Are your eyes on the competition or customers? What you should be obsessed with in your business.
How do you handle the competition?
Meaning, do your competitors factor into your offers, your customers, your sales and marketing strategy? How much weight should you give to their consideration?
And, what exactly should know about your competition and how do those insights affect your plans?
Unless you’re operating in a total vacuum, you should assess the competitors in your space to see what your customers see when they go looking for solutions.
However, there’s a difference between assessing and obsessing.
After interviewing and competitively assessing hundreds of businesses these past few years, a deep dive into most organizations reveals their competitive strategy has them making decisions with strategies more closely aligned with their competitors than aligned with their customers.
Does that sound crazy? We think it is but it’s not that obvious if you’re in a frenzied state about your competitor snagging one of your big clients or slashing their prices to try to poach your customers.
But think about it. Obsessing over your competition—what they’re doing, what they’re offering, where they’re pricing, where they’re advertising, who’s buying, etc.—can skew your decisions and actions to where you’re trying to compete with the same products, spend the same advertising budgets, offer the same terms, all in the name of winning the same customers.
This strategy is sure to backfire on you though because we don’t make decisions based on what seems the same, we seek to understand how things are different and choose the differences that are important to us.
Do you find reviews and referrals that give you clues as to how their customers feel about them? Do you get a sense of who loves them or what the most common complaints are? If you search them, do you see some word of mouth referrals and mentions on social media or around the web?
After you assess, maybe you obsess – not about the competition, but about how a customer perceives and experiences you! Do you clearly and quickly let future customers know who you are, how you’re different and what they can expect from you? How do you show up at every touch point of their experience?
...with deference to where the competitor is missing opportunities or saying the same thing as everyone else. Find your lane—heck, make your lane—and be the only one driving in it so those customers who truly want what you have to offer can efficiently find you, connect with you and choose you.
Conduct smart competitive intelligence so you can’t be compared, won’t be duplicated, and cannot be replaced.