Awards June 10, 2015
How to Face New Competitors
Many companies take unique approaches to business and end up changing markets because of it. You have to know how to face these new and relatively unknown competitors.
The term “disruption” in business is tossed around quite a bit nowadays – usually linked with firms like Salesforce.com, Uber and Kickstarter. But what does disruption really mean? Disruptive companies, according to the man who basically coined the term – Harvard professor Clayton Christensen – offer cheaper, faster or easier alternatives than ones currently being offered in any specific marketplace. Uber, then, is a disruptor because it gets people private rides much more conveniently than hailing a big city cab.
In the ad specialty space, e-commerce firms like Alibaba, Vistaprint and yes, even Staples (which has begun running national advertising that promotes its ability to fulfill orders for imprinted magnet, pens, mugs and notepads in their stores), are clear disruptors.
A company that wants to buy promotional products can go online (or to a local store), order quickly and maybe save a few dollars. Sure, they’re cutting out the distributor who might provide ideas or quality control, but some end-buyers just don’t care. Let’s face it – these disruptors aren’t going anywhere, which is why smart ad specialty companies need to respond and determine ways that they can effectively compete in this environment.
“You can’t approach a new generation of buyers with the same old traditional thinking.”
The first way to disrupt the industry’s disruptors is to actually invest in technology yourself and create an online presence that enables competition with the disruptors. Don’t dip your toe in the water, go all in. It’s great to have a face-to-face, relationship-driven business if your buyers are Baby Boomers, but Gen X and Millennial customers are creatures of technology. (Newsflash: Baby Boomers are retiring.) A Gen X prospect may not buy 10,000 pens on her phone, but she’s shopping for experience.
Take a look at the website of Alibaba – both on your desktop and on your mobile device – and see the type of shopping experience that can be afforded to buyers today. It’s a simplistic system that most anyone can understand and use. That’s the type of process that business-to-business buyers are going to increasingly demand – from everybody that they do business with.
A second way to combat disruption is to recruit and staff differently. You should be embracing cognitive diversity – the practice of hiring and employing different types of thinkers. Why? Research shows certain thinkers are more efficient at getting certain projects done, increasing efficiency. Industries get disrupted when major companies are slow to adapt to change. Cognitive diversity helps agility.
You can’t approach a new generation of buyers with the same old traditional thinking, which is precisely why experts preach the importance of hiring a cognitively diverse staff.
A third good step is to reach out to clients that the disruptors aren’t targeting. By 2025, there will be 60 million Latinos in the United States. Hispanics are a very culturally proud people – they want to connect with brands that speak their language and engage in their communities.
Alibaba’s model isn’t a good fit to make Latino inroads, so you can fill the void. Here, a little guerilla marketing can go a long way. Send Spanish-speaking employees and interns to Latino festivals and celebrations to serve as brand ambassadors for your company. Maybe they can pass out a few promotional items, too.
Finally, to combat disruption you can’t be afraid to take some risks. This might mean your supplier firm becomes the first in the industry to offer a wearables tech line. It might mean identifying a 3-D printing company that can run off 1,000 bobbleheads in one day.
In other words, ask yourself what your company can do that no one else is doing. Your first nine ideas might not be workable, but your tenth idea might be worth a shot. The alternative, of course, is for you to do nothing, which is the riskiest strategy of all. Why? Because that’s exactly what the disruptors in any industry are banking on.
Enjoy the issue!