How to Compete with Discounters
Article Overview: If you manage a small to medium-sized business, chances are you encounter pricing pressures from some version of a large discounter. Large competitors may have more money to spend to attract new customers, more buying-power to undercut your prices, and more resources to outlast you in a price war. If they’re from overseas, they may also have cheaper labour.
That’s why when chambers of commerce and associations bring me in to speak to business owners on competing with price discounters, my advice: “Don’t be better – be different.” In other words, don’t even try to beat their prices. Instead, be different in these three areas…
 |
Free Download - Stop Being so Nice! - Customer service tips when people are stressed By Jeff Mowatt
|
How to Compete with Discounters
If you manage a small to medium-sized business, chances are you encounter pricing pressures from some version of a large discounter. Large competitors may have more money to spend to attract new customers, more buying-power to undercut your prices, and more resources to outlast you in a price war. If they’re from overseas, they may also have cheaper labour.
That’s why when chambers of commerce and associations bring me in to speak to business owners on competing with price discounters, my advice: “Don’t be better – be different.” In other words, don’t even try to beat their prices. Instead, be different in these three areas…
Target Different Customers
Don’t waste your time or money trying to attract bottom feeders. These are customers whose only buying criteria is low price. You might attract them with a sale or discount, but they’ll leave you to save a nickel. Let your mega competitor have them. The good news is most people do not buy strictly on low price. If that we’re the case then everyone would live in the cheapest homes, drive the cheapest cars, wear the cheapest clothes, and only dine in fast food restaurants. People typically buy on low price when they perceive no extra value. That leads us to our next area to make your business different…
Supply Different Offerings
By definition, mega-suppliers appeal to the masses. They supply stuff that average customers buy. So don’t go there. Instead, position your business a notch above. Yours is the boutique experience that provides either different products, better quality, expert advice, or preferably all three. Think about bicycles… you can buy them relatively cheaply at department stores, but serious cyclists shop at bike stores, or they order custom-made on-line. Either way, they’re willing to pay more for quality. That’s where small businesses do well and make more money.
Provide Different Service
Remember your goal is to target customers who are smart; more interested in quality and value than just buying whatever’s cheapest. Contrary to popular opinion, smart customers no longer value information. Before smart customers even contact your business, they’ve already collected information about you and your competitors. They’ve given their smart phones a shake or searched Google. It takes them less than a second for the search and the information is free. Free is worthless. That means that if your employees are merely providing information to potential customers they aren’t really creating any perceived value - at least not enough to warrant charging a premium.
The question, when it comes to service, is what are customers willing to pay a premium for? It isn’t friendliness. Nothing wrong with being friendly, but employees at your discounting competitor can also be friendly. More to the point, your customers already have friends. And they’re also free.
What customers do value when it comes to service are three things: analysis, interpretation and advice. They want a genuine expert who has analyzed the plethora of options that are available. They want that same person to interpret which of these options might be best suited to that customer’s unique needs. And they want that expert to advise them on a few options. This requires that your employees need to not only know your products and services; they also need to know which questions to ask customers to clarify their unique needs. And they need to know how to position short-listed options in a way that help customers make smarter, faster, decisions. These are easy techniques I teach in my seminars.
When it comes to customer service, remember - this is business. Customers don’t want a buddy. They don’t want an informer. They want a trusted advisor. For this, customers will pay a premium.
Bottom line, managers and business owners would do well to worry less about beating their competitors’ prices, and focus more on becoming a category-of-one.
Related Articles
Small Business Fuels the Economy
Salesperson Wimp-Out: Cutting the Price
Not Every Employer or Employee Needs a Non-Compete!
So You Thought Non-Compete Agreements Were Safe? Think again.
What is a 'Covenant Not To Compete' when buying or selling a business
Employees make the Difference
More Customer Loyalty
Three Ways an Applicant's Non-Compete Agreement Can Stop You Cold
The Gravity of Failure
Is it best to be the cheapest or to be the best?
Martial Arts Marketing
Precautions to Take When a Key Employee Leaves
Non-Disclosure Agreement Warning!
