Dwight Schrute gave one of the best lessons I've ever seen re: how to defeat a cheaper competitor. Here's what he did + 2 examples I've seen of this working in the B2B wild. In Season 3, Episode 12 of The Office, Jim and Dwight meet with a prospect who wants to buy from their big box competitor, because their prices are lower. At first, Jim does what what most of us do in that situation. He rambles on about discounts and custom work they can do in an attempt to increase the perceived value and be more competitive on price. Meanwhile, Dwight uses the prospect's phone to call the customer service line of their big box competitor. Jim asks - "How important is customer service to you?" Prospect: "Very important." At that moment, the competitor's automated customer service line says, "Your call is very important to us...please hold...". Dwight hangs up and calls their own customer service line. Kelly picks up immediately. Here's why I love this scene. We don't win competitive deals when we try to compete on areas where our competitors clearly outperform us. We win competitive deals when we reframe the customer's decision-making criteria in our favor. Jim and Dwight can't compete with a big box retailer's pricing, without destroying their margin. So, they reframe the prospect's decision-making criteria from price to service. But, best of all, they don't TELL the prospect they're "better" at service. If they had - it wouldn't have worked. They SHOW him. They give the prospect the information he needs to realize it for himself. Now, while most of us can't copy exactly what Jim and Dwight did, we can absolutely make this work in real-life. Step 1 - Identify what makes your solution different (not better). Step 2 - Identify how NOT having that difference impacts your customer's business. Step 3 - Give them a way to do the math on their own to see the implications of it. Examples I've seen in real-life: 1 - Small manufacturer vs. bigger competitor. Bigger meant more layers of approval for change orders. Waiting for change orders = more downtime. Downtime carried a significant cost. Helped the buyer do the math on cost of avoidable downtime. 2- Diagnostic healthcare product that gave more accurate patient results, but was slower. Kept losing b/c buyers valued faster results. Helped the buyer size the costs/implications of inaccurate patient results. TLDR - Reframe the customer's decision criteria in your favor. Help them see the implications of the difference, don't just tell them the difference.
Competitive Positioning Strategies
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There are only 5 major drivers of competitive advantage in SaaS: 1. Speed of product innovation 2. Network effects 3. Switching costs 4. GTM innovation 5. Brand But if youâre sub $100M ARR, you probably only have one option. Brand. Why? Product innovation is VERY hard to sustain. Look at the major sales tech companies. Every product innovation present in one company is now a feature of every other company. At any given time, based on the quality of the Product or Engineering team, one or the other may be in the lead. Differentiated features become commoditized within months. Network effects are the best competitive advantage but most products don't have them. Switching costs can create a moat in the enterprise. But getting large enterprises to truly take a bet on scaleups is easier said than done. GTM innovation seems promising, but it invites heavy competition. For example, Apollo did this incredibly well, but AI is shortening the half-life of novel GTM, and your competitors will copy you immediately. All of this puts growth stage SaaS companies in a bind. If product innovation is table stakes, you canât get to true network effects, switching costs isn't a factor, and GTM Innovation is temporary, what do you do? You invest in Brand. This is unsatisfying to most CEOs because brand is a long-term investment with difficult attribution. But thatâs exactly why itâs DEFENSIBLE. Because it takes time. Because itâs difficult. And because itâs very hard to fake. Itâs the reason folks like Adam Robinson and Alina Vandenberghe ð¶ï¸ are leading their companies to such strong performance. You couldnât fake being either one of them for a second. They are simply themselves. And they invest every day in amplifying both their message and their company message in a way that feels natural and authentic and creates true fans. Brands leverage the power of trust. And in a world of digital exhaustion, trust is the most precious resource there is. DO NOT STOP INVESTING IN YOUR BRAND We are working at the speed of trust in the modern environment. Trust drives selection and preference which drives win rates and conversions. Brand is your 3 year demand gen investment. If you want to build a sustainable, durable business, people need to trust youâre going to be around. The bar has been raised today. If you are sub $100M in ARR and want to pursue a venture scale opportunity, you will need to invest in sustainable defensible competitive advantages. Product and GTM innovation is table stakes. Your long-term defensibility will come from a sustained investment in your brand.
