Beating your competition … today it’s likely that you are facing more and better competition than in times of yesteryear.
So how do you increase your win rate? First, a competitive edge is rarely achieved by knocking your competition. Knocking your competition puts the competition on center stage. You need to focus on the customer and manage the competition.
Show your customers why you’re the better choice. For example: Does your product better meet their needs? Is your company easier to do business with? Do you offer a better price? Are your terms and conditions more favorable?
To show that you’re the better choice, two steps are critical:
Sell outcomes not products. You win more often when the customer has a clear understanding of how you can help them do what they need to do better than the competition. How can you help them achieve their business goals and leverage their opportunities more effectively and more efficiently than anyone else? This is what selling value is all about, and it’s why great product presentations are simply an exercise in theater, not a best practice for beating your competition.
Achieve a competitive edge. To achieve a competitive edge you have to understand your competitive strengths and understand your customer’s perception of that assessment. It is particularly important to keep in mind that your assessment and your customer’s perception are often not in alignment. When that is the case, that needs to be addressed.
So how do you do all this?
First things first – have an informed answer to these questions:
Which of my competitors have a viable chance of winning the business?
What are the decision criteria the customer will use to decide between the competition and us?
How do we stack up on those criteria from the customer’s perspective?
Why would the players engaged in the customer’s buying process buy from us instead of the competitors?
When answering these questions, think about your responses from two perspectives – your company and yourself. In some cases, a customer may buy from you because of the service you personally provide as their salesperson.
In other words, an answer to that fourth question is: the customer might buy from you instead of your competitor, even if they don’t see much differentiation between products or price, because you provide value by the way you sell, as well as by what you sell. You are the competitive edge.