"Value. . .is the worth in monetary terms of the technical, economic, service, and social benefits a customer receives in exchange for the price it pays for a market offering." - Professors J. Anderson & J. Narus in the HBR

Listening for Value
The quote above comes from an old HBR article titled "Business Marketing: Understand What Customers Value" and the authors suggest that sellers can sell more if they go deep on the data to explain value to customers. Aiming less for, “Trust us—our mulch film will lower your costs. We’ll provide superior value for your money.” and more for "We can lower the cost of your mulch film by $16.83 per acre, let me show you exactly how."
I agree with the concept but it's missing one key component. Value rests within the customer, not inside the product. One committee may indeed understand and prioritize saving $16.83 an acre, but yet another committee may feel like savings are meaningless if they don't have staff to apply the mulch film, so they look for a solution that prioritizes finding labor.
To get to this level of understanding with your customers and know what they value, you have to ask questions. The rest of this note makes a couple of assumptions. One is that you are able to get in front of people, which isn't such an easy task. And two, you need to be talking to buyers which adds another level of complexity. Here's what I've learned and the research bears it out, the better you are at asking the questions that uncover value, the more likely you are to get in front of true buyers. Now, with that said, let's identify some value buckets you are listening to fill.
As the authors of that HBR article state, moving from high level abstractions to specifics helps buyers make a decision. Your job is to ask questions and listen for value to monetize with the customer. That way, if dollars per acre savings is less important than labor challenges, you can monetize and build value in labor savings. The key is to focus on what the customer cares about, not what you come up with sitting in your corner office.
Here are some buckets your people can listen for, learn how to measure, and then put a monetary value on with customers.
- Decisions - Bad decisions, Slow decisions, No decisions.
- Lost opportunities
- Keeping investments/dollars spent safe
- Highly compensated executive's time
- Market share
- Increased profitability over time
- Increased value in the eyes of investors
- Unproductive time
- Having options available
When you hear any of these seemingly soft, hard to measure outcomes, you can begin to monetize their value to the customer. How? The big four value questions:
- How do you measure that?
- What is it now?
- What do you want it to be?
- What's the value of the difference, over time?
Every company has things they measure. Every company has things they value and prioritize. Will your people hear them when they're offered? Will your people offer them when they're not?
If you need more on this subject, let's talk. It's what I do.
Good stuff.
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