Because features and benefits are often linked
together, there is an implied assumption that all features also have a benefit
and this thinking then extends to the belief that potential customers will be
able to figure out for themselves why those product features are beneficial to
them. Marketing text that talks about 'feature packed' products may be
interpreted by customers as suggesting the product is likely to be complicated
and difficult to understand.
The problem is that adding features has become
something of a tactical 'arms' race to outstrip the competition and meet or exceed
specification criteria. Charts listing a whole range of features with ticks to
indicate where a product excels and others fall short are quite popular for
technical products from cars to consumer electronics and of course b-2-b
products too. But these are what the product does. The reality is that the more
complex - feature packed - the product, the less the features actually get
used. Just look at a control surface that has been used for a while - a remote,
key board, control desk - and the pattern of wear and grime will reveal which
keys are regularly used and which are pristine and untouched.
Benefits may be based more on an emotional
consideration than an analysis of how the features stack up. The decision to
purchase a television may depend more on what it might look like in the living
room, the quality of the picture and how much it costs. There is an implied
assumption it will do a few other things like hooking up to a sat. box and DVD,
but beyond that the extensive range of other features are unlikely to sway the
argument. Mobile phones have become feature rich, but in terms of
sustaining a telephone conversation in an area of poor coverage or when a train
plunges into a tunnel remain just as challenging to the user as they were in
the early days. In the b-2-b sector product development has too often been
driven by what features the competitors offer, then going one better. The
rationale is to create differentiated products rather than compete in a
commodity market on price alone. But unless the features are translated into
customer benefits and explained in a way that the prospective customer
understands and appreciates, these features risk being excluded from the
purchase decision.
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