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Not a lot of businesses are recognizing the power of Change Management as a vehicle for enhancing customer experience efforts. Here's how to unlock the power of change management principles in the context of CX. ð¯ Understanding Customer Needs Before initiating any change, you must have a deep understanding of what your customers really want. Utilize data analytics, behavioral data, operational and financial data, customer interviews, surveys, market dynamics, competitive information, and other signals to assess and understand needs. ð¤ Aligning Objectives Leadership Alignment: Ensure that your leadership is onboard and committed to customer experience improvement. Stakeholder Involvement: Involve the frontline employees who interact with customers daily to contribute to the decision-making process. ðï¸ Planning Identify Key Changes: Prioritize which areas require change based on customer feedback and business metrics. Set Targets: Establish measurable KPIs to gauge the success of the changes you plan to implement. These should be business- and customer-driven metrics. Don't make this a metric like "increase OSAT from X to Y." ð£ Communication Internal Communication: Clearly communicate the why and the how to all internal stakeholders. This should include executives, directly impacted employees, and the broader line of business. Tailor it to the stakeholder. Customer Communication: Be transparent with customers about what changes to expect and how they will benefit. Keep them up to date on progress. ð ï¸ Implementation Pilot Testing: Conduct a small-scale test of the changes to assess their effectiveness. Feedback Loop: Gather continuous feedback from customers and employees throughout the implementation process. ð Evaluation and Adaptation Assess Impact: Examine metrics regularly to determine whether the changes are having the intended impact. Iterate: Use data-driven insights to make necessary adjustments. ð Sustaining Changes Training: Continuously train your team to adapt to new changes. Feedback Mechanisms: Keep the dialogue open with customers and employees for sustainable improvements. ð©ð» Leveraging Technology ð¨ð» Data Analytics: Use analytics to pinpoint improvement areas. Communication Platforms: Use tools like Slack or Teams for internal communication. Automation: Implement bots for routine tasks. CRM Systems: Manage customer relationships digitally to gain insights. ð¡ Involve Employees Effectively Employees are the face of your customer service. Include them in planning, provide training opportunities, establish regular feedback forums, and reward those who contribute to customer experience improvements. Have you applied change management principles to enhance the customer experience in your organization? What worked for you? What didn't work for you? #ChangeManagement #CustomerExperience #Leadership #DataAnalytics #EmployeeEngagement #Technology
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How to position your startup, in less than 5 words ðð½ I just started as head of growth for an AI company last week called Coworker One of my first priorities is to create a clear Market Position. There are a LOT of AI startups out there, so itâs very important to answer these 4 questions for a prospect, quickly: 4 Questions we need to answer: 1. what is it 2. how is it different 3. why is that believable 4. where do you fit into (or replace) my current process and tech stack I believe these are MORE important than benefits (how will this benefit me). Prospects are smart and can figure that out themselves. This is startup positioning. If you can answer these 4 questions for your startup, the sales process becomes much simpler and you have a clear advantage Hereâs my approach for coming up with the answer: â¬ï¸ Step 1: Start with Research. 1. Market map - how are experts defining the market 2. Keyword Analysis - what are people searching for 3. Dark Social - what are people discussing on private slack communities 4. Competitor - what are competitors saying 5. Prospect - listen to sales calls, how are prospects describing the problems and solutions theyâve considered â¬ï¸ Step 2: Decide category: âspicy mustardâ or Special X sauce. âSpicy mustardâ means youâre playing in an existing category, but are unique. You already have a place in the condiment aisle. People looking for condiments can easily find you. âSpecial X sauceâ means youâre trying to create a new category. No one is looking for you and the grocer doesnât know which aisle to put you on. We chose Spicy Mustard. â¬ï¸ Step 3: Decide positioning style: competitive or contextual. Competitive = positioned *against* something E.g. Stop Zoom meetings, send Loom videos E.g. Stop internal emails, send Slack messages Contextual = better way of something existing E.G. Calendly is an easier way to schedule meetings Figma is an easier way to design in teams We chose contextual. Coworker is an easier way to use AI inside a company, because itâs connected to all your apps â¬ï¸ Step 4: Put it all together. Write your position statement 100 times till you get it right. â â¬ï¸ The final answer: We put all this together and chose to position ourselves as: âAI agent for complex workâ 1. What is it? an AI agent 2. How is it different? itâs meant for complex work, (aka stuff ChatGPT cannot do) 3. Why is that believable ? itâs powered by OM1 - a deep memory layer thatâs connected to all your companyâs apps and knowledge 4. where do you fit (or replace) my current tech stack? The AI agent is connected to all your existing apps and can answer, plan and execute tasks across 40+ apps. Also works inside Slack, JIRA and a bunch of other apps you use. â Thatâs it, thatâs how you create a position for your startup. Let me know what you think and if I missed anything
