The document provides an outline for a competitive intelligence workshop for service providers. It discusses defining competition and gathering intelligence on competitors' locus, strategy, products/services, marketing, competence, quality of service, pricing and costs. The goal is to help businesses thrive by understanding competitors and the competitive environment.
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Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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The document provides an outline for a competitive intelligence workshop for service providers. It discusses defining competition and gathering intelligence on competitors' locus, strategy, products/services, marketing, competence, quality of service, pricing and costs. The goal is to help businesses thrive by understanding competitors and the competitive environment.
Original Description:
Competitive Intelligence Workshop for AUSIT, presented by Sam Berner of www.arabic.com.au
The document provides an outline for a competitive intelligence workshop for service providers. It discusses defining competition and gathering intelligence on competitors' locus, strategy, products/services, marketing, competence, quality of service, pricing and costs. The goal is to help businesses thrive by understanding competitors and the competitive environment.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
The document provides an outline for a competitive intelligence workshop for service providers. It discusses defining competition and gathering intelligence on competitors' locus, strategy, products/services, marketing, competence, quality of service, pricing and costs. The goal is to help businesses thrive by understanding competitors and the competitive environment.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
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COMPETITIVE
INTELLIGENCE for service providers
Presented by Sam Berner, Arabic Communication
Experts [email protected] OUTLINE of WORKSHOP • Definitions • Reasoning • Types of Competition • What CI to gather? • How do harvest? • What to do with the wheat? (1) Definitions Competition • Anything and anyone who sends clients and their $$ away from your door. Services (us!) • Fragmented industry of large # of small micro businesses no single entity with a significant market share, no single influencer to set an agenda for the industry • Dependent on location (oh, yeah!) • Close personal control of ownership • Training = higher competitive advantage • Deals in concepts not products => open to replication (competitive threat) • Key unit of inventory is TIME (cannot be returned/reused/resold) • Best marketing is WOM (so be WOW!) Competitive Intelligence (CI) • Systemic & Ethical program • for gathering, analyzing, and managing external information • that enhances your marketplace competitiveness • through a greater understanding of your competitors and the competitive environment. (2) Reasoning Why gather CI? • Thrive + Spot + Protect • Increases sales and market share • Protects your business from new threats • Helps grow existing business making it easier/better at spotting opportunities • Develops sustainable competitive advantage – deal with stuff before the stuff deals with you Difficulties • Invisible marketing • No goods to look at • Output hard to measure • Invisible pricing • Constant change in competition • Generalisations are dangerous • Trying to hit a moving target (3) Types of Competition Overview 1. The client 2. The influencer 3. The Big Brother 4. Traditional competitors 5. Internal competitors 6. Left-field competitors The Client • Biggest and most overlooked competitor • Decision making, emotional experiences with other services (bad apples) • Lumps you with the rest • Substitutes you with people from outside your industry • Apathy • Reluctance to change supplier even if they suck • Unable to plan/decide ahead • DIY mentality • Ignorant • Has perceptions • Too many/too few similar service providers = paralysis by analysis The Client – what to do? • Befriend and stay in touch • Keep up to date on their industry news • Understand the psychology of key decision makers • Build trust and relationships • Keep an eye on personnel changes • Beware the minions with small dog syndrome or urge to show off. The Influencer • Decision makers, colleagues, friends, other consultants involved in the purchase decision. • Subjective? Irrational? Biased? • Flat hierarchies create MANY influencers • Delegation creates influencers • Gatekeepers The Influencer – what to do? • Find them -> target them ->educate them • Remove gatekeepers if they are not worthy working with • Pay attention to the creation of new influencers The Big Borther (or is it Sister?) • Public sector undercutting private sector (TIS) • Favouritism • Capping wages • Using cheaper labour • Flooding market with competitors • Legislation/regulations that hampers the marketplace The BS/BB – what to do? • WEEP? • Unionise? • Work together with other small businesses (not necessary T/I) to badger the BS/BB until they change what is irritating you (optimistic long-distance approach) Direct Competitors • Offer exactly the same, or very similar service • Say that they do so • Offer viable alternatives • Operate in the same market as you • Serve the same clients as you • Difficult to compare, but compared they will be by your clients • Partial and full competitors • Most not high profile, very niche, and often hidden • Copycats • Pop up quickly, easy to set up • If there is one major provider, you might be seen as “second-best” Direct Competition – what to do? • Define who they are from client’s point of view • Identify the ones you don’t compete with – they can become allies • Gather CI that is “need-to-know” not “nice-to-know” • Approach partnerships carefully Internal Competition • Things you do to sabotage yourself: – Adamancy – Time management – Personality issues (shyness, ego, etc) – High mindedness – Inability to change – Over-promising – Perpetual upgrading – Not enough CPD and industry info Internal Competition – what to do? • Spend some time reviewing how you work • Note aspects that need improvement • Implement a plan of action Left-Field Competition - Definition • Other factors that arise out of nowhere, unexplained and unpredictable, to disrupt your business. Left-Field Competition - Types • Changes in demand • 24/7 • New entrants with better technology • New technology • Globalisation >> increased competition • Crowd sourcing • Off-shoring • Unionisation • Economic boom and recession • Client rationalises operations • Hidden competition (outside in T/I) • Commodisation • Associations Left-Field Competition – What to do?