African designers go global
Watch Your Business Expenses (Self-Employed)
The Ins and Outs of Small Business Public Relations
Having A Home Business Schedule Will Bring Success
How To Really Get The Competitive Advantage Over Your Competition
How To Really Get The Competitive Advantage Over Your Competition
The Importance of Keyword Research in Article Marketing
Article Tags:
big box,
business owners,
competing,
discounters,
price war
About the Author: Jeff Mowatt
RSS for Jeff's articles - Visit Jeff's website
Jeff Mowatt, B.Comm., CSP is an award-winning professional speaker, customer service strategist, and bestselling author of, Becoming a Service Icon in 90 Minutes a Month. His Influence with Ease® column has been syndicated and featured in over 200 business publications including Canadian Manager, HR Reporter, and Commerce and Industry. He has worked with thousands of leaders, professionals, and front-line employees on enhancing the service and sales culture and boosting results with customers. Jeff heads his own training company and his clients include some of the most admired corporations in North America including: Home Depot, Shell Canada, CIBC, and WestJet.
The Influence with Ease® approach that Jeff shares with audiences is effortlessly professional. Spiced with humour and dramatic examples, audiences discover how to engender more trust, feel more motivated, and enhance influence with just about anyone. It's powerful, and it's profitable.
To obtain your own copy of his book or to inquire about engaging Jeff for your team, visit www.jeffmowatt.com or call 1-800-JMowatt (566-9288).
Click here to visit Jeff's website

More from Jeff Mowatt
30 Seconds to Significant Sales How to upsell without turning off your customer
The Humility Advantage
Risky Business How repeat customers may jeopardize your future
When youre the Top Dog Three keys to leading like a professional
Your Irresistible Offer Proposals that convert prospects into buyers
|
|
Related Forum Posts
Compete vs. Alexa
- Thanks for the tip Clint.
I checked out what Compete thought of EvanCarmichael.com and it says the top keywords that drive traffic to my site are:
#1 mary kay - estee lauder - leadership
#2 chris gardner, quotes by
#3 gardner rich investment firm
While I might rank for these keywords they are far from the top referring keywords.
It looks like nobody has figured out the holy grail. I wonder how much ISPs are actually willing to share their data with Compete and other similar services. I would consider moving my hosting if I knew my ISP was sharing information about my website with outside organizations.
Alexa vs. Compete
- Thanks for the tip Clint.
I know Alexa is not perfect - but as far as I can see it is the best measuring stick out there.
I keep track of my own numbers which are important for my advertisers as well.
Why do you feel that Compete is a better measuring stick than Alexa? I would love to hear your thoughts on it.
Most Useful SEO Tools For Webmasters
- Hi,
My name is Jeff, I work for WebBizIdeas.com and we are developing an article called "50 Most Useful SEO Tools for Webmasters." We have ranked & listed our top 30 SEO Tools but want to get your opinion on what SEO Tools are most useful to you; as Internet Business Owners.
Google Webmaster Tools
Google Analytics
Google Alerts
Yahoo Site Explorer
SEOBook.com Keyword Research
SEOBOOK.com SEO For Firefox Tool
SEOBOOK.com Search Engine Rank Checker
SEOBOOK.com Back Link Analyzer
SEOChat.com Keyword Difficulty
Compete.com
Quantcast.com
Alexa.com
Archive.org
Stompernet Site Seer
Technorati.com
PRWEB.com
ADDTHIS.com
SHARETHIS.com
EzineArticles.com
Scribd.com
Squidoo.com
YouTube.com
StumbleUpon.com
Reddit.com
Digg.com
Del.icio.us
Wikipedia.org
Flickr.com
NewsVine.com
Yahoo Answers
NOTE: When you list your answers please include a description on what the site is, why it is important to you, and your experience please....we may include it in our article.
Jeff
$3000 per mo Site for Sale: $65,000 OBO
- $3000 per mo Site for Sale: $65,000 OBO
Content and Community Driven Pet Websites
________________________________________
Profile: Two Pet Related Websites
Price: $65,000 OBO
Age of sites: 2 years 4 months
Monthly revenue: $3300 (plus or minus a couple hundred)
Key details:
Growth Year over Year: 641%
Uniques: 200,000 per Month
Page Views: 1 mil + per Month
Referrers: 10,000+ Monthly
Search Engine Traffic: 61%
Members: 7500+/-
Articles: 318
Blog Posts: 189+
Forum Posts: 256,000+
Topics: 19,000+
Adsense Revenue: $1500-$1700 per month
Kontera Revenue: $900+ per month
Direct Advertisers: $90 - $300 per month
Monthly Server Costs: $100
Monthly Advertising Costs: $0
Total Profit Per Month $2500 - $3000
Organic Growth Month over Month: 10% +/- (Zero spent on advertising – all word of mouth and search engine)
Software Licenses: All Open source and thus free: Linux, Apache, MySQL, Zen Cart, PHPLIST, WordPress, SMF, and the rest Custom Programming.
