this post was submitted on 09 Nov 2023
1 points (100.0% liked)

Entrepreneur

0 readers
1 users here now

Rules

Please feel free to provide evidence-based best practices, share a micro-victory, discuss strategy and concepts with a frame work, ask for feedback, and create professional conversation. Treat every post as if you're at work and representing the best version of yourself.

founded 10 months ago
MODERATORS
 

So, I am pretty sure it's a known fact that people get pissed at ads, salesmen, and general marketing. Even if the product is useful and good, people still rail at the person promoting it. But, as entrepreneurs, marketing is one of the biggest aspects of our work.

How do you market your product uniquely and interestingly? I know that no matter how good a marketer you are, some people will always be pissed at you.

I want to hear your thoughts on how to engage the most amount of people. And then make them try out your product.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] Source0fAllThings@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

The best products are “easy” to market because they only add value to the client and never “take” anything from them. An example is a service that is free to use and that solves the user’s pain points, and, you’ve monetized it in a way that only shares in the user’s payoff (e.g., you keep a percent of their revenue boost).

These products are as close to ones that “sell themselves”, in which case you’re merely orchestrating the delivery or sale. Your only “pitch” is to put your client’s imagination in touch with the idea, and hand the product to them when the dots have connected so to speak.

I realize this is a bit of a cop out answer since some products require a “hard sale”, or, you’re unable to forgo a fee for its use or purchase. However, if you’re early enough, these “marketing” questions should absolutely factor into whether you think you have a good idea worth pursuing or not.

Bottom line harsh truth: If your product is great but too difficult to sell, then it wasn’t as great as you thought it was.

Redeeming point: Even with hard sells, you can make it work as long as the cost of marketing is less than the energy you’re spending selling people on the idea.