How
To Prosper Because of Your Competition
As
Published in Money 'N Profits, Commerce & Industry, and many
others.
By
Bill Dueease
Your
Personal "Coach" to Business Success
If
you've been considering your competitors as roadblocks, or hindrances,
you've been overlooking an important springboard to success.
Business owners frequently consider their competition as the enemy. Many focus on "beating the other guy" because that's how they measure their success-just like in sports, where one side has to beat the other to win.
However, by focusing on beating the competition, you will divert yourself from your real objectives: increasing profits, gaining more time and gaining more control. Bottom line, you will succeed at these goals only by improving yourself and your business, regardless of the competition. However, you can use your competition to further your own prosperity. Let's look at how this can be done.
| Phase 1: Face Your Competition |
The first step
in prospering because of competition is to identify and analyze the "Real Competition."
It's frequently not readily apparent. Sure, your business might have a new and
unique product or service, but when the needs it actually fulfills are defined,
you'll discover that many other types of products and/or services fulfill similar
(if not the same) ones.
The second step is to evaluate your competition thoroughly-to know more about
them than they or your potential customers do. You gain considerable knowledge
and power doing this, which you will be able to use during the next step.
| Phase 2: Embrace Your Competition |
The next step is
to embrace your competition. That's right! In fact, you want and need competition.
Here are several of the reasons why:
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a. |
You
need to avoid and/or get relief from bad customer experiences. You quite
often spend too much time, money and effort on extremely demanding, very
price conscious, "unpleasable" customers, who almost always produce no profits
and sometimes create losses. Even worse, they distract you from your best
customers, who drift away in silence. |
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b. |
You
might as well let your competitors deal with these problem people and thus
probably overlook the better ones-who might seek you out. |
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c. |
You show strength to customers when you don't fear competition. Many potential customers will try to threaten you and your business with "The Competition" as a negotiating tactic. Your confident understanding of your competitors and of your desirable customers will allow you to educate them to the real differences. This is how you can position your business favorably. |
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| Phase 3: Use What You Know |
There are examples all around you of business owners thriving because of their competition. One couple, for example, started a cleaning business in the face of an overabundance of competitors and greatly prospered, even with higher prices. They were able to do this because they were the only business to quickly answer the phone with a live friendly person and to rapidly return all calls. Their competition actually drove excellent customers to them.
In another case, a development group created an extremely profitable new ski resort by concentrating on providing warm, courteous and ever-increasing benefits to their skiers. The existing ski area considered themselves the "only game in town" and were more focused on treating their directors as semi-royalty, and they considered their paying customers lucky to have the privilege to ski there. The developers of the new resort feasted on the monopoly the others thought they had.
By using what you know now, you too can prosper because of your competition.
Bill Dueease is a business owner coach who specializes in educating owners to increase profits, reduce stress, and gain time from and control over their business to reach their life goals. This article and others are provided as an educational service by Aspen Business Group. If you have questions, comments, or requests, you're invited to contact:
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bill@findyourcoach.com
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