The reason you're struggling to come up with a compelling value proposition is because you're asking the wrong question. You're trying to invent a clever slogan, when you should be obsessing over your customer's biggest problem. Most of the marketing advice out there is rubbish. It has you writing bland, corporate-speak that resonates with absolutely no one and wastes your ad budget. If you want to stop burning cash and actually get traction, you need to forget everything you think you know about 'value propositions' and start thinking about nightmares.
This isn't about features, benefits, or your company's mission statement. It's about finding a specific, urgent, and expensive problem that keeps your ideal customer awake at night, and then positioning your business as the only logical solution. Get this right, and your ads practically write themselves. Get it wrong, and you're just shouting into the void with everyone else.
Your ICP is a Nightmare, Not a Demographic
Let's get one thing straight. Your Ideal Customer Profile, your ICP, is not a collection of demographic data points. I see this mistake all the time. Founders and marketing managers proudly show me their ICP document: "We target SaaS companies in the fin-tech space with 50-200 employees, and our key persona is the Head of Engineering".
That tells me precisely nothing. It's a completely useless peice of information. What does that Head of Engineering actually care about? What's the one thing that would make her bang her head against the desk in frustration? What's the problem that, if solved, would make her look like a hero to her CEO?
You have to get brutally specific. Your ICP isn't a person; it's a problem state. It's a nightmare. Your Head of Engineering client isn't just a job title; she's a leader terrified of her best developers quitting out of sheer frustration with a broken, inefficient workflow that you can fix. She's worried about shipping new features too slowly and losing to a nimbler competitor. That's the nightmare.
Here's another one. A legal tech SaaS company isn't selling 'document management software'. That's boring and no one cares. Their nightmare isn't a messy folder structure. The nightmare is a partner missing a critical, non-negotiable filing deadline because they couldn't find the right version of a contract, exposing the entire firm to a multi-million pound malpractice lawsuit. See the difference? One is a feature, the other is a career-ending catastrophe.
Until you can articulate the nightmare your customer is living in, you have no business spending a single pound on ads. You'll just be another company shouting about your "innovative solutions" and "synergistic platforms" while your ideal customer scrolls right past, looking for an aspirin. Do this foundational work first, or you are simply setting your money on fire.
So how do you find their actual problems?
Alright, so you're bought into the idea of hunting for nightmares instead of demographics. But how do you actually find them? This isn't about sending out a SurveyMonkey poll asking "What are your biggest challenges?". You'll get generic, surface-level answers. You need to become a digital anthropologist. You need to listen where they talk, lurk where they congregate, and read what they read.
Forget focus groups. Your real intelligence is hiding in plain sight, in the unfiltered corners of the internet where your ideal customers are complaining to their peers.
-> Niche Subreddits and Forums: Don't just go to r/business. Find the specific, nerdy subreddits for their profession. If you sell to developers, you should be living in r/ExperiencedDevs or r/devops, not just reading the posts, but analysing the comments. The real gold is in the replies, where people share their unfiltered frustrations. What tools do they hate? What processes are broken? What's the one thing they wish their boss understood?
-> Private Facebook & Slack Groups: There are thousands of these. Groups like 'SaaS Growth Hacks' or other industry-specific communities are where real conversations happen. People ask for recommendations, complain about vendors, and share war stories. Your job is to be a fly on the wall. Take notes. Look for recurring themes and emotional language. Words like "nightmare," "hate," "frustrated," "stuck," and "overwhelmed" are your signposts.
-> Industry Newsletters and Podcasts: Who do they trust? What content do they actively consume not because their boss told them to, but on their commute? For a certain type of tech exec, it's newsletters like 'Stratechery' or podcasts like 'Acquired'. The comment sections and community discussions around this content are often more valuable than the content itself. It shows you what they're thinking about and what they value.
