Great products hit a nerve!  What that really means is they provide something special that “connects” with their audience on an emotional level, tying into a basic fundamental need.  We’ve all had the experience of seeing a new product that creates an instant and almost automatic  “must have” response.  Kids especially, are quick to respond to products and programs that are designed by experienced youth oriented product developers to create an instant emotional connection.  When this happens, the product, and often the message supporting it, downshift the audience into the emotional center of the brain. I call this the emotional promise of a product or program.

I once tested a new product entry by a major toy company into the category of boy’s toys.  The product was specially designed for young boys (3-7 years old) who are at the developmental stage of “autonomy”. That means that after the early co-dependency stage (0-2 years) they are feeling their “independence oats” which is directly tied to the need for autonomy and power.  The “magic” of this concept was that in both the verbal and the visual communication, the product focused specifically on the need for autonomy and power. This translated into a very compelling emotional promise on a number of concrete and abstract levels that include entertainment value, need satisfaction, attention, competency, relationships and a variety of play patterns.   

 

As far back as Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, psychologists have conducted research data on the fundamental “drivers” that motivate and move individuals to action.  Maslow’s hierarchy started with basic biological survival needs such as food, water and sex and followed with the next level, the need for safety.  The hierarchy of needs progressed into higher levels such as love, self esteem and self actualization.  This hierarchy of needs is age and stage related and also assumes that the needs on the lower end of the hierarchy are at least partially satisfied before an individual can truly meet the higher needs on the ladder such as self actualization. Other theories and research have continued to emerge from the research on needs and motivation that point to a broad range of fundamental “drivers” that push and motivate our behavior as consumers, mostly on an automatic or unconscious level.

 

PRODUCT SUCCESS TOOLBOX

 

  1. Pick one of your favorite products and ask yourself, what is the emotional promise of this product?  What need does it satisfy for me?
  2. While you’re watching TV or other forms of media advertising, focus on the emotional promise of the ad.  What emotions is the advertiser trying to tap into?  Why?
  3. In the development of enriching products and programs, why is it critical to understand the emotional promise?
  4. What have you noticed about how the emotional promise of a product or program is related to the age and the stage of  the consumer?   How is it significantly different for children than adults?

 

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Your product success depends upon your Product Success I.Q. I don’t mean the kind of I.Q. we typically think about,  measured in school as a predictor of your future potential.  Instead, I’m talking about a unique set of Integral Qualities that translate into flexibility, productivity, resilience, and fulfillment in a culture where rapidly changing economic value is fueled by technological innovation and where “what’s hot” and “what’s not” changes everyday.

Your Product Success I.Q. combines three critical success dimensions especially relevant now, in our ever changing contemporary culture.  These  3 Cs of product success are Character, Competence and Communication.

In this post, I’ll explain each one of these briefly and show you how they provide a working framework for product success in future posts.

Character is a distinctive set of qualities or characteristics that make up, distinguish and define an individual and his business. From my perspective it includes two sub-components.  The first is a Sense of  SELF, that  is not only the ego driven separate sense of self,  but  much more expansive to invite and embrace creativity, individual differences, integrity, passion, purpose, productivity and consciousness.  The second component of Character is  a person’s accompanying set of values that directly align with this larger Sense of SELF.

Competence refers to the individual and business qualities, abilities and skills, and their levels of knowledge. The three sub-components of Competence are Mastery, Meaning and Self Management.

Communication, is the process of exchanging information. For the Product Success System, Communication occurs in three separate domains-communication with oneself  (ME Communication), communication with other individuals or groups (WE Communication), and finally communication with inanimate non-human objects (IT Communication such as computers, environment, technology).

Today, in our frenetic technological environment, it is absolutely critical to understand the 3 Cs as a fundamental set of building blocks for product success.  As this series of posts unfolds, the application of the Product Success I.Q. to both the PERSON and the PRODUCT dimensions of product success will be discussed in further detail with examples and activities.

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PRODUCT SUCCESS PROFILE: The Product Essence

September 4, 2009

One of the first critical steps that you must take to a develop a successful product or program is to determine the ESSENCE of your product. The ESSENCE of your product is the “heart” or core of your product.  You should be able to communicate this instantly in five words or less. Think about it [...]

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PRODUCT SUCCESS: Product As Purpose

September 3, 2009

I recently watched an episode of a new television show called Shark Tank (ABC 9:00 P.M Sundays). The basic idea is for a panel of five “successful” businessmen to interview a budding entrepreneur about their new product idea and then proceed to offer financial assistance or decline, depending on the profit potential of the concept.  [...]

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PRODUCT SUCCESS: Product As Path

September 2, 2009

Life is a series of passages or developmental stages, all of which end up at some level of wisdom and mastery for each of us. This level depends upon our natural gifts and talents in combination with how we learn from our experiences. Product as path defines success with a different definition than product as [...]

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PRODUCT SUCCESS: Product As Profit

August 28, 2009

There are a number of ways that we can think about what makes a successful product. Let’s take a look at the first one-product as profit.
This definition is simple. It’s all about the profit potential and what it will take before the money starts rolling in. Product as profit is essential but [...]

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PRODUCT SUCCESS: From The Inside Out

August 26, 2009

Product success has a dark side. It can fulfill your dreams, passion and purpose in life or it can absolutely drain you dry. Sometimes the expression “be careful what you wish for” is right on the money, because we all have blind spots and learned limitations that prevent us from seeing the “big picture” when [...]

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