Within the retail sector “hero items” or “destination items” are the standout products that attract customers to specific stores and drive additional sales, whether those are discretionary purchases or the weekly supermarket shop. The challenge for retailers is how to effectively measure performance to successfully identify these items, and what marketing strategy and tactics they should then apply to attract more customers and drive sales.
What is a Hero Product?
The hero product of the brand is usually its best seller, and one that takes pride of place in displays and presentations. If you could only sell one product from your brand, this is it. Or perhaps your brand only has one product.
Don’t Have a Hero Product? Don’t Worry
There are two options at this point: either you don’t know which of your many great products you should position as your hero, or else you have yet to create your hero product. If you are in the first camp, ask around, get people to try all your products, and figure out which is the best contender. Make sure it fully aligns with your brand and represents you well, and then commit to its new position as hero!
If you are ready to create your new hero products, here’s a quick guide to designing a new product, without getting too specific for each type of cosmetic.
- Start by clearly defining your brand message and values. If you are all about organic, make sure your hero product is organic too. Write down the key points to uphold the brand promise.
- What problem do you want this product to fix? Be clear about the pain point you or your customers face that requires the help of this product. For example, targeting fine lines and plumping skin may be a better and more specific goal rather than simply “anti-aging”.
- Don’t get carried away trying to fix too many things with this product, unless what makes it a hero is that it’s a one-stop shop.
- Make sure that every part of your product is worthy of being the hero. This includes design and packaging, the name (choose one that can expand—see point 5), the price point, the ingredients, its retail location(s), etc. This can take time, but it’s important to get it right.
- Be strategic in making it the star. Give it top billing, and be aware that if you execute its rise to fame correctly, the hero product may turn into the leading product of your hero line. If the original product is good enough, then you should consider creating products embodying the same ideals that flesh out a whole routine or similar.
Market the Hero Product
Marketing your hero means having a beautiful product, with appropriate packaging, that can do most of the talking for you. Your goal is to get your hero everywhere, in front of everyone who might use it. Having just one product to promote is often easier than promoting a whole brand. Some concrete steps to increase awareness include:
- Request reviews from happy customers and publicize responses
- Send to social media influencers to get honest reviews and create peer trust amongst their followers (social proof) – Conduct trials or studies if relevant to back up any claims (but be careful with FDA regulations)
- Create samples and provide to any willing participant, requesting feedback or a mention on social media
- Invite customers and friends to build a focus group. This can give you important outside information and opinions if you feel too close to the project.
How to Identify Your Next Hero Product
You’ve had success with your Hero Product, but now it’s time to expand your product line and improve your profit margin.
With the success of your Hero Product, you’ve been able to build your company and your team, but you might be starting to get concerned that you are hitting a ceiling for that product’s market size. It’s getting harder to sell your Hero Product, and your Return on Ad Spend (ROAS) to drive new customers to your brand isn’t yielding the same returns that it used to. You know that there is still plenty of headroom for your company to grow into, but you aren’t sure that it is going to come from your existing product line.
At this point, customers are happy with their current products, and they have submitted plenty of feedback and feature requests. While you believe that your Hero Product will continue to drive your business forward, you also realize that it is time to start adding other hit products to your catalog. So, the real questions you are asking yourself are:
What product do I make next? Will my customers love it as much as they loved my first Hero Product?
If you want to create another Hero Product, and many more after that, here’s what you’ll need to know:
- How to understand and analyze the data you already have
- How to use customer data to your advantage
- How to get customer input on new product development through effective surveys
Getting More out of Your Data- Sales data on your current products will be one of the best ways to find out easy wins in new products. Off the cuff, you’re probably very familiar with how your products are selling, but have you taken a deep dive to really understand how each product is selling?
You may have other questions. Why are some products outselling others? Why do some older products continue to outsell new releases? Why do I keep having to discount some products just to get them out of our warehouse?
Deeply analyzing your data with this sort of questioning will be necessary to help you paint a picture of what makes your Hero Product so popular and what makes your Slow Movers struggle in comparison. Focus on understanding what makes your Hero Product so successful and try to identify what were the misses with your Slow Movers.
It can be tough to identify the exact causes, but customer reviews are a great source to identify the trends. We recommend pulling in your Customer Support and Social Media teams to see if they can shed light on why customers loved your Hero Product and didn’t love your Slow Movers. They are on the front lines, and while their reports might be anecdotal, they will be able to provide common themes from the feedback.
An additional analysis we recommend is to calculate the Average Selling Price (ASP) for the products sold. This analysis is simple: for each product, divide the Total Revenue by the Total Units Sold to see the price that the products ended up selling for. It is helpful to see the difference between the MSRP and the price your customers purchased your products for, after factoring in discounts and other price changes.
By looking past just how many units were sold, you will able able to analyze how popular each product is and what you actually made for each item. Hero Products and Fast Movers have an Average Selling Price close to their MSRP, while Slow Movers typically have a much lower Average Selling Price than their MSRP.
Dig Deep to Draw Conclusions Your data already gives you great information, but you will want to take a deeper look to identify commonalities or considerable differences across your product catalog. These patterns will be an indication of the most relevant product(s) to focus on making next.
Ask yourself:
- What other problems are my customers facing that our current products don’t solve?
- What are customers doing in their day-to-day lives that are related to the value we provide, but we don’t directly address today?
- What are the products/services that our customers have asked us to make? (Social media and customer service teams are a treasure trove for these types of requests.)
