Subscribe | Advertise Brought to you by Omnisend The sun is shining. The birds are chirping. And your plant is on your coffee table…dying. “I just got this a month ago! How is it already dead? Actually, maybe it was 3 months ago. Oh no—did I ever water it?” you think as you touch its wilted, brown leaves. Instantly, a sense of failure washes over you. This is the fifth plant you’ve killed. And this wasn’t just any plant—it was a hoya. Your green-thumb friend told you to get one because it “requires so little maintenance that you’d have to intentionally murder it.” “That’s it. I’ve killed them all—even the unkillable ones. I’m never buying a plant again,” you think as you sadly Google (for the fifth time) what to do with an on-its-way-out plant. “Our Plants Water Themselves,” the website hero message reads, immediately grabbing your attention. You see a ton of different plants, all with the same appealing promise: You only have to water them once a month. So you pick out a new hoya and the apricot-colored pot it’ll live in, fully confident this won’t end in horticultural homicide. Why are you so confident that your new easyplant will provide a different outcome? In today’s special edition of Why We Buy 🧠, we’ll explore a well-known company to see how they use buyer psychology principles in their business. This week we’re diving into easyplant—the foolproof way to keep plants alive. Let’s get into it. 🤑 A Look Inside easyplant easyplant doesn’t just sell plants. They sell a solution to the biggest problem aspiring plant owners face: keeping them alive. Many plants come with confusing care instructions that can be overwhelming to follow. Some need water weekly, others twice a month. Some thrive in dim corners, and some need a daily sunbath. And if you mess up? Your green-thumb dreams get crushed, leaving you feeling like you failed. So easyplant made plant care foolproof with a simple self-watering solution. Then they nailed their messaging in just 4 words: Our Plants Water Themselves. Their messaging isn’t just about convenience—it’s about flipping their target customers’ most painful problem into a compelling promise. Suddenly, anyone can feel confident in keeping their plant alive. And when people feel confident in a decision, they’re more likely to buy. 🧠 How easyplant Uses Buyer Psychology easyplant knows even the prettiest pothos won’t sell themselves. That’s why they use smart marketing strategies. Here’s how they turn plants into profit. Buying plants is stressful for many, with anxiety-ridden thoughts like these invading our minds: “What if it dies in a week because I overwatered it? Or underwatered it? How am I ever supposed to figure out a schedule? What if I’m just bad at this?” easyplant erases those fears one by one: You can’t underwater. Overwatering is rare. Just water it once a month. This makes the buying decision feel safe. And the less room for regret, the easier it is to say “yes.” You don’t just wake up on a random Wednesday and think, “I should get a fiddle leaf fig!” easyplant knows their customers have a number of events that trigger them to enter into the buyer journey—like deciding to give their current space a facelift. By addressing this trigger event, easyplant shows up *exactly* when their customers are ready to buy. People want to make commitments that will allow them to live out their desired identity. So once they commit to a low-effort plant that finally makes them feel like a plant parent, they’re hooked. And to stay consistent with that identity, they’ll want (and buy) more. But instead of risking another fragile plant, they’ll stick to what works—only filling their space with plants that are (nearly) impossible to kill. 🤔 Thinking About Your Business easyplant took an ordinary product (houseplants) and made it extraordinary by solving a pain most aspiring plant parents face. But you don’t need to sell money trees to tap into their marketing brilliance. Ask yourself… Q: Do you know exactly when your buyers are ready to buy? Q: How can you align your offer with buyers’ desired identity? 💥 The Short of It Even though easyplant uses plenty of buyer psychology principles, their success is rooted in one thing: flipping their target customers’ painful problem into a compelling promise. With ❤️ from Katelyn and Jordyn |
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