-> The 'Tools They Already Pay For' Test: This is a big one. What software is already on their company credit card? HubSpot, Salesforce, Xero, Slack. These aren't just tools; they are signals of priorities. If a company pays for HubSpot, they value inbound marketing. If they pay for a high-end security tool, they're paranoid about data breaches. Understanding their existing 'stack' tells you what they've already decided is important enough to spend money on. Your product needs to fit into this world, either by integrating with it or by solving a problem that those tools create.
This research isn't a one-off task. It's an ongoing process of building an intelligence file on your customer's world. This file is the blueprint for every ad you'll ever write, every landing page you'll ever build, and every sales call you'll ever make. It is, without a doubt, the highest-leverage activity you can do for your business.
How do I turn that pain into an ad that works?
Once you've done the hard work of identifying the nightmare, crafting the actual ad copy becomes much simpler. You stop trying to be clever and start being a translator. You're translating their pain back to them in a way that makes them feel seen and understood. You don't need to be a world-class copywriter; you just need a framework.
Here are a few brutally effective ones we use that you can steal.
For a high-touch service business, use Problem-Agitate-Solve (PAS).
You don't sell "fractional CFO services"; you sell a good night's sleep. You find the problem, you poke it with a stick to make it hurt more, and then you present your service as the relief.
-> Problem: "Are your cash flow projections just a shot in the dark?"
-> Agitate: "Are you one bad month away from a payroll crisis while your competitors are confidently raising their next round?"
-> Solve: "Get expert financial strategy for a fraction of a full-time hire. We build dashboards that turn uncertainty into predictable growth."
For a B2B SaaS product, use the Before-After-Bridge (BAB).
You don't sell a "FinOps platform"; you sell the feeling of relief. You paint a picture of their current hell (Before), show them what heaven looks like (After), and position your product as the vehicle to get them there (Bridge).
-> Before: "Your AWS bill just arrived. It’s 30% higher than last month, and your engineers have no idea why. Another fire to put out."
-> After: "Imagine opening your cloud bill and smiling. You see where every dollar is going and waste is automatically eliminated."
-> Bridge: "Our platform is the bridge that gets you there. Start a free trial and find your first £1,000 in savings today."
This is exactly the kind of shift in thinking that helped us take one of our B2B software clients from struggling to get leads to generating 4,622 registrations at just $2.38 each. We stopped talking about features and started talking about the 'After' state.
For high-ticket physical products, attack feature-obsession head-on.
Don't just state the spec; state its consequence. What does that feature actually *mean* for the customer's career, reputation, or bottom line?
-> The Feature: "Our new mass spectrometer has a 0.001% margin of error."
-> The 'So What?': "So what? So your lab can publish results with unshakeable confidence, securing more funding and attracting top talent that other labs can only dream of."
Notice that none of this copy is particularly "creative." It's direct. It's empathetic. It speaks to a deep, specific pain point. This is what resonates. Here’s how it looks in practice:
| Audience Pain | Bad Copy (What you're probably doing) | Good Copy (What you should be doing) |
|---|---|---|
| Agency owner struggling with project scope creep. | "Project Management Software for Agencies" | "Tired of clients adding 'just one more thing'? Our platform locks in project scope so you get paid for every hour you work. Stop scope creep for good." |
| SaaS founder worried about high customer churn. | "Advanced Customer Success Platform" | "Watching your best customers leave? Get ahead of churn with predictive alerts that show you who's at risk, and why, before they cancel their subscription." |
| eCommerce store owner with low conversion rates. | "Increase your eCommerce sales" | "Plenty of visitors but no sales? Your product descriptions are probably to blame. We write copy that turns browsers into buyers. See a 691% return like our last women's apparel client." |
Right, I've got my message. Now what's my offer?
Now we arrive at the most common failure point in all of B2B advertising: the offer. You can have the best ad copy in the world, targeting the perfect audience, but if your Call To Action leads to a weak offer, you've wasted your time and money. And the "Request a Demo" button is perhaps the most arrogant, high-friction, and lazy Call to Action ever conceived.
