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18 September 2013

Do you have a clear point of difference to drive growth?

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Staying in business has never been harder. 10,632 companies collapsed in the 12 months to March 1 2013 -  ASIC also reports the number of firms being placed in administration is more than 12 per cent higher than during the GFC. Over the last few months an average of 44 small businesses were closing every day according to ABS data.

A change of government won’t change the fact the pace of change is still accelerating, the choices for customers continue growing and the decisions we all face in life are more complex than ever.

Where will your business growth come from?

These are your options:

  1. From existing clients
  2. By getting new clients
  3. Expanding to new locations, (interstate, overseas)
  4. Developing new services
  5. Making acquisitions

90% of businesses focus on number 1, selling more to current customers or charging them more. Yet the upside is limited.

Of the small number that go down the acquisition path most are disappointed. An AGSM survey of mergers and acquisitions showed after 3 years just 10% exceeded expectations of synergy and only 10% - 15% met expectations. The rest had failed or were in a death spiral.

Expansion and new product or service development often require a large commitment of resources and takes attention away from the existing business.

Which leaves new business as the key driver of growth. Marketing is the one proven method that can drive scalable new business growth. A successful new business program begins by confirming you have a differentiated offer relevant to today’s customer. Every prospective customer has more than one choice. What does your business have that makes it so special they have to choose you?

Customer alignment, simplification and innovation

Here’s a simple technique that GE Capital employs to keep their business differentiated in this time of rapid change. Tri_chart.png

Customer aligned

  • Employees know which customer segments we serve and what their top 3 needs are
  • Our organisation rallies around these needs (customer facing & support departments)
  • We continuously track customer metrics at a transaction, product and business level
  • We respond to customer feedback fast

Simple

  • We do less, better
  • Our customer processes are intuitive
  • Our internal processes are as easy as our customer processes
  • We routinely identify and eliminate the bottom 30% flow value processes, reporting and meetings

Innovative

  • We encourage, empower and reward staff who challenge the status quo
  • We launch new ideas fast (< 45 days average)
  • We have a full pipeline of ideas linked to incremental volume
  • We invest a significant amount annually on innovation

Differentiation for new business growth

Don’t hold your breath waiting for the government to simplify regulation, align their policies with your needs or innovate the country’s way to prosperity. Look at your current structure, reconsider what the business currently offers and determine a positioning that will differentiate you from your competition. Today.

This is just one of the tools UNO uses to ensure when our challenger brand clients invest in marketing, the returns will be worth the effort.

Glenn | Tags: differentiaton customer alignment new business


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