Turning Your Services into a Product
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Article Title: Turning Your Services into a Product
Author's Name: C.J. Hayden
Author's Email: info @ getclientsnow.com
Author's Website: www.getclientsnow.com
Word Count: 735
Turning Your Services into a Product
C.J. Hayden, MCC
One of the biggest challenges in selling professional
services is that what you are offering is intangible. Your
product can't be seen, touched, or tasted. Until your
prospective clients experience what you do, they have no way
of knowing if it will turn out, whether they will like it,
and how well it will work in their situation. To make a
buying decision, the client must first trust that your work
will produce the result that they need.
The most common way to package professional services is by
the hour or day. The client pays for your time, and they
keep paying until the project is declared complete. But
clients are often resistant to this. You will hear them say,
"I don't want to leave it open-ended," "That seems high for
an hourly rate," "I'm not sure my budget will allow for
this," or even "I'm not quite clear what it is I'd be
getting."
You can overcome these barriers to making a sale by
"productizing" your services. This awkward term simply means
that you make your service look more like a product, so that
it becomes easier for your clients to buy. You give it a
defined scope, fit it into a limited time period, assign it
a definite price tag, and attach a distinctive name.
Let's say you are an image consultant, and you've been
selling your time for $75 per hour. Instead, you offer a
"One-Day Makeover" at a price of $495, and include a
wardrobe assessment, color consultation, and shopping trip.
You're giving your clients a defined result with a clear
timeframe and set price, making it easy for them to buy.
Plus, you are able to let clients experience a range of the
services you offer and suggest additional ways they can work
with you.
A market research consultant working with corporate clients
at $150 per hour could instead provide a "Market Position
Blueprint" for a flat fee of $2500. The package would
include a comparison matrix of three key competitors,
qualitative data from interviews with six loyal customers,
and recommendations for improving the client's market
position, all to be delivered with 30 days. Clients know in
advance exactly what they are paying and what they will get
for it.
When buying your services in a package, the client runs less
risk. They don't have to worry about cost overruns or
getting an unexpected result. They know how soon the result
they are paying for will be delivered. There's also an
emotional comfort factor in buying a package. Purchasing
something with a name attached makes it feel much more
tangible than simply buying hours.
For you, offering a package helps you get your foot in the
door. Once you show a client what you are capable of, more
business will often result. Even if you price your package
at slightly less than what you would earn for working the
same amount of time at an hourly rate, you will probably
profit more because more of your time will ultimately be
sold.
Many consultants find that fixed-price contracts are much
more profitable than working by the hour. In a survey quoted
by the late Howard Shenson in "The Contract & Fee-Setting
Guide for Consultants & Professionals," consultants working
exclusively on a fixed-price basis had 87% higher profits
than those working on a daily or hourly basis.
To determine which of your services would be best to turn
into a product, consider what your target market most often
wants from you. Is there a specific set of steps you usually
follow when first working with a new client? Activities that
you perform repetitively with many people give you an
opportunity to create templates, worksheets, and other tools
that you develop only once and use over and over. This
effectively allows you to charge for the same work more than
once.
Be sure to spend some time on coining a unique name for your
product. You want a memorable results-oriented name that
will help you to stand out from the competition, and perhaps
even allow you to trademark it.
To launch your first product, you may not need to do much
more than develop a standard format for what you are already
doing, set a price, and name your new invention. Taking this
critical step toward making your services more tangible can
result in easier sales, more repeat business, and more
profitable engagements.
C.J. Hayden is the author of Get Clients NOW! Thousands of
business owners and salespeople have used her simple sales
and marketing system to double or triple their income. Get a
free copy of "Five Secrets to Finding All the Clients You'll
Ever Need" at www.getclientsnow.com
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