PricingBrew

Insights & Tips

Already a subscriber? Login

Become a subscriber and unlock an information arsenal focused on making your pricing efforts more effective.

The Right Recipe for a Strategic Value Message

As a pricing professional, you probably won’t be in the position of crafting any strategic value messages for your company or its products and services. Usually that task falls to the marketing or sales teams. Hopefully, they have a lot more experience drafting these kinds of statements than the pricing team does.

But the fact that you aren’t the one writing the value message doesn’t mean that you can’t make some basic judgements about its quality.

It’s a little like judging a bread recipe. All leavened bread relies on four basic ingredients: flour, water, yeast, and salt. The quantities vary from loaf to loaf, and you can have any number of seasonings and additions to give you infinite variations.

You don’t have to be a master baker to tell if one of the key ingredients is missing. If there’s no flour, you’ll have a gooey mess. If there’s no water, you’ll just have a pile of powder. If there’s no yeast, your bread won’t rise. And if there’s no salt, it will rise too much and fall apart.</>

A strategic value message relies on a similarly short list of ingredients. It answers the question: “How does your offering deliver what I need and value, better than the alternatives?” In order to answer that question, you need three key ingredients:

  1. The Buyer is the most important ingredient in the value statement — kind of like the flour in the bread recipe. You have to understand what they need and want before you can craft any kind of answer to that key question. And if the buyer’s needs and wants are missing, you don’t really have a value statement.
  2. The Seller is also critical. After all, you have to have something to offer the buyer if you are going to convince them to buy it. The value statement should explain how your meets the buyer’s needs and wants.
  3. The Alternatives are the key ingredient most commonly missing from value messages. Buyers always have alternatives to your product — even if the only obvious option is just not buying anything.

If the statement doesn’t have one (or more!) of these key ingredients, you don’t really have a value message. And if you want to have a good value message, you need those three ingredients plus two more additions. These are the “seasonings,” that make the key ingredients more palatable for your buyers:

  1. Specifics and clear language: If you can’t tell what the value statement is talking about because it’s so full of marketing jargon, it’s not a good value message. Any buyer reading or hearing it should be able to understand it immediately.
  2. Credible proof and evidence: A lot of marketing teams fill their value messages with hyperbole and fluff. If your product is the fastest, strongest, best, or most cost effective anything, you should have hard proof to back up those claims.

When you bring it all together, an effective strategic value message meets the criteria laid out in the diagram below:

We cover this concept in more detail in the webinar on Communicating Value Over Price. And we expand on the same ideas in The Fundamentals of Value-Based Pricing, Exposing Your Differential Value Step-by-Step, and Getting Sales to Sell the Value.

When you bite into a loaf of bread, you can tell immediately if something is off — even if you’ve never baked anything in your life. The same is true when you read a strategic value message that’s missing an important ingredient. Make sure your organization has messages that will support your pricing strategy.

Get Immediate Access To Everything In The PricingBrew Journal

Related Resources

  • How to Prevent Margin Meltdowns in the Field

    When your salespeople adopt better pricing and discounting habits, your strategies can become much more powerful than they were on paper. In this tutorial, learn seven real-world strategies and tactics for getting B2B salespeople to price and discount more effectively.

    View This Tutorial
  • Marketing Pricing Initiatives for Success

    Pricing initiatives often require buy-in from multiple departments just to get off the ground. In this on-demand training seminar, learn the essential marketing process for securing and maintaining internal buy-in and support for your pricing projects and initiatives.

    View This Webinar
  • Using Pricing Analysis to Drive More Growth

    Pricing analysis capabilities are usually only focused on pricing. But pricing isn't the only thing the analytical processes and underlying data can be used for. In this on-demand webinar, you will learn how answering other powerful questions can increase your impact and internal profile.

    View This Webinar
  • Golden Rules of B2B Pricing

    B2B pricing has its own set of rules and governing principles...most of which you'll never find in a textbook. What are these "golden rules" and how you keep from breaking them?

    View This Webinar