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the brand is the
strategy
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About 95% of what executives in
competing companies do is pretty much the same all around.
This is good management.
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If
you are CEO’ing a wireless communication services provider
services, you strive to put up an advanced technological infrastructure
with a promising future, cool end-user phones, other devices and
accessories, a great service system, attractive added-value services,
and competitive prices. Well, this is precisely where your competitors
put their efforts as well. The 5% (give or take) that you do differently
constitutes your strategy. The CEO of Southwest Airlines, the revolutionary
domestic American airline, most of the time does exactly what her
colleagues do. But her firm offers Ticketless travel, and serves
meals in the airport during waits, and not on the plane. |
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Doing well what you are
supposed to be doing – is
a prerequisite for competing. It is definitely not a strategy. Being
better - is a deserving effort, yet it is not a strategy either,
especially not in the long run. Categories tend to converge into
an equable level, more or less, of prices/costs, product quality
and features, technological sophistication, and service quality.
How, then, are you supposed to compete? Well, you could offer your
clients more than what your competition offers, for a higher price,
for the same price, for a lower price, or – offer them less
value for a lower price. All of these options can give you an edge,
but usually not for long. |
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You could also offer something
different than what your competition does. You can cater to a need
not formerly
satisfied by your category. Nokia, for example, did just that when
it decided to treat cellphones as fashion accessories and later
as entertainment devices. Even this approach could not be considered
as an insurance policy. There are no insurance policies in the
world
of business. But, if it is difficult or impossible to imitate,
or it is something not likely to be imitated by your competition – then
you might just have created for yourself a mini-monopoly of your
own. Well, this is surely an accomplishment that should not be
underestimated in a competitive market. |
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