Think about it from your prospect's perspective. They are a busy, important person. You're asking them to commit 30-60 minutes of their valuable time to sit through a sales presentation. It presumes they have nothing better to do. It screams "I am going to sell to you". It offers them zero immediate value and positions you as just another commodity vendor begging for their time. You must do better.
Your offer’s only job is to deliver a moment of undeniable value—an "aha!" moment that makes the prospect sell themselves on your solution before you've even had a proper conversation.
If you're a SaaS founder, this is your unfair advantage. The gold standard is a free trial (with no credit card required) or a generous freemium plan. Let them use the actual product. Let them experience the transformation firsthand. When the product itself proves its value, the sale becomes a formality. You aren't generating Marketing Qualified Leads (MQLs) for a sales team to chase down; you are creating Product Qualified Leads (PQLs) who are already convinced and coming to you. This is how you get results like the 5,082 software trials we generated for one client, or the 1,535 trials for another B2B SaaS. The offer was irresistible because it was all value, zero risk.
If you're not a SaaS company, you are not exempt from this rule. You must bottle your expertise into a tool, a piece of content, or an asset that provides instant, tangible value. You have to solve a small, real problem for free to earn the right to solve the whole thing. For a marketing agency, this could be a free, automated SEO audit that instantly shows a prospect their top 3 keyword opportunities. For a data analytics platform, a free 'Data Health Check' that flags the biggest issues in their database. For us, as a B2B advertising consultancy, it's a free 20-minute strategy session where we audit a company's failing ad campaigns and give them actionable advice on the spot.
Delete the "Request a Demo" button from your brain. Replace it with "Get Your Free [Valuable Thing]" and watch what happens to your lead quality and volume.
Shouldn't I build 'brand awareness' first?
This is a dangerous myth, often pushed by large agencies who love billing for fuzzy metrics. They'll tell you that you need to run "Brand Awareness" or "Reach" campaigns to "warm up the market" before you ask for a sale. For a startup or a small business, this is terrible advice and a fast track to an empty bank account.
Here is the uncomfortable truth about these campaigns on platforms like Meta. When you set your campaign objective to "Reach" or "Brand Awareness," you are giving the algorithm a very specific command: "Find me the largest number of people inside my targeting for the lowest possible price."
The algorithm, being the ruthlessly efficient machine it is, does exactly what you asked. It seeks out the users who are least likely to click, least likely to engage, and absolutely, positively least likely to ever pull out a credit card. Why? Because those users are not in demand by other advertisers. Their attention is cheap. You are actively paying the world's most powerful advertising machine to find you the worst possible audience for your product.
The best form of brand awareness for a growing business is a competitor's customer switching to your product and raving about it. That only happens through conversion. Awareness is a byproduct of having a great product that solves a real problem, not a prerequisite for making a sale. That is why, from day one, you must optimise your campaigns for a conversion action – a lead, a signup, a trial, a sale. This tells the algorithm to find people who actually take action, not just people who scroll past. This single change can be transformative. We helped one client reduce their Cost Per User Acquisition from a painful £100 down to just £7 by cutting out the awareness nonsense and focusing relentlessly on a high-value offer and a conversion-optimised campaign.
How does knowing all this actually help me grow?
This all sounds like a lot of hard work. And it is. So why bother? Because understanding this stuff fundamentally changes the economics of your business. It allows you to move from guessing to calculating. The real question isn't "How low can my Cost Per Lead (CPL) go?" but "How high a CPL can I afford to acquire a truly great customer?"
The answer lies in its counterpart: Customer Lifetime Value (LTV). Once you know what a customer is truly worth to you, you know what you can afford to spend to get them. Most founders have no idea how to calculate this, so they focus on keeping lead costs as low as possible, even if it means getting rubbish leads.
Here’s the simple maths. You need three numbers:
1. Average Revenue Per Account (ARPA): What do you make per customer, per month? Let's say it's £500.
2. Gross Margin %: What's your profit margin on that revenue? Let's say it's 80%.
3. Monthly Churn Rate: What percentage of customers do you lose each month? Let's say it's 4% (meaning the average customer stays for 25 months).
