Techniques for Discovering, Building and Communicating Differentiation A primer for small businesses to gain clients

Dr. Rahul Razdan, CEO Ocoos

09/07/2016 12:39 PM
Total Views: 27474

A clear understanding of one’s differentiated value is the bedrock of a sales and marketing strategy. Clearly defining the differentiated value and communicating it effectively (especially on the Internet) is a non-trivial task.  This issue is especially exacerbated by the expense of building and updating marketing communication vehicles such as websites.   


However, if a small business firm uses a state-of-the-art Internet platform such as Ocoos, it can build an iterative learning process for discovering, building, and communicating a differentiated value statement.  Here is how it works: 


  1. Build an initial view of the differentiated value of your company:

    1. Write it down in a way to communicate to customer.

    2. Think about your proof points for building credibility.

    3. Identify competitive alternatives and answers to customer objections.

    4. Identify 3-5 example customers in the market segment of interest.

  2. Build a website that communicates your initial point-of-view. 

  3. Build a small survey in the platform (5-10 mins within Ocoos), which asks the consumers specific questions:

    1. Do they gain a clear understanding of your offering from the website ?

    2. Do they understand your unique differentiation?

    3. Do they find the information credible? If not, what sort of information would convince them?

    4. What impediments--if any--exist to keep them from moving forward to a buying decision?

  4. Run this survey with your example customers and gather feedback.

  5. Iterate on steps 1-4 until you have settled in on your unique differentiation point, as well as focused on the market segment for which you are the obvious choice.


Once you have settled into a core strategy, the next step is to amplify your offering. How do you do that on the internet? The short answer is to build content around your core points of differentiation, establishing yourself as a “thought leader.” The longer answer will be in our next article (ptr to techniques/virtual communities).


 

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