Launching a Product vs. a Service: Why the Strategy Is Different

Launching a Product vs. a Service

I’ve built launch strategies for a perfume brand, a wellness spa, a group coaching program, an e-book, an online course, a masterclass, a 1-1 coaching program, a high-ticket service, and a paid online community, among other projects.

The perfume launch and the coaching program launch had almost nothing in common. I mean, they had the same buyer psychology – people still need to understand, connect, and trust before they pay. But how you build that understanding, connection, and trust? Completely different.

Most launch advice doesn’t make this distinction. It treats every launch the same – build hype, tease the offer, countdown timer, go live. And that’s exactly why so many launches underperform. The strategy was rarely in alignment for what was being launched.

The Core Distinction: Desire vs. Gaps

Here’s the simplest way I can put it.

Products sell on desire. Services sell on gaps.

When someone buys a product, they’re buying because they want it – the feeling, the identity, the experience it represents. When someone buys a service, they’re buying because they’ve realised there’s a problem they can’t solve alone.

These are two completely different buying emotions. And they require two completely different engines to drive them.

Using the wrong one doesn’t just underperform, it actively works against you. A candle brand running gap-reveal content feels preachy. A business coach running aspiration-only content feels shallow. The content isn’t bad, just built for the wrong type of launch.

How Product Launches Work

When I built the launch strategy for a perfume brand, the campaign was anchored entirely in desire. Not education. Not ingredient breakdowns. Not “why this product is better.” Desire, the kind that makes a product feel like it belongs in someone’s life before they’ve even bought it.

The pre-launch content wasn’t informational. It was experiential. It built a world – a feeling, an identity – that the audience wanted to step into. By the time the product was available to buy, wanting it wasn’t the question. It had already been answered.

I ran a similar strategy for a wellness spa, launching a new concept. The pre-launch wasn’t a list of services or a breakdown of what was included. It made a specific type of customer feel so seen – so specifically understood – that buying felt like finally being let into something that was already theirs.

That’s what a product launch is supposed to do. Not convince, invite.

How Service Launches Work

When I built the launch strategy for a psychotherapist launching a mental health program, desire wasn’t the engine. Gap reveals were.

Her audience wasn’t going to buy because the program looked aspirational. They were going to buy because the pre-launch content showed them something about their own patterns they hadn’t seen before – and made the program feel like the only structured path forward.

When I worked with a personal brand strategist on his launch, the same principle applied. The pre-launch content didn’t lead with what he offered. It led with what his audience couldn’t see about themselves – gaps they were too close to their own work to notice. That content did something informational content never could: it made people feel genuinely seen. And feeling seen is what earns the trust that turns into a sale.

Service launches don’t build desire. They build clarity, and by launch day, the audience isn’t hoping the offer might help them. They know it will – because the pre-launch content already showed them exactly why.

Where It Gets Nuanced

Not every offer falls neatly into one category.

A paid community can go either way – or both. A book launch is usually desire-led, unless it’s the entry point to a higher-ticket offer. A physical space or a masterclass often runs both engines simultaneously: the experience sells on desire, the services inside it sell on gaps.

The decision isn’t obvious. It depends on the specific offer, the specific audience, and the specific buying emotion that’s most powerful for that combination. Getting it wrong – or splitting the difference without a plan – means neither engine fires properly.

This is where templates fail every time. A template can give you a structure, but it can’t tell you which engine your offer needs, or how to build content that fires it in the right sequence for your specific audience.

The Most Expensive Mistake

I’ve seen service providers try to sell coaching programs on aesthetics and aspiration alone. Their audience thought it looked great – and scrolled past. No gap was surfaced. No reason to buy beyond “this seems premium.”

I’ve seen product brands try to sell through long educational posts about ingredient quality. Their audience learned something – and then bought from a competitor whose content made them feel something.

The strategy was bad, per se, just built for the wrong type of launch.

And the painful part is that you often can’t see it from the inside. When you’re close to your offer, it’s almost impossible to be objective about which emotion actually drives the purchase – or whether your content is building toward that emotion at all.

The First Question Isn’t “What Should I Post?”

It’s ‘What drives the purchase decision for this specific offer?’

Is it desire? Is it gaps? Is it both – and if so, which leads?

That single decision shapes every piece of content, every email, every sales page headline, every story. Get it right, and your launch works as one coherent thing, each piece building on the last. Get it wrong, and you’re pushing hard in a direction your audience was never going to follow you.

If you’re launching this quarter and you’re not sure which engine your offer needs – or you know, but you don’t know how to build around it – that’s exactly where I come in. I identify the engine first. Then I build the launch strategy around it.

Because the strategy that sells a perfume is not the strategy that sells a coaching program. And the difference between them isn’t something you want to figure out mid-launch.

Emmanuella Igwebuike

Launch Partner · Deentrepreneur

I build complete launch strategies for business owners who are done guessing. After 6 years, I’ve seen the same gaps in every launch that doesn’t convert. I find them. I close them. Then I hand you a plan you can actually trust.

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LAUNCH STRATEGY

Launching a Product vs. a Service I’ve built launch strategies for a perfume brand, a wellness spa, a group coaching

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