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Digg it UP - Warning: Don't Let Your Business Become a Commodity
Shortage of Auto Mechanics is Getting Serious The first question every potential customer, client, patient, etc. should ask when shopping for products or services is, “Why should I do business with you?” This question is so basic, so reasonable, so simple… a complete “no-brainer” for anyone in business, right?If you are looking for a career and you like to tinker with things, well then look no further because there is a completely severe shortage of auto-mechanics in the United States and it is getting really serious. By the end of 2007 they are projecting some 200,000 mechanics short of what we need.You see, the issue with labor shortages in the auto mechanics arena is really problematic. But what can be done? Many High School and College Automotive Tech Shops have closed their doors, due to lawsuits and costs. Some charter schools are trying to revive the old "shop class" type education and vocational training schools and Congress is also trying to help with a 1.4 Billion Dollar Spending Bill. Smart thinking, but will it help? Living With Looseness Neither creativity itself nor the issues that demand creativity are tidy or controlled. To handle this, you need a mental framework that is forgiving of a necessary degree of confusion, ambiguity, uncertainty or contradiction, providing, of course, that a sufficient core of structure can be extracted from it to allow your activities to proceed.There are five main areas of ambiguity that managers find particularly troublesome: Where the significance and reliability of information is problematical. Where it is unclear at what level the problem needs to be tackled. Where different value orientations lead to political and emotional clashes among key players, inside and outside the organization. Where contradictions and paradoxes appear. Wher Apparently not, because very few business owners and entrepreneurs know how to answer it! And although they don’t come right out and say, “You should do business with us, because we’re pretty much the same as our competitors but we’re good at it,” but it amounts to pretty much the same thing. Not much differentiation there. Customers see parity everywhere. They are bombarded daily with advertisements for just about everything and have learned to tune out most of the “noise”. As consumer loyalty becomes a thing of the past companies are scrambling to invent new ways of acquiring that ever-elusive buyer, exacerbated by the vast number of new choices available on the internet and the relative ease of purchase. In this environment it is even more important for businesses to “stand out from the herd”… to avoid being lumped into the “commodity basket. What is a commodity? Simply put: Goods that are perceived as identical and therefore must compete on price. Companies are forced into this undesirable place primarily because their “inside reality” does not match “outside perception.” In other words, consumers may look at your business; your competitors’ businesses; and/or some completely unrelated business and view them as the same thing. Therefore, they are left with choosing one company over the other on price or convenience. And while some companies can operate in this arena for a while, it ultimately moves them closer to extinction and means they’ll never be able to command a healthy price for their products or services. And businesses will continue to compete in this way until they do something to alter their prospects’ perceptions! Remember, perception is reality, even if it’s not true! Surpassing the Commodity Ambush The greatest challenge for any business today is learning how to create and articulate their unique benefits, thus surpassing the “commodity trap”. However, this can be accomplished relatively easy using a step-by step approach. The first step is recognizing and acknowledging that the marketplace sees you as a commodity. Don’t fight it — it’s a competitively powerful perspective to admit you’re pretty much the same as your competitors; to be realistic and see your company through the eyes of your customers and prospective customers. Next, you must identify the specifics area where your “inside reality” doesn’t match “outside perceptions” by asking current, prospective and former customers to help you identify gaps. These can be skewed in several different ways. For instance, let’s assume that you’re the most knowledgeable, educated and competent financial advisor in your area, having earned and saved your clients much more than your competitors. At a networking event you give your business card to a qualified prospect in need of your services and you sche Finally The Truth That Dare Not Speak Its Name Is Beginning To Emerge! rywhere. They are bombarded daily with advertisements for just about everything and have learned to tune out most of the “noise”. As consumer loyalty becomes a thing of the past companies are scrambling to invent new ways of acquiring that ever-elusive buyer, exacerbated by the vast number of new choices available on the internet and the relative ease of purchase.The age of the 30-second TV commercial is over.There’s a lot of hand wringing on Madison Avenue these days. Companies like Virgin Atlantic are concluding that advertising on TV is too pricey and the effects too difficult to measure.The industry must adapt to a coming world where consumers enjoy total control and will no longer tolerate tedious commercials that hold them hostage to messages they care nothing