Marketing Strategy & Competition

Some of today’s marketers have moved away from the challenge of finding the product-market fit and, instead, focus their efforts on their competition. It’s easy to get bogged down in a reactive stance doing so. Competitor-obsessed marketers sometimes fail to grasp that their competitors will also react to other players — including you.

Nothing is perfect in a fast-moving environment

It’s often tempting for businesses to chart the competition as a starting point. The reasoning is that they need to know who they are competing against, and how and where they need to do better. That might seem reasonable, but it’s not the most productive approach, as we’ll soon see. It’s also tempting to assume that competitors have already perfected the marketing strategy, but this very rarely the case. In fact, a marketing strategy is never perfect; it’s an evolutionary process and it’s being formed in an ever-changing environment.

In the same vein, businesses should know that simply copying a strategy will not work, and neither does simply reacting to the actions of your competitors. You can never quite reverse engineer another strategy, and even if you did, you’d be executing it under different circumstances and with a different set of means. You’re likely targeting slightly different demographic and your selling points are different. More importantly, your business will have a different set of resources and face different circumstances than your competition. 

Monitor, but don’t copy

Businesses who start with charting and copying the competition assume that said competition has mastered the product-market fit, and that there is a healthy margin to be made simply by duplicating these efforts. Not so. Many big businesses take a portfolio approach to their marketing strategy, i.e. some products might be sold at a slight or even negative margin, if it helps secure more new customers or generate a larger presence. While you can decipher and duplicate the exterior elements of a strategy, you don’t know the underlying business parameters.

Run your own race

All of this means a business will do far better developing a unique identity and tactics, rather than copying or surveying those of their competitors. Nobody knows your own niche or sub-sector better than you, and you only have insights into your own detailed costs, revenues and relationships. It is a good idea, however, to occasionally monitor what your competitors are doing; to get a feel for who is around you, what the employed tactics are, and understand any emerging trends, or tastes. But you should not be swayed by competitors’ actions unless they are of such profound impact they’re literally creating entirely new categories — or eating your lunch.

Author: Lars

Lars has recently written 8 articles on similar topics including :
  1. "Postie, a new Los Angeles-based startup, has a vision for the future of advertising and marketing — and it’s direct mail". (July 3, 2018)
  2. "Last Thursday, Marriott sent out millions of emails warning of a massive data breach — some 500 million guest reservations had been stolen from its Starwood database. One problem: the email sender’s domain didn’t look like it came from Marriott at all". (December 3, 2018)
  3. "British companies' marketing budgets grew at their slowest rate in nearly two years in final quarter of 2017, partly reflecting uncertainty created by Brexit, a survey showed on Wednesday". (January 17, 2018)
  4. "People freak out when they discover that computers and MRI can already read our minds. Columbia University researchers just announced the ability of computers and MRI to read brain signals and convert them into clear spoken words". (February 9, 2019)
  5. "At least 65 media workers around the world have been killed doing their jobs this year, media freedom organization Reporters Without Borders said on Tuesday". (December 19, 2017)
  6. "The social network said Sandberg's request was "entirely appropriate". (December 6, 2018)
  7. "It's not a good look for Facebook". (February 20, 2019)
  8. "Regardless of what you may think of Facebook as a platform, they run a massive operation and when you reach their level of scale you have to get more creative in how you handle every aspect of your…". (June 28, 2018)
Posted on  , , , , , , , , , ,