 00:41 | #11

    Great piece, as always from @designdamage: 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content | http://t.co/2Hegf7P

  12. September 7th, 2011 at 03:00 | #12

    7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your #Content via @designdamage http://t.co/nNJoQUv #SEO

  13. September 11th, 2011 at 03:54 | #13

    Excellent post. I especially like #4, translate what you do with what they value. Everything is about the “me” attitude, so that makes a ton of sense. And really there is everything right in getting the value you came for. Good post. Good job.

  14. October 11th, 2011 at 22:21 | #14

    Great piece, as always from @designdamage: 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content | http://t.co/SsKdwbN7

  15. October 11th, 2011 at 22:29 | #15

    bit of psychology RT @marketingwizdom Great piece @designdamage: 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content| http://t.co/TIEbWFAz

  16. October 12th, 2011 at 00:56 | #16

    like!~ ‘Effective marketing is not about manipulation, it’s about being human’ RT// @marketingwizdom (c) @designdamage: http://t.co/4svv8rn8

  17. December 23rd, 2011 at 15:39 | #17

    Great topic,all right.

  18. February 28th, 2012 at 04:39 | #18

    RT @marketingwizdom: Great piece, as always from @designdamage: 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content | http://t.co/SsKdwbN7

  19. February 29th, 2012 at 01:38 | #19

    “@marketingwizdom: Great piece, from @designdamage: 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content | http://t.co/qy5IagkM” @myen

  20. March 2nd, 2012 at 00:15 | #20

    7 Ways to Elevate the Perceived Value of Your Content on @designdamage | #socialmedia – http://t.co/6APif8j8

  21. June 20th, 2012 at 11:28 | #21

    Great piece, as always from @designdamage: 7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your #Content | http://t.co/SsK8YBDX

  22. July 6th, 2012 at 08:07 | #22

    7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content via @designdamage http://t.co/eYUSXqUj

  23. September 30th, 2012 at 18:51 | #23

    As long as you perceive value in your product, Communicate one with the customers too. http://t.co/droljKlv via @designdamage

  24. December 27th, 2012 at 13:50 | #24

    7 Ways To Elevate The Perceived Value Of Your Content via @designdamage http://t.co/Ycvfe2ly

  25. February 3rd, 2013 at 10:31 | #25

    Great Article, Good Stuff

  1. September 29th, 2010 at 20:13 | #1
  2. March 16th, 2011 at 04:16 | #2
  3. March 31st, 2011 at 19:58 | #3
  4. March 10th, 2012 at 05:18 | #4
  5. April 18th, 2012 at 10:08 | #5
  6. August 1st, 2012 at 06:53 | #6
  7. November 20th, 2012 at 07:16 | #7

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