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Is "good enough" really your competition? Or are you better than that? In a crowded market, it's easy to compete against products or solutions that are just "good enough." But what happens when your offering is truly superior? How do you ensure it's seen as a class above the rest? ð Here's how you can reposition yourself and highlight your unique value â´ Elevate Your Story ⴠâ Craft a narrative that emphasizes your journey, innovation, and commitment to excellence. â Highlight your passion for solving customer pain points more effectively than anyone else. Showcase Tangible Benefits ⴠâ Use case studies and testimonials to demonstrate real-world successes. â Provide clear, quantifiable benefits that set you apart from the "good enough" alternatives. Leverage Thought Leadership ⴠâ Share your expertise through blogs, webinars, and speaking engagements. â Position yourself as a trusted advisor and industry leader. Create a Premium Experience â´ â Offer exceptional customer service that goes beyond expectations. â Focus on creating a seamless and delightful user experience. Communicate Your Unique Value Proposition ⴠâ Clearly articulate what makes you different and better. â Use compelling messaging that resonates with your target audience's needs and desires. ð Remember, it's not just about being better; it's about being perceived as irreplaceable. â ð When you position yourself as a differentiated solution, you don't just compete â you lead.Â
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Almost a week ago , I shared the week#1 transformation for a SaaS founder in which we turned their vague product pitch into something sharp and magnetic. But once you have the message, the next question is: âWhoâs it actually for and why would they choose you over others?â In week#2 of their transformation journey we focused on sharpening their positioning. The founderâs SaaS tool could technically help any online business.  And THAT was the problem. It was too broad. They were trying to market to everyone which had it connecting with no one. Hereâs what we changed: â We mapped out their best-fit customers â®not just users - the buyersâ¯. â We analyzed their competitorsâ messaging and found the white space. â We repositioned the product around a clear niche: 7-figure e-com brands drowning in support tickets. Updated Positioning: "Built for growing e-commerce teams who need to scale support - without growing headcount." Now their message isnât just clear, itâs relevant, to the right people, at the right time. #StartupMarketing #PositioningMatters #FounderTips
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The most significant difference between professionals who attract premium opportunities and those who struggle with mediocre offers lies in how they position their value proposition.  Most professionals default to functional descriptions that blend into the competitive landscape, while those commanding top opportunities position themselves as solutions to specific business challenges.  Problem-Centric Positioning: Rather than listing responsibilities, successful professionals identify and articulate the specific business problems they've solved and the measurable impact of those solutions.  Outcome-Focused Communication: Instead of describing processes, they emphasize results - revenue generated, costs reduced, efficiency improved, or risks mitigated.  Industry Pain Point Alignment: They research and speak directly to the challenges their target employers face, positioning their experience as directly relevant solutions.  Quantified Value Demonstration: Every major accomplishment includes specific metrics that translate their work into business language decision-makers understand.  This positioning shift fundamentally changes how organizations perceive your candidacy - transforming you from another qualified applicant into a potential solution to their pressing business needs.  Companies invest premium compensation in professionals who solve expensive problems, not in those who simply perform standard functions well.  The opportunities that align with your career goals and compensation expectations typically require this solution-oriented positioning to break through competitive noise.  How have you successfully repositioned your professional value to attract better opportunities?  Sign up to my newsletter for more corporate insights and truths here: https://lnkd.in/ei_uQjju  #deepalivyas #eliterecruiter #recruiter #recruitment #jobsearch #corporate #personalbranding #valueproposition #professionalbranding #careerstrategist
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Bad customer experience (CX) is costly. But worse than the cost is the damage it can do to your business. Weâve all seen the fallout from poor customer interactionsâlost sales, negative reviews, and damaged reputations. Thatâs why itâs crucial to prioritize and enhance CX. Here are key strategies to implement: â¡ Map the Customer Journey: Each click and interaction shapes their perception. Create detailed personas to uncover needs, behaviors, and pain points. â¡ Process Inventory: Identify inefficiencies, like delayed shipping, by mapping the customer journey and tracing issues back to their roots. â¡ Ethnographic Research: Study customers in their natural settings to gain insights data alone can't capture. Align strategies with genuine customer expectations. â¡ Cultivate a Customer-Centric Culture: Follow Teslaâs leadâensure every employee is driven to enhance CX, fostering continuous feedback and adaptation. â¡ Leverage Data: Use a 360-degree view of each customer to predict needs, personalize interactions, and exceed expectations. Donât cut corners when it comes to improving CX. Focus on these strategies to drive loyalty and revenue. Itâs worth it.