Now, the calculation:
LTV = (ARPA * Gross Margin %) / Monthly Churn Rate
LTV = (£500 * 0.80) / 0.04
LTV = £400 / 0.04 = £10,000
In this example, each customer is worth £10,000 in gross margin to your business over their lifetime. Now you have the truth. With a £10,000 LTV, a healthy 3:1 LTV:CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) ratio means you can afford to spend up to £3,333 to acquire a single customer and still run a very profitable business. If your sales process converts 1 in 10 qualified leads into a customer, you can afford to pay up to £333 per qualified lead.
Suddenly, that £250 lead from a CTO on LinkedIn doesn't seem expensive, does it? It looks like a bargain. Especially when we know that with the right strategy, you can get high-quality B2B leads for as little as $22. This is the maths that unlocks aggressive, intelligent growth and frees you from the tyranny of cheap, low-quality leads.
I get it. What's my plan of action?
You've seen why your old approach to value propositions was flawed and why focusing on nightmares, irresistible offers, and real business maths is the only way forward. It’s about shifting from a product-centric view to a problem-centric one. This is the core of all effective advertising.
This is a lot to take in, I know. It's a fundamental change in how most businesses think about marketing. To make it easier, you need a clear, step-by-step plan to implement this in your own business. It requires discipline and a willingness to ditch old habits, but the results are worth it. This is how you stop competing on price and start competing on value. This is how you build a marketing engine that doesn't just generate clicks, but creates customers.
This is the main advice I have for you:
| Step | Action | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Define the Nightmare | Forget demographics. Spend a week being a digital anthropologist. Live in the forums, subreddits, and groups your ideal customers inhabit. Document their specific, urgent, expensive problems using their own words. | This ensures your entire marketing strategy is built on a foundation of genuine customer pain, not your own assumptions. Your messaging becomes instantly relevant. |
| 2. Craft the Message | Use the Problem-Agitate-Solve or Before-After-Bridge frameworks. Write ad copy that directly mirrors the nightmare you've uncovered. Focus on the transformation and the relief, not your product's features. | This kind of copy bypasses the logical brain and speaks directly to the emotional desire for a solution, making your ads far more persuasive. |
| 3. Build an Irresistible Offer | Delete "Request a Demo". Replace it with an offer that provides immediate value with zero risk. A free trial, a freemium plan, a free audit, a valuable template, or a problem-solving tool. | This lowers friction dramatically and lets the prospect experience your value, turning them into a highly qualified lead who sells themselves on your solution. |
| 4. Target the Pain | Use your research to inform your ad targeting. Instead of broad job titles, target interests related to the niche software they use, the influencers they follow, or the communities they belong to. | This gets your perfectly crafted message in front of a much smaller, but infinitely more relevant, audience, reducing wasted ad spend. |
| 5. Optimise for Conversions | Set your campaign objective to 'Conversions' (or Leads/Sales). Tell the platform's algorithm to find you people who take action, not just people who look at ads. | This forces the ad platforms to do the heavy lifting for you, actively seeking out the tiny percentage of users who are most likely to become a customer. |
| 6. Know Your Numbers | Calculate your LTV. Don't guess. Use the formula: LTV = (ARPA * Gross Margin %) / Monthly Churn Rate. This gives you your maximum affordable Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC). | This turns marketing from a cost centre into a predictable, scalable growth engine. You'll know exactly how much you can spend to acquire a customer profitably. |
Putting all of this into practice is what separates businesses that struggle for traction from those that scale predictably. It requires a shift away from thinking like a seller and towards thinking like a problem solver. It's not easy, and it requires a level of customer obsession that most companies lack.
If this all feels a bit overwhelming and you'd like a second pair of expert eyes on your strategy, it's often worth getting help. An expert can help you uncover the customer nightmare, craft the offer, and build the campaigns far faster than you could on your own. If you'd like to see how this could apply to your specific business, we offer a free consultation where we can look at your current strategy together and identify the biggest opportunities for growth.