14 Mar 2008 02:22:53 | Debbie LaChusa
Eliminating your competition is the easiest way to increase your
chances of business success. And I don’t mean literally
eliminate them, in the sense of doing something “bad” to them.
When I say eliminate, I mean ... take them out of your
prospect’s consideration set for your product or service
category. Make it so your prospects ONLY think of your business,
product or service when they are contemplating making a
purchase. That way you get their business, instead of your
competition making the sale.
What this means is if you sell widgets, you want your prospects
to only think of your widgets when they are thinking of buying
widgets. This is pretty easy to do if your business is not in a
competitive industry.
But let’s suppose there are all kinds of businesses selling what
you are selling, or filling the same consumer or business need
you are filling. How can you make sure your prospects ONLY think
of you — and therefore only BUY from you — and not all those
other companies?
Answer: By thoroughly understanding those competing businesses
and then doing one of two things:
(1) Finding a position in the category you can own.
This will separate you from all the other businesses and will
make you uniquely qualified in the eyes of your prospect to fill
their need.
This usually requires finding a specific market niche you can
focus on, or finding a specific product or service attribute or
benefit, that is of value to your prospects, that none of your
competitors can claim or are currently promoting.
This puts you in a class of your own and virtually eliminates
the competition. No one does exactly what you do. Or in the
quite the way you do it.
(2) By turning your competitors into “co-opitors.”
What the heck is a “co-opitor?” It is a competitor that you turn
into a partner or a cooperator. Are there businesses or
individuals with whom you could partner, with the idea of
referring business to each other?
For example, a wellness coach could partner with a weight
watchers clinic or a health club or a massage therapist. All of
these practitioners are selling improved health and well being,
but they can also be positioned as complementary services.
Or, let’s say you are a web site designer and you decide to
focus primarily on working with small businesses (a market
niche). You could create a partnership with another web site
designer who has decided to focus on large corporations.
If you both agree to only take on business that fits your
identified niche, and to refer business outside your niche to
the partner, you both win.
You can partner with other businesses in your exact business in
this manner, by identifying niches, by geographic area served,
or by size or type of clients served.
And you can partner with businesses in different categories that
fill a similar customer need by agreeing to work together to
help each other get customers.
There is not a business out there that cannot effectively use
one of these two strategies to significantly reduce their
competition. So figure out which strategy fits your business
best, and make it a priority to eliminate your competition this
year.
(c) Copyright 2005 Debbie LaChusa, 10stepmarketing
About Author :
20-year marketing veteran Debbie LaChusa created The
10stepmarketing System to help small business owners and
solo-preneurs successfully market their business, themselves
without spending a fortune on marketing. To learn more about
this simple, step-by-step program and to sign up for her FREE
audio class and FREE weekly ezine featuring how-to articles,
tips and advice, visit http://www.10stepmarketing.com