When a product requires more user effort than competitors, frame that effort as a core benefit. For a complex baking kit, the longer prep time becomes a feature—an intentional 'flavor journey' and a chance to slow down, turning a potential negative into a premium experience.
To combat price objections, artisan cheese expert Adam Moskowitz reframes his product not as expensive, but as valuable. The superior flavor-per-bite of quality cheese provides more intrinsic value than cheaper, mass-market alternatives that primarily offer a generic 'creamy' texture.
The obsession with removing friction is often wrong. When users have low intent or understanding, the goal isn't to speed them up but to build their comprehension of your product's value. If software asks you to make a decision you don't understand, it makes you feel stupid, which is the ultimate failure.
A woodworker reframed a transaction from buying a finished product to a collaborative building experience. This shift completely altered the customer's value perception, leading him to happily pay 30% more than the original high-priced item for an imperfect, co-created result.
Customers often rate a service higher if they believe significant effort was expended—a concept called the "illusion of effort." Even if a faster, automated process yields the same result, framing the delivery around the effort invested in creating the system can boost perceived quality.
Consumers perceive products as higher quality when they are aware of the effort (e.g., number of prototypes, design iterations) that went into creating them. This 'labor illusion' works because people use effort as a mental shortcut to judge quality. Dyson's '5,127 prototypes' is a classic example.
A perceived product flaw can be a primary value proposition for a different type of customer. For example, a diffuse global audience, useless to local venues, becomes a powerful asset for organizations aiming for international reach, unlocking a new market.
Delight goes beyond surface-level features. It's about creating products that solve practical problems while also addressing users' emotional states, like reducing stress or creating joy. This is achieved by removing friction, anticipating needs, and exceeding expectations.
Resist the instinct to explain what a feature is and does. Instead, first explain *why* it was built—the specific business problem it solves and why that's relevant to the prospect. This framing turns a feature walkthrough into a personalized 'test drive'.
Competitors like TurboTax measure success by a binary "taxes filed" metric. Beluga Labs redefines success as a qualitative outcome: "maximized all possible savings." This shifts the value proposition from a simple chore-completer to an ongoing financial optimization partner, creating a stronger user relationship.
Contrary to popular belief, simple isn't always better. On Running's CPO argues that overly simple products give consumers fewer opportunities to explore, learn, and feel like an expert. A degree of complexity allows users to "give it its own life," which can be a more powerful driver of adoption than a streamlined experience.