Friday, March 15, 2013

The Law of Focus: How to Avoid Direct Competition (part 3 of 3)


The Law of Focus: How to Avoid Direct Competition (part 3 of 3)

Click on the title to watch the video on YouTube.

Full transcript to the video:

Sing: "Aint nothin’ like the real thing, baby. Aint nothin’ like the real thing."

Hi, this is Glenn R Harrington of Articulate Consultants. Welcome to the third video of a three-part series in which I describe how to avoid direct competition in business by applying the law of focus. These three videos are intended for people with sales growth, customer loyalty, and referral generation on their minds.

In the first video, I describe how competition could be any alternative a customer considers instead of spending their money on the goods and services your company offers.

In the second video, I discuss the first example of two real companies that emerged from being stuck as small-time generalists to become thriving specialists after applying the law of focus.

Example Two: the figure-skate boot maker.

Imagine yourself the parent of a teenage girl who loves figure skating. Still growing, your daughter has outgrown and outworn her figure skates. She needs a new pair. You and your spouse join her in wanting the best.

It takes little asking around to learn that the best figure skates are not purchased as skates at all, but as special-ordered blades attached to custom-made boots. Your daughter would not be happy with anything less.

The best figure-skate boot maker, you learn, operates a small shop a five-hour drive away. The boots cost plenty; reputedly worth every penny.

The figure-skate boot maker occasionally visits the ice rink where your daughter’s figure skating club provides ice time. So, with an appointment booked, your daughter has her measurements taken. Weeks later, you take the family on a car trip to pick up the boots. This is how you get to meet the proprietor.

The company started with its founder who, in addition to being a talented technician, has always had an entrepreneurial twinkle in her eye. She drew on experience repairing shoes and boots plus purses and leather gloves; even some saddle work and bridlery.

It was only after she had custom-made a few pairs of figure-skate boots, then discovered that every one of those customers was thrilled and referring friends, that she began to recognize the potential in focusing on this market.

In time, a steady flow of new customers came to her for custom-made figure-skate boots. They were willing to pay top price for work that she could perform well. As the volume of figure-skate boot orders remained steady and grew, she could perform even better and her operation became ever more profitable. She found it invigorating as an entrepreneur and decided to make it her business focus.

Within two years, her focus on figure-skate boot making allowed her to leverage her technical expertise as well as her business sensibilities. She hired one new person every three months.

The law of focus requires a company to narrow its scope to widen its appeal. This figure-skate boot maker, like the figure-skate blade sharpener, exemplifies how the law of focus, applied intelligently, can help an independent small business to fulfil its true potential. They continue to succeed as their integrated marketing and brand management position them as must-see specialists.

Like the blade sharpeners, the figure skate boot makers stoke great word-of-mouth with sharp advertising. Their advertising is steady, targeted, and articulates authentic key messages to the right people in the right media. The margin of uncertainty is nicely low. Living up to reputation, each company consistently provides excellent service to a growing share of a geographically-dispersed specialty market.

It remains important to be adaptable while serving the target market. This includes accepting what might be called “also” business that complements the company’s focus. Tightly-focused specialists often earn nice profits from a healthy volume of “also” business that they attract because of their strong, clear reputation.

I believe that every independent business has potential to be fulfilled, sometimes better than key people are aware of. Despite company founders typically investing much time, energy, money, and creativity in their venture, there can be an indispensable role for an outside expert to play – the role of a consultant – in helping to ensure that the founding vision comes to fruition as well as it can.

On that theme, let me state this clearly: Better for a business to focus on what makes it irreplaceable to its target market than to decide what its brand promise ought to be.

I serve clients who want to ensure that their independent small business fulfils its potential in alignment with a clear mission or purpose and core values, serving a well-defined market. Applying the law of focus intelligently complements this, helping to avoid direct competition while potentially thriving in a distinct market niche. Check out my related articles at the links below.

Serving independent small businesses in Canada and the USA, I am Glenn R Harrington of Articulate Consultants.

Sing: "Aint nothin’ like the real thing, baby. Aint nothin’ like the real thing."

Related article – Marketing Tip: Avoid Direct Competition:

http://www.articulate.ca/AvoidDirectCompetition.html

Related article – Three Reasons Why Independent Businesses Need Authentic Key Messages To Succeed:

http://www.articulate.ca/IndependentBusinessNeedKeyMessages.html

Related article – Authenticity Rules: A Reality Check for Creative Advertisers :

http://www.articulate.ca/AuthenticityRules.html

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

The Law of Focus: How to Avoid Direct Competition (part 2 of 3)


The Law of Focus: How to Avoid Direct Competition (part 2 of 3)

Click on the title to watch the video on YouTube.

