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Collaboration_Not_Competition
| Collaboration, Not Competition
The basic assumptions upon which traditional marketing
approaches are built could use some updating. For example, what
if we asked whether businesses actually have to compete for
customers. Does that seem silly? The answer would be, "Of
course, they do! What planet are you from? It’s a dog eat dog
world—and it’s always been that way." But there may be an
additional perspective, a way that can create a dramatic shift
not just in the way business is done but in how we treat our
customers and each other.
This is the perspective of collaboration, which implies that
each of us is unique, that no two people are exactly the same.
If no two people are exactly the same, then it stands to reason
that no two businesses are exactly the same. It is simply not
possible for two businesses to serve the same client's needs
equally. One will be a better fit than another; the best fit
produces a perfect client or customer working with the perfect
provider.
Each of us, and the businesses we've joined or created, exist
for a specific purpose or mission. Our businesses have developed
as a result of our own experiences and needs, and are simply
tools for fulfilling that mission. Each business has its own
mission to serve a particular group of customers in a particular
way. That is why businesses have no need to compete with each
other in the way we’ve traditionally thought of it. Instead,
business owners and managers could collaborate in ways that
truly serve their customers' and their own interests.
If this sounds heretical, then it shows how deeply the concept
of competition -- "survival of the fittest" -- colors our views
of the way we do business.
Today, when consumers have an abundance of choice in products
and distribution outlets, businesses can shine even brighter—and
be of greatest service to themselves, their organization, their
clients, and their communities—when they are knowledgeable about
the products and services offered by other businesses in their
own and related industries. Consumers value services that save
them time, money and headaches. By becoming this type of
resource through collaborating with others in your industry, you
are increasing the overall abundance of products and services
and will ultimately bring the greatest success to everyone.
Take a moment to contemplate the following questions, and write
down your answers. These questions are designed for you to
consider what might be possible for you and your business if you
had at least one collaborator in your same industry.
1. Who in your same industry do you consider to be your main
"competition?"
2. If you were not serving your customers, who would be serving
them?
3. What services do these businesses offer that are the same as
yours? Different from yours?
4. Have you ever referred one of your less-than-perfect
customers to one of your "competitors?"
5. What would stop you from referring a less-than-perfect
customer to one of your "competitors?"
6. Under what conditions would you refer a less-than-perfect
customer to one of your "competitors?"
7. Do you belong to an association or organization dedicated
solely to your industry?
8. If so, what benefits have you received as a result of your
membership in that organization?
9. Who else do you know in your industry who belongs to this
organization?
If you want to make a dramatically impressive difference in your
business, we invite you to meet or speak with a new potential
collaborator every day for the next 21 days. You will create
quite a stir within your industry, you will have a greater
breadth of knowledge about your industry than other businesses
providing similar services, and your reputation for being open
and collaborative will spread very quickly resulting in
increased positive awareness and referrals.
So, who will you be calling first?
Copyright 2002, PerfectCustomers Inc., www.perfectcustomer.com.
For more information, and to receive your free subscription to
the Daily Strategic Attraction Tip E-zine, contact
PerfectCustomers Info at info@perfectcustomer.com.
About the author:
Jan Brogniez's background includes more than 20 years producing
millions of dollars of sales revenue in Corporate America. Jan's
mastery of strategic planning and her keen business acumen led
to the development of PerfectCustomers Inc.'s proprietary
Strategic Design Session process.
Stacey Hall, VP of Sales & Marketing, is credited by industry
experts as the inventor and the catalyst for the new
paradigm-shifting Strategic Synchronicity marketing movement.
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