Global Social Benefit Incubator 2008
Exercise 2: Value Proposition
Value Propositions are brief descriptions of your organization and the value it provides, and articulate why the target customer/beneficiary will “choose to buy” or “consume” your product or service offering(s) over other alternatives. (Note: the alternative may be “non-consumption”).
Submit Your Value Proposition
Task Overview:
The purpose of this exercise is to define that value that you create for your beneficiaries (compared to the alternatives). In Exercise 1, you defined your beneficiaries and identified why they will be motivated to use your products or services. In Exercise 3 you will attempt to “monetize” this value with income streams (earned or contributed) that will contribute to your sustainability and ability to scale.
Background Resources:
Reference on value proposition: J. Gregory Dees, Jed Emerson, and Peter Economy, Strategic Tools for Social Entrepreneurs: Enhancing the Performance of Your Enterprising Nonprofit, New York, John Wiley, 2002, Chapters 1 & 2.
What is the definition of a Value Proposition?
A concise statement which articulates why the target beneficiary will “choose to buy” or “consume” your product/ service offering over other alternatives in the market. (Often the biggest hurdle is competing against “non-consumption”). It is the distilled essence of the strategy.
Effectiveness of Value Proposition
Is it clear why your product/services is better than alternatives? Is it clear that “non consumption” is a less beneficial alternative?
Evidence Makes Value Propositions Come Alive
EXERCISE 2:
Create a Value Proposition for your organization in a sentence such as:
Example: The Aravind Eye Care System Value Proposition
Submit Your Value Proposition
Submit Your Value Proposition
Task Overview:
The purpose of this exercise is to define that value that you create for your beneficiaries (compared to the alternatives). In Exercise 1, you defined your beneficiaries and identified why they will be motivated to use your products or services. In Exercise 3 you will attempt to “monetize” this value with income streams (earned or contributed) that will contribute to your sustainability and ability to scale.
Background Resources:
Reference on value proposition: J. Gregory Dees, Jed Emerson, and Peter Economy, Strategic Tools for Social Entrepreneurs: Enhancing the Performance of Your Enterprising Nonprofit, New York, John Wiley, 2002, Chapters 1 & 2.
What is the definition of a Value Proposition?
A concise statement which articulates why the target beneficiary will “choose to buy” or “consume” your product/ service offering over other alternatives in the market. (Often the biggest hurdle is competing against “non-consumption”). It is the distilled essence of the strategy.
Effectiveness of Value Proposition
- Targeted beneficiaries recognize that this message is for them
- Understandable (by beneficiaries, as well as employees, and donors)
- Important relevant to salient aspect of the beneficiaries’ context & culture
- Credible: can be supported by evidence
- Deliverable by the organization and employees and beneficiaries can say it easily and with integrity
- Differentiated: “competitors” (non consumption or alternatives) cannot easily make the same claim
- Sustainable advantage: “competitors” cannot catch-up quickly
Is it clear why your product/services is better than alternatives? Is it clear that “non consumption” is a less beneficial alternative?
Evidence Makes Value Propositions Come Alive
- Experience
- demos, test drives, pilots, references
- Experts
- academic, consultants, analysts, gurus
- Examples
- Diagrams, pictures, customer PR
- Statistics & quantification makes evidence stronger
- Analogies help make evidence understandable
- Irrefutable facts are the best evidence ... “water flows downhill”
EXERCISE 2:
Create a Value Proposition for your organization in a sentence such as:
[Name of organization] provides [products/services], which are [statement of key differentiators], for [target beneficiaries], and thereby creates [statement of social value/impact], unlike [competition].
Example: The Aravind Eye Care System Value Proposition
For the millions of people in India with cataract blindness, the Aravind Eye Care System profitability provides diagnosis, treatment, and post-operative care, which is 100% safe, has a greater than 90% chance of cure, is less than 1/5 of the cost of comparable care, and is free for those who cannot afford to pay. Unlike government run hospitals, Aravind provides high-quality cataract surgery in a professional and ethical manner, serving all patients with dignity. Unlike those who do not receive quality surgery, patients are able to return to productive lives.
Submit Your Value Proposition






