Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Unique selling proposition

 
Marketing Dictionary: unique selling proposition

Concept developed by Rosser Reeves, one of the founders of Ted Bates Advertising Agency, which says that advertising must offer the consumer a logical reason for buying a product that separates the product from its competitors. According to this concept, all successful advertising campaigns are based on a product's unique selling proposition. There are three basic tenets to the concept: (1) each advertisement or commercial must offer a special benefit to the consumer; (2) the benefit must be unique to the advertised brand (something the competition does not offer); and (3) the benefit must be strong enough to pull customers toward the brand.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Unique selling proposition
Top

The Unique Selling Proposition (also Unique Selling Point) is a marketing concept that was first proposed as a theory to explain a pattern among successful advertising campaigns of the early 1940s. It states that such campaigns made unique propositions to the customer and that this convinced them to switch brands. The term was invented by Rosser Reeves of Ted Bates & Company. Today the term is used in other fields or just casually to refer to any aspect of an object that differentiates it from similar objects.

Today, a number of businesses and corporations currently use USPs as a basis for their marketing campaigns.

Contents

Origin

In the early 1940s, Ted Bates & Company carried out extensive market research on successful advertising campaigns. In particular they identified two desirable attributes: the penetration and the usage pull (Reeves 1961, p. 10).

The pattern they found among campaigns that produced a high usage pull was the basis for the coolness of the USP. It may also be known as the unique selling point.

Definition

In Reality in Advertising (Reeves 1961, pp. 46–48) Reeves laments that the U.S.P. is widely misunderstood and gives a precise definition in three parts:

  1. Each advertisement must make a proposition to the consumer. Not just words, not just product puffery, not just show-window advertising. Each advertisement must say to each reader: "Buy this product, and you will get this specific benefit."
  2. The proposition must be one that the competition either cannot, or does not, offer. It must be unique—either a uniqueness of the brand or a claim not otherwise made in that particular field of advertising.
  3. The proposition must be so strong that it can move the mass millions, i.e., pull over new customers to your product.

Examples

Some good current examples of products with a clear USP are:

  • Umeedain.com: "Purchase Domain & Hosting and get free attractive design of website"
  • Head & Shoulders: "You get rid of dandruff"
  • Olay: "You get younger-looking skin"

Some unique propositions that were pioneers when they were introduced:

  • Domino's Pizza: "You get fresh, hot pizza delivered to your door in 30 minutes or less -- or it's free."
  • FedEx: "When your package absolutely, positively has to get there overnight"
  • M&M's: "The milk chocolate melts in your mouth, not in your hand"
  • Wonder Bread: "Wonder Bread Helps Build Strong Bodies 12 Ways"

References

Reeves, Rosser (1961), Reality in Advertising, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, LCCN 61007118 

See also


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Marketing Dictionary. Dictionary of Marketing Terms. Copyright © 2000 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Unique selling proposition" Read more