about.There are still a lot of people in the business that don’t accept what is about to happen. That is myopic. Perhaps it is time for the advertising and TV industries to get contact lenses, because the latest research suggests that trouble lies ahead.However it is what was not said in the article that confirms the impression that most people in the industry In this environment it is even more important for businesses to “stand out from the herd”… to avoid being lumped into the “commodity basket. What is a commodity? Simply put: Goods that are perceived as identical and therefore must compete on price. Companies are forced into this undesirable place primarily because their “inside reality” does not match “outside perception.” In other words, consumers may look at your business; your competitors’ businesses; and/or some completely unrelated business and view them as the same thing. Therefore, they are left with choosing one company over the other on price or convenience. And while some companies can operate in this arena for a while, it ultimately moves them closer to extinction and means they’ll never be able to command a healthy price for their products or services. And businesses will continue to compete in this way until they do something to alter their prospects’ perceptions! Remember, perception is reality, even if it’s not true! Surpassing the Commodity Ambush The greatest challenge for any business today is learning how to create and articulate their unique benefits, thus surpassing the “commodity trap”. However, this can be accomplished relatively easy using a step-by step approach. The first step is recognizing and acknowledging that the marketplace sees you as a commodity. Don’t fight it — it’s a competitively powerful perspective to admit you’re pretty much the same as your competitors; to be realistic and see your company through the eyes of your customers and prospective customers. Next, you must identify the specifics area where your “inside reality” doesn’t match “outside perceptions” by asking current, prospective and former customers to help you identify gaps. These can be skewed in several different ways. For instance, let’s assume that you’re the most knowledgeable, educated and competent financial advisor in your area, having earned and saved your clients much more than your competitors. At a networking event you give your business card to a qualified prospect in need of your services and you sch Offline Advertising - A Great Way to be Seen! >Companies are forced into this undesirable place primarily because their “inside reality” does not match “outside perception.” In other words, consumers may look at your business; your competitors’ businesses; and/or some completely unrelated business and view them as the same thing. Therefore, they are left with choosing one company over the other on price or convenience. And while some companies can operate in this arena for a while, it ultimately moves them closer to extinction and means they’ll never be able to command a healthy price for their products or services.Making it Big Online by Straying Offline!I bet you were thinking that really doesn't make sense, how am I supposed to make money online if I am not working all the hours god sends infront of my computer?The answer to that question is so simple and yet not many people think about it and if they do they soon forget it and continue to do battle with the thousands of other 'Internet Marketeers' out there.Don't get me wrong there is nothing wrong with working online and I think that to make it big you need a healthy balance of both. I started out my career just working online and although it got me results I still wasn't reaching my earning potential.I decided that it was great to reach a target market of people all over the country but what about on my own doorstep? The And businesses will continue to compete in this way until they do something to alter their prospects’ perceptions! Remember, perception is reality, even if it’s not true! Surpassing the Commodity Ambush The greatest challenge for any business today is learning how to create and articulate their unique benefits, thus surpassing the “commodity trap”. However, this can be accomplished relatively easy using a step-by step approach. The first step is recognizing and acknowledging that the marketplace sees you as a commodity. Don’t fight it — it’s a competitively powerful perspective to admit you’re pretty much the same as your competitors; to be realistic and see your company through the eyes of your customers and prospective customers. Next, you must identify the specifics area where your “inside reality” doesn’t match “outside perceptions” by asking current, prospective and former customers to help you identify gaps. These can be skewed in several different ways. For instance, let’s assume that you’re the most knowledgeable, educated and competent financial advisor in your area, having earned and saved your clients much more than your competitors. At a networking event you give your business card to a qualified prospect in need of your services and you sch The Seven Worst Types of Employers – From the View of Employers of IT Contractors is way until they do something to alter their prospects’ perceptions! Remember, perception is reality, even if it’s not true!1. Those that make it clear from the start that there is a 'caste system', with the management at the top, the permanent employees next, with the contractors being the 'untouchables'.2. Those that say "I could never work just for money the way you guys