Understanding these questions and analyzing your company’s current catalog will help you arrive at solutions to problems that are adjacent to your customers’ pain points—and opportunities:
- You’ll be able to cross-sell new items to your current customers to increase their Customer Lifetime Value. Owned channels (Email/SMS) make this a low-hanging sales strategy that will greatly increase profits.
- Acquire new customers that might not have loved your original product solution, but are still in your target market. Your second product may appeal more to them.
The products that can fulfill both of these points should be at the top of your list to research further, as they provide the greatest opportunity to grow not only topline revenue, but profit as well.
Engaging Your Customers-The most effective way to reach your customers is to email them a survey that asks for feedback on your current products, collections, and what challenges they are facing.
This is a very important step in your product creation process. Customers who are frequently purchasing and using your products are your biggest resource into what complementary or new product offerings they want to see.
Talking to customers directly will offer you more benefits than you can imagine. They will bring light to the daily challenges they are facing, tell you why your products are better (or where you could improve) compared to the competition, and more. If you are asking about the problems customers are having when thinking about your current products, they will probably think of issues that are related to the problems you’re currently addressing. It’s a great opportunity to expand the current feature set or introduce a new product that solves a specific problem that they’ve voiced.
In addition to insights, allowing them to participate in your product development process will help build brand loyalty. By allowing those customers who are already fans of your products to participate in your research, they will feel like their opinion matters to your company. This, in turn, will make them more inclined to purchase products in the future and give you even more feedback. It might take an investment upfront, but this is a virtuous cycle that will continue to feed itself as it gets bigger. It will also help you tighten the gap between your product development and sales cycle.
Developing an Exceptional Survey Experience- From the start, make sure you know exactly what you want to learn from your customers. Being specific when starting out and clearly writing out the goals you want from this experience will help guide the flow of the survey. In this case, you are looking to understand what new products can help improve your customers’ challenges. So, keep this in mind from start to finish. The survey content should be heavily focused on getting feedback on areas to improve your current products and learn about future customer needs.
Once you have your goals set, you’ll want to determine which survey tool you’re going to use. There are many sites available that make survey creation and analysis very simple. We build all of our surveys through Typeform, and find their features really useful when analyzing the data and integrating the responses into our Marketing channels.
Now that the leg work is complete, it’s time to develop the questions for the survey. Keep your goals in mind when you begin to write out questions, and make sure you’re fulfilling the objectives you’ve set out to achieve. But make sure not to limit your customers by only asking them yes/no or multiple-choice questions—leave some open-ended and offer the option for them to select “other” and explain their thoughts.
You’ll find that by leaving your customers space to share, there will be responses you never expected.
It’s also important to keep your survey short and concise. The longer a survey takes to complete, the more people you’ll lose in the process. We recommend keeping this survey to under 5 minutes. While that may not seem like a long time, you’d be surprised how many questions you can ask in a 5-minute survey.
Even if your survey is only 5 minutes long, make sure to incentivize your customers to take it. We highly recommend offering a special promo code they can use at your store. This will help increase completion rates and boost the number of participants. As a secondary benefit, it can function as a mini-promotion to encourage customers to make a purchase after they complete the survey.
Here are some examples of how you should be phrasing your survey questions (placing your company name and branding throughout):
- If money didn’t matter, which one of our products would you buy?
- This is a great way to gauge interest in what products you’ve already released, but customers might not have bought yet. The most popular answers to this question should be featured more prominently in your current marketing.
- What product(s) would you like us to make next? (Please select all that apply) Provide all the product ideas that the team currently has and leave an “other” selection in case they have an idea that the team hasn’t thought of yet.
- Use this as an opportunity to vet all of the ideas that the internal team has shared with you. It will be a great way to validate which ideas customers are interested in versus which ones shouldn’t be a priority right now.
- What types of products would you like to see us offer? (Please select all that apply) This is a great variation on the product question to learn more about categories of products customers would be interested in buying next.
If you have mockups or photos of new concepts/prototypes that can explain what you are thinking about, this is an excellent forum to gain feedback before you spend money producing them. It is also an opportunity to investigate new product categories.
Some other tips for creating a great survey:
- You can add basic demographic questions before or after any survey to gather base level data from your customers without adding too much time.
- On the very last question of the survey, collect emails with a prompt along the lines of, “If you would like to speak to a member of our team to further expand on your responses, please leave your email below.”
- If you decide to use a discount code as an incentive for taking the survey, be sure to include it on the Thank You page of the survey.
- Make sure that you tell your customers before they take the survey that they will be able to copy and paste the discount code from the survey’s Thank You page.
As you receive responses to the survey, a pattern will emerge of what challenges your customers are facing, and what they want to see produced to address them. This is great! Pay attention to these, and if more than 30% of respondents select a specific idea, seriously consider creating the product/service. You then know that you have at least a third of your existing customer base that is interested in buying the new product.
Your Next Big ProductNow that you’ve done your research, analyzed the data, and engaged with your top customers, you should have plenty of information to point you in the right direction for your next product launch. You’ll -also have a handle on a sophisticated and well-considered product development process.
FAQs
How is a hero product different from other products in a lineup?
Unlike regular products, a hero product usually stands out due to its unique features, popularity among consumers, or its ability to represent the brand effectively. It often serves as a flagship or flagship product.
What characteristics make a product a hero product?
Hero products often have distinctive features, high quality, and strong market appeal. They may address a specific customer need exceptionally well, and their success is reflected in factors such as sales figures, customer reviews, and brand recognition.
Why is it called a "hero" product?
The term “hero” in this context suggests that the product is the star or standout performer within a brand’s portfolio. It is the product that takes the lead and plays a crucial role in the overall success of the brand.
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