Words. Often it's the little things that turn visitors off after arriving at your Website, reading your copy in a brochure or sales letter, or suffering through a bad PowerPoint presentation.
The technology business is rife with words in Website, whitepaper copy and bad PowerPoint presentations, that I call "product-speak".
When people read your copy, visit your Website or sit through your presentation, they are doing so because they have pressing issues or problems that they need to solve. When you write - start from the point of view of your buyer's needs, not your "ground-breaking" product, unless you want to sound just like your competition.
David Meerman Scott calls these words Gobbledygook and he wrote a brilliant E-Book that you can download instantly called The Gobbledygook Manifesto.
You can even run your copy through a content analysis tool called Gobbledygook Grader, to identify
You might find David's blog "The Four P's of Marketing" that topples one of the pillars of marketing literature worth a read...and a laugh!
If you need help in translating your "product speak" into something that your visitors will want to read, then we can help.
In our work with technology companies in creating website messaging and whiteboard stories, we see the following words or phrases frequently.
I think not. Technology evolves slowly and every innovation is built on prior innovations. According to W.Brian Arthur in The Nature of Technology, it's a process of combinatorial evolution.
If your product is truly unique, no-one would know about it. You as a human being are unique, because there is only one of you. In reality no matter how smart you are, or how cool your idea/product is, you'll find someone else has already made it or is building something very similar, right now.
I don't know when this word made it into the technology lexicon. I had never heard of it until I joined the technology industry and since then I hear it every day.
I have a key that I use to get in the door of my house and one to operate my car. There are plenty of words you could use instead of key to describe something; how about important, main, big, central, priority.
This is a play on words if you are talking about an existing product; if it was truly next-generation it wouldn't be available yet.
This is interesting. Being an Australian, where for many years we had a cultural cringe or global inferiority complex, it was important for our entertainers, artists, writers, sports-people and anything that the left our shores to be "World-class". I get the feeling that when someone brags about being World-class, it probably isn't.
Cringe
I have included a visual for clarity.
Woof-Woof.
Yawn, and yes please delete page 3, listing your awards from your corporate PowerPoint presentation. No-one cares how many awards you've won....except you and maybe your Mom and your investors.
Please feel free to contribute to the list, will list the top 20...based on your comments.
At your next presentation, ask your audience to rate the clarity of your value proposition in addressing their needs on a scale of 1-10.
If you are not getting 8-10/10 consistently, you probably need to think about rewriting your presentation from the buyer's perspective....or we could help translate into a Whiteboard story that is more compelling to the buyer.