Software Editions: All software running latest releases.
Uniques Last Month: 200,000
Page Views Last Month: *2,000,000+ per month
Referring Sources: 1,000 different referrers
Referring Keywords: 60,000 Search Terms
First Page Results: Thousands of keywords and keyword combinations
Indexed pages (Google): 65,000+
Indexed pages (Yahoo): 26,000+
Google page rank: 5-6 (Lots of 3’s and 4’s throughout the sites)
Pages of Content: 60,000+/-
Alexa site rank: 124,000 (way off the mark due to audience profile)
Compete Site Rank: Much closer but still off.. See image
Brand Value: All Original Creative and Content including Logo, Forum Template, Front-end, CSS, Code, Images etc. Extremely well made to render fast as well as accessible, to both humans and search engines. Search optimized throughout.
Description:
I actually posted this for sale almost 11 months ago but didn’t take any offers. Since then traffic has increased almost 650% and revenue has increase by almost as much, closer to 600%. Revenue comes from direct advertising ($150-$350 per mo) but primarily Google Adsense ($1500 - $1750 per mo) and Kontera Links ($700-$900 per mo).
Letting go as I’m working full time and just started Business School… I just don’t have the time. However, these sites are ripe for one to build a better business direction.
I started these sites as the pet industry happens to be exploding, exponentially and almost parabolically. Google “pet spending” to find a glimpse. Some articles you’ll find:
“The Growing Pet Industry Is One Trend You Can Bank On”
"In the past 10 years, pet spending has more than doubled to an estimated $38.4 billion for 2006."
"According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the pet industry is now the seventh largest retail segment in the country."
“We have only begun to see the tip of the spending iceberg"
“Pet Spending at All Time High”
"Pet ownership is on the increase in the US, and the amount of money spent on pets is dramatically increasing too."
The two sites are content and community driven websites with 350+ health related articles on pets, a pet blog that discusses current issues, and a very active message board and community. They compliment each other perfectly and as such are being sold together as a package. The templates are completely custom designed and CSS powered. They would be XHTML Strict Compliant however we’ve included a couple of things that just wouldn’t let it pass. There are almost 8000 members between the two sites. Several hundred more between the blog subscribers and the email list subscribers. At one time we had a store (its all still there however it’s been shut off) and we had about 200 customers. The store lasted only about a month and a half as our careers just didn’t allow us to provide the customer service this site deserves. We also had a drop ship company that worked out really well, (and we still do if we want them). Much more work than our careers had time for. The logos are custom. I’ve got the logo in vector version for Signs and tee shirts. The Design is custom. All software front-ends are custom and running clean - open source applications. Runs extremely well.
The entire 2 sites run on a dedicated server that runs about $100 a month.. The sites run on a LAMP environment, meaning Linux, Apache, MySQL and PHP. All of the software is open source and requires no fees. We run PHPLIST, Zen Cart, and SMF Simple Machines Forum. The blog is Word Press. The article system is completely custom however the back end panel is ran simple from phpMyAdmin – straight to the database.
I think there is enormous potential with the two sites as the brands have a very loyal following and is growing by leaps and bounds. It has been mentioned in 10 or so online and offline newspapers (that I am aware of) as well as a magazine – all of which will be provided. The site was featured as Yahoo’s Site of the Week. The site was forever (and perhaps still is) the number one pet site viewed on StumbleUpon.com. The blog also has 177 links from 56 sites according to Technorati.com and ranks 52,000. The database is huge. It’s full of fully owned content, images, customer data, subscriber data, members etc etc. The brand really sells when it comes to tee shirts and calendars. We have a drop shipper when needed that we buy tee’s at 4 dollars a shirt. Each shirt sold for $20 so there was a great margin.
The two sites have a solid existence and are trenched well into all the major search engines with perhaps thousands of first place results for keywords and keyword combinations. The majority of traffic is all organic from Google, Yahoo and MSN and it will stay that way forever. The site was built solidly by SEO pros with Search Engine Spiders in mind as every part of the site is search friendly. All pages have been correctly and lightly coded. The database powers the meta tags, title tags, h1’s, h2’s, image titles and bold tags. The site has tens of thousands of dollars put into the design and functionality.
petsite4sale@gmail.com
Recommended Article for You
close
Share this article with your friends. Fund someone's dream.
Leave a comment below or share on the left and you'll help support entrepreneurs in Africa through our partnership with Kiva.
Over
$50,000 raised and counting -
Please keep sharing! Learn more.