do". Most companies and managers forget that contractors need to be motivated too. They don't work for money on a day-to-day basis. They take the job for money, just like the permanent employees. Managers are usually the biggest de-motivators of contractors, especially when they say things like, "You shouldn't need to be motivated when you earn the money you do".3. Those that keep a beady eye on the people that work for them, to make sure that everyone is working every minute of every day. It increases the stress on workers who alre Surpassing the Commodity Ambush The greatest challenge for any business today is learning how to create and articulate their unique benefits, thus surpassing the “commodity trap”. However, this can be accomplished relatively easy using a step-by step approach. The first step is recognizing and acknowledging that the marketplace sees you as a commodity. Don’t fight it — it’s a competitively powerful perspective to admit you’re pretty much the same as your competitors; to be realistic and see your company through the eyes of your customers and prospective customers. Next, you must identify the specifics area where your “inside reality” doesn’t match “outside perceptions” by asking current, prospective and former customers to help you identify gaps. These can be skewed in several different ways. For instance, let’s assume that you’re the most knowledgeable, educated and competent financial advisor in your area, having earned and saved your clients much more than your competitors. At a networking event you give your business card to a qualified prospect in need of your services and you sch Starting A Business - The Three 'Ps' ic and see your company through the eyes of your customers and prospective customers.There are a lot of factors to consider when starting a business. Primary among these are the three “P”s – Plan, Prepare and Persist.PlanAfter you have selected some ideas from your brainstorming to base your business around, create a plan of attack. List what you'll need before your business starts. What will your ongoing expenses be? Factors include rent, utilities, permits, licensing, legal fees, inventory, staff, design, marketing collateral, mailing lists, software, advertising and more. Get as much as you can out on paper and set deadlines to get things accomplished. This will allow you to evaluate your pace.PrepareOnce you have a plan, carry it out. Preparing to start a business can be a lot of work. Tasks include getting an identity designed, creating business Next, you must identify the specifics area where your “inside reality” doesn’t match “outside perceptions” by asking current, prospective and former customers to help you identify gaps. These can be skewed in several different ways. For instance, let’s assume that you’re the most knowledgeable, educated and competent financial advisor in your area, having earned and saved your clients much more than your competitors. At a networking event you give your business card to a qualified prospect in need of your services and you schedule an initial meeting in your office. However, when the prospect arrives the waiting room is bland and the sofa upholstery is threadbare; the rest rooms are in desperate need of cleaning; your receptionist is curt; your office is a mess and you can’t find the forms you need. Then you spend the next hour reiterating the professional qualities you posses – careful attention to details, reliable service, thoroughly researched advice, etc. You’re convinced that you have the know-how and abilities to provide the very best financial advice to him or her, but they choose another company. Why? Because there was a huge gap between what you said and what they experienced. Your words said, “quality and professionalism” and your environment and staff said exactly the opposite! As the saying goes, “If it looks like a duck and walks like a duck, it’s probably a duck.” What does a dirty bathroom have to do with sound financial advice? In this case, everything. So you can either argue the point (i.e. one has nothing to do with the other) all the way to the poor house or do whatever is necessary to create an office environment that reflects your level of professionalism. Alternatively, your customers may continue to choose you over a competitor because you consistently deliver more product or service value that you’re not even aware of! And again, the only way to find this out for certain is to ask your repeat customers! For example, women may choose one comparable hair salon over the other because they are more careful schedulers and they never have a long wait. Presto! Instant differentiation handed to you on a silver platter! The third, and possibly the worst, perception gap brings us back to the commodity “nowhere land”. In order to transcend this place you’ll need to force an “apples and oranges” comparison between your company and the competition. You must design, execute and communicate such significant differences between you, that it customers would be foolish to take their business anywhere else, regardless of price. Caution! Do not confuse think that you can accomplish “differentiation” by drumming up false, but clever, promises. You should never underestimate consumer, they are not stupid. One of the quickest ways to destroy your business is to communicate value you cannot deliver. For instance, I recently went to a local retailer that advertised their open hours as Monday through Friday for 8 am-5pm. When I arrived at 2pm the door wa
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