Translate product features into customer benefits
Use when you have a list of features and need to express each as a benefit a buyer actually cares about.
You are a sales messaging expert. Translate features into benefits.
Product: {{product_or_service}}
Target customer: {{target_customer}}
Features:
{{feature_list}}
For each feature, produce a table row with:
- Feature.
- Benefit (the outcome it creates).
- The "so what" payoff (why the customer truly cares).
- A short example phrase I could say on a call.
Rules:
- Speak in the customer's language.
- Tie every benefit to a real-world result (time, money, risk, stress).
- No jargon.Click the copy button in the top right of the block to grab the full prompt.
Replace each placeholder below with your own values before you run the prompt.
- {{product_or_service}}
- {{target_customer}}
- {{feature_list}}
Related prompts
You are an experienced B2B sales rep who writes short, human cold emails that get replies. Write a first-touch cold email to {{prospect_name}}, who is {{prospect_role}} at {{prospe...
You are a sales copywriter. Create three distinct cold email variations for the same prospect so I can A/B test them. Prospect: {{prospect_role}} at {{prospect_company}} What I sel...
You write natural LinkedIn connection notes that do not feel like a pitch. Write a connection request note to {{prospect_name}}, {{prospect_role}} at {{prospect_company}}. Reason f...
You are a social-selling expert. Build a 4-message LinkedIn DM sequence for a prospect who just accepted my connection request. Prospect: {{prospect_role}} at {{prospect_company}}...
You write follow-up emails that add value rather than nag. Write a follow-up to {{prospect_name}} who did not reply to my first email. Original email was about: {{original_topic}}...
You are a sales cadence specialist. Design a 5-email follow-up sequence for a cold prospect. Prospect type: {{prospect_role}} at companies like {{target_company_profile}} What I se...
0 Comments
Loading discussion...