• Keep your eyes and ears open
• Research a lot • Think of various disaster scenarios • Change tactics (marketing, delivery, even product) • Stay positive – see it as a challenge (4) What CI to Gather? Types of CI • Locus • Strategy • Product/service • Marketing • Competence • Quality of Service • Pricing and Cost • Identity, ownership, staff Locus • Define your industry sector as your client sees it: – Agencies (national/multinational/government) – Freelancers – Outsiders that are “hidden competition” – Associations – etc. • No defined turf • Here and overseas • Maybe not in your industry? • Don’t be snobbish. Strategy • How do they respond to LF competition? • What is their “positioning statement”? • Is their service newer/more innovative? • What is their mission statement? • What values to they apply to their decision making? • Can you fill in any gaps they have left? • Are they making themselves a brand-name? • How does their expertise compare to yours? • What is their market-niche? • Are they setting a trend? • Are they optimising what they are good at? • What is the services mix? • What are the modes of delivery? • How do they maximise client retention? • How do they come across in their pricing strategy? • What are their alliances? “Product” • “Service” is largely invisible, tailored to each customer. • How do you compare oranges to potatoes to exotic birds? • It is what you offer “over and above” that defines the difference. • So define the service FIRST. • “Cat-in-the-bag” for client, difficult to evaluate. • It is about THE POTENTIAL TO DELIVER. “Product” (cont.) • What is your competitors’ potential • CPD? Marketing? Business communication? References? Previous clients? What do these previous clients say? • Are they focused? • Do they provide added-value • Do they provide integrated services? • If you lose a job to them, do you know why? • What are their future plans? • Sherlock Holmes at work here. Marketing • Mostly not visible • P2P & word of mouth • Many contracts awarded on a handshake • If you are always a bridesmaid, maybe it is time to look for a different boyfriend? Marketing (cont.) • What is their hook? • Do they host events? • If not, do they regularly speak at other people’s events? • Do they sponsor? • Are they on professional databases that provide referrals? • If not advertising, but busy – what is the secret? • What are their CRs like? • How do they segment their market? Is theirs more fertile? • How much of their advertising is “smoke & mirrors”? • How much are they spending on it? Marketing (cont.)
YOU ARE LOOKING FOR
WHAT THEY DO RIGHT & GO ONE BETTER. YOU ARE LOOKING FOR WHAT THEY MISSED & STEP IN. Competence • Where do they deliver their services? • How are their services delivered? • How long have they been delivering? • How long have they retained clients? • Is their delivery steady? Quality of Service • How do they satisfy their clients? • How are they “different and better”? • How available are they? • How does the end product compare with what they advertise? • How do they measure client satisfaction? • How do they handle complaints? • Do they have an 1800 number? • Are they engaged with their customers? Pricing and Cost • The most difficult part of CI • Impacted by client perceptions of price and value • Often all you get is a range. • The best CI here has to do with knowing your customer’s budget. • Can’t be understood without knowledge of competitors costs. • Beware of smoke-&-mirrors Pricing and Cost (cont.) • For fee or for free? • What is being provided? • Is it leading to something else? • Does the price offered make sense? • Are they trying to monopolise? • How are they charging? • Are they bundling services? • Is there preferential pricing for long-term clients? Big projects? • Are they using bluff tactics? • Do they low-ball their bids? • Marketing $$ vs income $$ Pricing and Cost (cont.) ADVICE If you decide that you are overpriced (a) Adjust pricing; or (b) Emphasize the additional value added. DO NOT UNDERCUT. YOU ARE THE LOSER. Identity, Ownership & Staff • What qualifications they have? • How are they perceived by clients? • Are they going an extra mile? • Any bad apples? • Who is doing what? • SWOT analysis • What age range are they? • How many? • What experiences and expertise? • How long have they been doing that? • How long have they been with the same business? • How do they manage their knowledge? Internally and externally. • How do they keep up to date? • Who do they have drinks with? Where to Look? • Look in – NAATI directory – AUSIT, ATA, ITI, others – Mailing list brokers – Ads in industry publications – Press releases – Yellow pages and industry directories – Websites (quote forms and content) – RSS Google news and blogs – Expos, conferences, academic publications – Social media Where to Look? (cont.) – Newsletters/get onto their mailing lists – ads, press releases, photos – Forums, chatrooms, social media – Brochures, logos, letterheads, BC – Keep an eye on new entrants – Use FOI where possible (Contracts awarded) Where to Look? • Look in: – Conversations – Use someone to do a phone review of what clients think of their services – Toll-free number – Customers/suppliers who left them – Tap into current and former clients: • Ask clients if they mind sharing quotes/proposals • Network with clients/suppliers. Keep eyes and ears open. How to collect CI? – Develop a CI mindset – THINK: what information you SHOULD be receiving, but aren’t – Analyse your competition. This will make you see patterns better: • What sort of competition do they represent? • What external competitive forces are you reckoning with? • Who are the influencers? How to collect CI? (cont.) – Look at any major clients you lost and analyse them – Identify clients you would like to win, and study your competition for each of them. – Keep records of bids you lost, and review them – Collect > Read > Think > Analyse > Use.. – Be cost effective – let as much info as possible come to you. – Ask “What can I do better with this info?” Your CI Checklist 1. Make the commitment 2. Identify needs and objectives 3. Identify the sources of information 4. Use technology 5. Compile a report (brief) 6. Take action on the results 7. Evaluate against objectives 8. Make changes The CI Grid – Create a grid showing: • Where your competition wants to be • Where you are at the moment – Is that good? – Should you be somewhere else? Lest you forget •Avoid: – Forgetting that your competitors will also be trying to gain intelligence on you. – Spending money on researching those who are no longer your competitors - move with the market. – Overstepping the ethical line. – Imagining that by simply copying competitors or beating them fractionally to market is the key to success; seeking greater differentiation from the competition is the route to a market advantage. Resources • Google “gathering competitive analysis” – read a lot of this stuff before doing yours. • Watch videos (heaps online) • Go to a university and spend a day browsing books on the topic. Local libraries suck in this field – they should be under 658.47 (or if at UQ, under HD38.7)