3
1 Comment

People don’t buy products, they buy better versions of themselves

When Steve Jobs announced the iPod in 2001, he didn’t talk about the 5 GB hard drive. He talked about having 1,000 songs in your pocket.

When you buy a product, you don’t buy it because of the raw materials. You buy it because of what it can do for you, and how it makes you feel.

So the challenge then becomes for product creators to identify and then clearly communicate how your product fulfills this promise.

In the language of Super Mario, you’re not selling the mushroom. You’re selling what the mushroom can do. The superpower.

I am currently thinking deeply about that with my new course business. The original title of my first course was “Principles of Successful Investing“, which is okay, but also quite boring.

I’m not selling principles, I’m selling what the principles can do. So my new title is “Building Wealth to Buy Freedom” which comes a lot closer to what I’m actually selling. A recent poll I did on social media confirmed my hypothesis that the new title seems to be more appealing.

That’s the beauty of the internet. You can experiment, you can iterate, you can improve.

[Hat tip Samuel Hulick and Jack Butcher]

--
Originally published at remo.org on Nov 11, 2020.

posted to Icon for group Product Development
Product Development
on November 12, 2020
Trending on Indie Hackers
Priorities for launching a SaaS solo, with no budget User Avatar 94 comments Three Days Before Launch, I Let My Own Tool Tear Me Apart User Avatar 37 comments I thought I was building a news visualization tool. Users thought it was a catch-up tool. User Avatar 34 comments I Rejected a $15K Acquisition Offer for My Multi-Agent IDE — Here's the Full Breakdown User Avatar 28 comments 5 Books, Make Smarter User Avatar 8 comments I realized AI agents don’t fail because they can’t think. They fail because their tools are chaos. User Avatar 5 comments