In the mature, highly competitive markets of today there is always a current or new competitor lurking in the wings ready to try and entice your customers away with a special offer, lower price or promise of better service. In this guide, we will be examining how you can respond to competitive threats and ways in which you might protect yourself from them.
Value your customers
The first rule of competition is the most critical because it will help you to keep your focus on what really matters: the customers, not the competitors. If you treat today’s customer well, then you are likely to have a loyal customer base that is unlikely to be easily wooed away from you. When it comes to your customers, you need to:
Winning new customers is an expensive business, so it makes commercial sense to spend time and effort to keep the ones you have. Use these questions to help you consider how much you value your current customers.
Valuing customers
If you have answered these questions honestly, you will be able to see you can improve the ways in which you value and listen to your customers.
Loyal customers are the best defence
Loyal, satisfied customers have no reason to risk trying out competitors’ offers. Organisations that appreciate the lifetime value of customers and work hard at building and maintaining the relationship have less to fear than those who pay lip service to the notion of customer service and satisfaction, or businesses where today’s sale is more of a priority than tomorrow’s repeat business.
Take competitors seriously
Having emphasised the need to keep a focus on the customer, it would be naïve to suggest you can ignore the competition. Remember, it is your customers who will decide who your true market competitors are. This may not be the market leader or the latest new entrant into your market. Identify your key competitors and make it your business to keep up to date with their strategy and tactics.
You should be aware of:
How customers choose
Whatever the purchase, be it a consumer good or a business-to-business service, customers make purchase decisions in the same way.
The decisions are made on the basis of the customers’ perception of value for money. Understanding this reality is important for two reasons:
If you are losing customers or failing to win new business it is important to ascertain whether your problem is based on perception, or if your offering is not matching customer requirements. The first is solved by communication and education. The second requires you to go back to the drawing board to design a package which meets the customers’ requirements. Product-focused organisations are those most likely to have ended up with an over-engineered product providing lots of features which have added to the cost but which do not add customer value.
Customers have their own list of expectations and needs. When they go to buy a new office photocopier or computer system, these may be formally laid down in the form of a specification. In consumer markets the requirements may be less formalised but are nonetheless established, from the minimum leisure facilities at a holiday destination to the performance expected of a new car. The customer sets out with the shopping list made up of benefits needed. These are the core benefits, in other words, the basic functional needs. For example, a mobile phone service may need to cover Europe and expected benefits could include special prices at weekends, a breakdown of the bill and an international enquiry system.
Meeting the culling criteria
These core and expected benefits represent the customers’ ‘culling criteria’. In other words, they will only consider suppliers who meet these criteria and will reject those that do not. It is important that you identify and monitor the culling criteria of customers in your target market as they can change; for example, increased awareness of the need for energy conservation may change expected requirements when choosing a new gas boiler or replacement windows.
Where competition takes place
Competition takes place between suppliers who have satisfied the cull criteria. If all the companies now offer the same deal and they have benchmarked or copied each other in an attempt to be more competitive, the customer is left with no choice but to choose on the basis of price. The market has then commoditised because, from the customers’ perspective all the alternatives are equal in terms of the benefits offered.
Differentiation means that companies add benefits designed to distinguish them from the competition and which they believe will be valued by their targeted customers. The better you know your customers, the easier it will be for you to identify the added-value benefits they appreciate. If you are successful, you will establish a competitive advantage.
There are two problems associated with adding these (augmented) benefits:
The ideal
The challenge businesses face is to find augmented benefits valued by their customers, but which cannot be easily copied by competitors. During the time this utopia can be achieved, businesses can enjoy the commercial benefits of having a sustainable competitive advantage. Because this is harder to achieve with new, improved features, most organisations are focusing on service, relationships and brand values to provide a basis for sustainability. Today, what you offer is less important, as most companies offer the same; differences are perceived in how you do business.
Coping with low-cost competitors
The reality for many firms is they are faced with lower-cost competitors, so how should you react?
The dangers of competing on price
Price cutting directly damages the bottom line of the business, but it can also change the customers’ perceptions of your quality and it certainly introduces the expectation of lower prices next time.
Look at this example:
A company selling a product normally priced at £100 wants to increase sales or respond to a lower price competitor. They decide to reduce prices by 10 per cent. If you assume that the direct costs of this product were £50, you can see the effect on the bottom line.
Before | After a 10 per cent price cut | |
Price | £100 | £90 |
Production cost | £50 | £50 |
Margin | £50 | £40 |
Note a 10 per cent price cut reduces margin by 20 per cent.
The alternative
Another option is to add value. Consider giving away a small gift with each purchase. For instance, if you own a deli, offer customers a free coffee with every purchase over £20. Ideally, you are looking to offer benefits valued by the customer which are relatively cheap for you to supply.
Adding value
If we add 10 per cent value we now have:
Price | £100 |
Direct costs | £55 |
Contribution to fixed costs and profit | £45 |
In this instance our direct costs have increased by 10 per cent as we have added 10 per cent more to the product, but the bottom line has not changed by as much.
This is because the extra value perceived by the customer is made up of direct costs and contribution.
So the supermarkets’ three-for-the-price-of-two is less costly than 50 per cent off the price, but judged by the customer to be of equal value. As an added advantage, the customers’ perception of quality and expectation of price remains unaltered, whilst they may tell friends about the great offer or extra service you provide.