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If youâre trying to position your startup BUT arenât willing to pick specific competitive alternatives to compete with⦠Youâre going to end up competing with everything. ð± And when you compete with everything, explaining your differentiation is near impossible â because your product holds different value relative to the other products youâre getting compared to. This concept is crucial to understand for products that have many use cases. (ie. Airtable) âââ Whatâs Airtableâs differentiation against a no-code automation tool? â It can handle all the automation tasks but gives you more control over managing the data. Whatâs Airtableâs differentiation against a spreadsheet? â It does everything a spreadsheet does but also reliably stores data like a relational database. Whatâs Airtableâs differentiation against a project management tool? â It does everything a project management tool does but gives you the ability to customize the workflows without code completely. ð Their differentiation is COMPLETELY DIFFERENT when referenced against a unique alternative. And Airtable has dozens of other tools it could compete with (CRMs, project management software, collaboration tools, etc.) â Airtable canât possibly explain its unique value against all of these tools at once â especially when they were an early-stage startup with limited resources. They had to be selective on which tools to compete with. (and so does your early-stage startup) They chose spreadsheets & databases. âWeâre part spreadsheet, part database.â âWeâre a database, but you donât need to be a developer to use it.â âWeâre like a spreadsheet, but with a lot of added functionality.â These two reference points acted as shorthand for Airtable, drastically reducing the time for someone to understand what the product is, what they might use it for, and the value it could provide. Nowadays, Airtableâs positioning has matured into a multi-pronged set of positionings that speaks to the unique value against all of these alternative tools. (though they primarily position as a no-code application builder) âââ The takeaway for early-stage startups⦠You get to decide where and who youâll compete with. Founders and marketers should make these decisions to highlight their unique differentiation. If you never decide, youâll effectively remove your ability to differentiate. #positioning #b2bmarketing #productmarketing
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ðð²ðð¼ð»ð± ð£ð¿ð¼ð³ð¶ðð: ðð¼ð ðð¼ ðð¿ð®ð³ð ð® ðð¿ð®ð»ð± ð¦ðð¼ð¿ð ð§ðµð®ð ð¦ðµð¶ð³ðð ððð¹ððð¿ð² ðµ ð¬ð¼ð ð±ð¼ð»âð ð¯ðð¶ð¹ð± ðºð¼ðð²ðºð²ð»ðð ðð¶ððµ ð½ð¿ð¼ð±ðð°ðð. ðµ ð ð°ð¶ ð£ð¶ðªðð¥ ðµð©ð¦ð® ð¸ðªðµð© ð´ðµð°ð³ðªð¦ð´ ðµð©ð¢ðµ ð´ð©ð¢ð¬ð¦ ð±ð¦ð°ð±ðð¦ ð¶ð±, ð®ð¢ð¬ð¦ ðµð©ð¦ð® ðµð©ðªð¯ð¬, ð¢ð¯ð¥ ð±ð¶ð´ð© ðµð©ð¦ð® ðµð° ð¢ð¤ðµ. The biggest brands donât just sell stuff â they stand for something bigger. They shape conversations, change perspectives, and spark real-world change. So, how do you craft a story that doesnât just connect but ignites a movement? ð. ðð²ð¿ð²âð ððµð² ðð¿ðððµ: ðð ððð®ð¿ðð ðð¶ððµ ð½ðð¿ð½ð¼ðð². Not just making money, but a cause worth fighting for. Look at Patagonia. They donât just sell outdoor gear. Theyâre fighting for the environment. Your brandâs âbig whyâ should connect to a universal problem people really care about. ð®. ð¡ð²ð ð, ð¶ðâð ð´ð¼ð ðð¼ ð¯ð² ð½ð²ð¿ðð¼ð»ð®ð¹. People donât buy from companies. They buy from the people behind those companies. Share your stories â the struggles, the wins, the moments that shaped your mission. When Yvon Chouinard launched Patagonia, it wasnât about clothes. It was about protecting the planet he loved to explore. ð¯. ð§ðµð²ð», ð½ð¿ð¼ðð² ð¶ð. Words arenât enough. Actions matter more. Align your practices, partnerships, and initiatives with your mission. Show people youâre committed â not just talk. ð°. ðð»ð± ððµð²ð», ð¶ð»ðð¶ðð² ðð¼ðð¿ ð®ðð±ð¶ð²ð»ð°ð² ðð¼ ð·ð¼ð¶ð» ððµð² ðºð¼ðð²ðºð²ð»ð. A movement isnât a monologue. Itâs a conversation. How can they get involved? What actions can they take today? Create spaces for dialogue, participation, and advocacy. ð±. ð§ð²ð¹ð¹ ððð¼ð¿ð¶ð²ð ððµð®ð ðð½ð¿ð²ð®ð±. Use visuals, real customer stories, and data that inspires. Make your message shareable â because inspired people share things that matter. ð². ðð¶ð»ð®ð¹ð¹ð, ððð®ð ð°ð¼ð»ðð¶ððð²ð»ð. Movements donât happen overnight. Theyâre like a snowball rolling downhill â gaining speed and size. If you stay true to your message and keep pushing forward, your movement will grow. Trust takes time, but itâs the only way real change sticks. My final thought? Brands that create real impact donât just sell products â they shift mindsets and spark action. And it doesnât matter if youâre a start-up or a giant. Your brand can lead the next big movement. Are you ready to make it happen? Because the worldâs waiting for your story.