Full transcript to the video:

Sing: "Aint nothin’ like the real thing, baby. Aint nothin’ like the real thing."

Hi, this is Glenn R Harrington of Articulate Consultants. Welcome to the second video of a three-part series in which I describe how to avoid direct competition in business by applying the law of focus. These three videos are intended for people with sales growth, customer loyalty, and referral generation on their minds.

In the first video, I describe how competition could be any alternative a customer considers instead of spending their money on the experience your company offers.

I also raise six questions about customer experience. Good, reliable answers could help your business to avoid direct competition and become better known as the go-to source for a distinct, valued customer experience.

Imagine your company humming along nicely, generating and delivering on a healthy, growing volume of business for happy customers, many of whom keep coming back; many bringing or referring others to you.

In this video, I’ll tell you about the first of two real small, independent companies that came out of difficult times after narrowing their scope and sharpening their key messages to expand their success. That is, after they applied the law of focus.

Each had early success followed by difficult times. Each emerged from its difficult times more focused and less concerned about competitors. Their eventual success has been unmistakably, authentically earned and a result of becoming more widely known for one distinct, essential strength.

I live near the ocean, so let me use nautical terms for what happens during those difficult times that catalyze the transition from small-scale success to real thriving. Key people learn to recalibrate their compass, navigate a better route to success, keep the wind in the sails, and manage on-board resources effectively for the journey to long-term, resilient success.

Example One: the figure-skate blade sharpener.

Imagine yourself the parent of a teenage girl who loves figure skating. You see the good friendships, personal discipline, physical fitness, and other benefits to your daughter – including her happiness. You and your spouse cover most of the costs.

When your daughter was younger, you would take her skates to a local sports store for sharpening. You liked how they would take special care with the spikes at the tips of figure-skate blades.

Even so, you have since learned from your daughter’s friends, their parents, and her skating coach that a certain shop in a nearby city is the best place to go for sharpening.

Those inexperienced with figure skating cannot tell the difference. Figure skaters themselves exude their gratitude for great blade sharpening. That, you learn, comes from this shop an hour’s drive away.

At first, you feel skeptical. Then, you opt to go to the shop in question yourself.

There, you learn not only that this place sharpens an impressive volume of figure-skate blades, but that people from much further away send their skates. You recognize some skaters whose parents make family car trips out of dealing with this place. You see couriers come and go. You even meet the shipping and receiving clerk – somebody whose full-time job is to traffic skates in and out of this shop.

When you meet the owners, you learn a little more about the business. The shop’s history also includes locksmithing and custom machining. They still sharpen lawn-mower blades, knives, and such.

It took some time before they noticed that skate sharpening kept bringing people from near and far willing to pay top price. Customers would book drop-off and pick-up appointments from other cities – most remarkably for figure skate blades. The market for sharpening figure-skate blades held the most potential if they chose to focus on it.

After too many mediocre years as a generalist shop, competing with too many other generalists, they made that choice. The time to focus on operating as a specialty shop had come.

Soon after your return home, you learn that figure skaters who get their blades sharpened at this one shop comprise an elite segment of the regional figure-skating community. Your daughter has become one of the lucky ones, her love of skating strengthened. That you paid top price becomes merely incidental.

Now, what does this tell you about how to get any small business to succeed like that? Here’s a hint: Say the word “sharpening” in the dressing room and every customer of this shop – mostly the top skaters on the rink – instantly know where to go for the best. That’s the law of focus in action.

Sing: "Aint nothin’ like the real thing, baby. Aint nothin’ like the real thing."

Independent small businesses can emerge from challenging times to better fulfil their potential by applying the law of focus. See the third video in this three-part series for more discussion about this, including the second example: another real, thriving company that pulled itself out of tough times. Also, see my related articles at the links below.

Related article – Marketing Tip: Avoid Direct Competition:

http://www.articulate.ca/AvoidDirectCompetition.html

Related article – Three Reasons Why Independent Businesses Need Authentic Key Messages To Succeed:

http://www.articulate.ca/IndependentBusinessNeedKeyMessages.html

Related article – Authenticity Rules: A Reality Check for Creative Advertisers :

http://www.articulate.ca/AuthenticityRules.html

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Monday, March 11, 2013

The Law of Focus: How to Avoid Direct Competition (part 1 of 3)


The Law of Focus: How to Avoid Direct Competition (part 1 of 3)

Click on the title to watch the video on YouTube.

Full transcript to the video:

Sing: "Aint nothin’ like the real thing, baby. Aint nothin’ like the real thing."

Hi, this is Glenn R Harrington of Articulate Consultants. In this three-part series, I discuss how independent small businesses can emerge from challenging times to better fulfil their potential by applying the law of focus.

These three videos are intended for people with sales growth, customer loyalty, and referral generation on their minds. If you are concerned about market position, client retention, and the overall success of an independent small business, then pay attention.

The law of focus, applied intelligently, can help any business to become known as the go-to source for the customer experience that defines its brand.

When any experience triggers an emotional response, the intellect or logical capacity of the person feeling that emotional response typically weakens – often to the same extent as the strength of the emotion.

Consumer psychology, emotion, and logic are involved when a company thrives. That thriving itself can define its market niche. To the attentive eye, it can also reveal the ideal client profile and wherever adaptation is needed.

Successes and failures provide useful guidance to those who pay attention, who can then conduct business adaptively, innovatively, and realistically in the presence of competition while remaining authentic.

Now, about competition: Imagine that you are the owner/operator of a Chinese restaurant in North Bay.

You could view all other local Chinese restaurants as your competitors. After all, they could take away business from you when people who want to eat Chinese food go to their restaurants; not yours.

You could instead view the owners and operators of local Chinese restaurants as a mix – from colleagues to competitors.

You could also choose to view all local Chinese restaurants as a distinct business community within the local culture.

Now, imagine this: After a soccer championship game, one group of a dozen people decides to go a restaurant to celebrate. Various restaurants are suggested. Why would they choose your place? Your sechuan eggplant hotpot? Your dan-dan noodles?

After some discussion, they choose the local Mediterranean place for their celebration feast. Not your restaurant. Not any Chinese restaurant.

Next year, it could be any one of the other places considered, or a newcomer. With one trip to the grocery store and one trip to the liquor store, it could be a backyard barbecue instead of any restaurant.

Your restaurant competes with every option that a dozen people after a soccer championship would consider for their celebration.

To get that business next time, your restaurant has to be the hands-down winner in enough people’s minds before the group even decides to go out after the game. That’s how to avoid direct competition.

See my article Marketing Tip: Avoid Direct Competition. It uses the soft-drink industry for examples. You can find a link to the article below.

If you were a plumber in Saskatoon, you might view the local plumbers on a spectrum ranging from associates to adversaries. This could be an accurate perspective.

Even so, the do-it-yourself approach with tools and tips from the local hardware store might actually be your top competition, any day of the year. This leads to an important question.

Under what circumstances does your ideal client buy your services? When they come back for more, why do they do that? What gets them to refer others to you? That’s three questions.

Thee more: For what is your company best known? Why do people bypass your competitors to buy from you? When people buy from you – first time or returning – what does it mean to them?

In any industry, in any city, when people responsible for marketing and brand management gather good, reliable answers to these six questions, by paying attention to their market, and in so doing pay attention to patterns in the thoughts and feelings expressed about the experience of being their customer, they enable themselves.

They enable themselves, through their authentic understanding of the customer experience, to express that experience in the words of the people who loyally pay their company for that experience.

They enable themselves to identify the traits, values, and needs of other people who would pay for that experience if they knew that it was available to them and how to get it.

They enable their marketing and brand management efforts to articulate authentic key messages to the right people through the right media.

They enable their companies to match supply and demand effectively and efficiently because they follow the guidance of their target market to be known as the go-to source for a distinct customer experience.

Sing: "Aint nothin’ like the real thing, baby. Aint nothin’ like the real thing."

In the following videos of this three-part series, I describe how two real independent small businesses applied the law of focus to narrow their scope, sharpen their key messages, and expand their success. Check them out. Also, see my related articles at the links below. I am Glenn R Harrington of Articulate Consultants.

Related article – Marketing Tip: Avoid Direct Competition:

http://www.articulate.ca/AvoidDirectCompetition.html

Related article – Three Reasons Why Independent Businesses Need Authentic Key Messages To Succeed:

http://www.articulate.ca/IndependentBusinessNeedKeyMessages.html

Related article – Authenticity Rules: A Reality Check for Creative Advertisers :

http://www.articulate.ca/AuthenticityRules.html

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