Customer small business financing solutions delivered through a single, online application.
Loan Types
Free access to multiple funding solutions
See funding solutions from 75+ nationwide lenders with a single application.
Gauge how accessible business financing is to small businesses.
Learn about business loans
Customer stories
Meet Heather Beck, Owner and Founder of K9 Lifeline and Heather's Heroes.
Apply for financing, track your business cashflow, and more with a single lendio account.
Home Running A Business Market Competitor Strategies: Differentiate Your Small Business
Your small business is different than any of the other 32.5 million small businesses in the US, right? But do your customers know it?
Whether you’re looking to start a company find a way to set yours apart from the pack, however, you need more than just a good idea, funding, and elbow grease—you’ll need a differentiation strategy.
Why would a customer choose your new gelato shop over Baskin-Robbins or another local ice cream store? If you’re having trouble answering that question, then you need a differentiation strategy.
Your differentiation strategy is how you distinguish your business, your products, and your services from other businesses in your space. It may highlight a specific quality of your service or a price points or even a company mission or philosophy. Differentiation is an important way for your business to add value, increase brand recognition, and gain a competitive advantage. And the more competition in your market, the more important differentiation becomes.
Continuing with the gelato example, you may find that you can differentiate by offering flavors that no competitor in your market has. By stepping outside the scope of what your competitors offer, you can suddenly provide new unmatched value. These unique flavors give you an advantage over your competition and can help you acquire customers who may not have switched previously.
Unfortunately, differentiating your gelato business in a competitive market may take more than just adding additional flavors or unique toppings. You may need to dive into your competition to find the best opportunities to differentiate your small business from others on Main Street.
The process of analyzing your competition is an important first step because it gives you a broader view of your competition and the market as a whole.
With this new perspective, you can now begin to identify your unique advantage(s)—differentiation—or what you aspire your unique advantage(s) to be.
For example, you may decide to open a clothing retail store. Selling apparel isn’t necessarily unique and the market may already be saturated with competition, so how do you plan to stand out?
Maybe you offer a clothing rental service, maybe you hire a fashion consultant to assist your customers, or maybe you focus only on businesswear. Before you can find a unique path forward, you need to see what already exists—and what opportunities are available.
A competitive analysis will offer more direction for you to build your differentiation strategy, and it should be an always-on exercise you conduct to make sure you are continuing to develop competitive advantages.
There are no limits to the strategies available for differentiating your small business. From quality and price to exclusivity and reputation, businesses can differentiate themselves from local and global competition.
Below are 3 common differentiation strategies for small businesses to consider.
A recent survey from Zendesk on the impact of customer service found that 87% of respondents allow a customer experience to influence future buying behavior—including recommending the business to others (67%) and repurchasing from that company (54%).
Differentiating your new business through quality customer service will benefit you in the short and long run because it can:
If you want to improve your customer service, it starts with your employees. First, hire employees who are qualified, the right fit, and—if they are customer-facing—have great people skills. In addition to the hiring process, also make sure you onboard and train your employees with customer service as a core focus of your business. Finally, have a system for collecting and reviewing customer and employee feedback in addition to implementing changes whenever necessary.
Providing a great customer experience goes beyond customer service; it extends to the entire customer-business interaction. Other ways to improve the customer experience can include:
If you’re a new business entering a market with established competition, it helps to start by specializing in serving a specific clientele. This approach is also referred to as the market segmentation strategy and involves isolating and targeting smaller groups within a bigger market (even within your own business).
Take Under Armour, for example, which recently surpassed Adidas as the #2 sports brand in the US with a 14% market share behind only Nike (46%). When Under Armour started in 1996, nobody could have imagined this moisture-wicking athletic T-shirt company would grow to become Nike’s biggest rival. Before expanding to jerseys, shorts, or shoes, it spent its early years focused solely on athletic shirts and working to dominate that niche.
Finding and owning a niche within a larger market is a great strategy for new businesses because it’s based on differentiating yourself to a specific audience that’s being underserved. By narrowing your focus, you can devote yourself to satisfying a unique need or problem—differentiating yourself as the go-to business for that audience.
The main benefits of using the niche strategy to enter a competitive market are that you can:
Value is one of the best ways to differentiate your new business, but value is complex. New businesses will often use lower prices, better quality, or offer more in order to increase customer value. Sometimes, small businesses can add value and differentiate themselves by simply being more involved in their community.
Instead of focusing on internal changes to add value to your customers, consider going outward and adding value through community involvement. While not directly related to your business, it can increase your brand image and loyalty—which can be especially helpful for differentiating a new business in a saturated market.
For example, if you’re starting a dog grooming business, you could become a volunteer at the local humane society or offer your services at some of their adoption events. Not only is a great way to build trust and good will in your community, but it can provide a great platform for networking with potential customers.
Some ways you can get involved in your community and add more value include:
Whether you aim to differentiate from the competition through lower prices, better quality, specialization, customer service, or any other strategy, you need to communicate it effectively for it to work.
Your differentiation strategy needs to be a cohesive part of your marketing mix and your customer experience. From your social channels and website to your store displays and advertising, there needs to be a clear and consistent message explaining your unique difference.
Remember, differentiation is more than just what you say, it’s what you do and how you do it. If you’re selling quality as your differentiation, your office, product, employees, website, and even logo needs to convey that message. You’re a new business, you need to build trust quickly and a cohesive strategy can help you do that.For example, if you are trying to penetrate the market as a low-cost provider, you should have signs and marketing collateral that compares your price to others in your area. You may also want to implement a store policy where you will beat any of your competitors’ prices. A lot of businesses claim to offer the best price, but if you will actually beat any price from your competitors, you are likely to build a reputation quickly as the brand with the lowest, best price.
Differentiating your business in a competitive market is not always easy—especially for new companies that are worried about other problems like quality control, hiring, or dealing with escalating inflation.
The risks with differentiating your new business include factors like:
Differentiating a business is simply when you offer something your competition cannot easily replicate. The most obvious examples are businesses that have established brand equity that makes the perceived value more than the physical services or products they sell.
Apple is a great example of differentiation because they have to build a brand that makes their products more “valuable” in the eyes of customers even if the technology is not much different from what else is available. Customers, in many ways, are buying Apple products (much like Starbucks) for the brand name or prestige they feel and not the tangible features.
At the end of the day, your business is always going to be different from others on Main Street. Even if you sell the exact same products or services, you have different employees, a different reputation, and you—as the owner—are different.
These subtle factors, in addition to the differentiation strategies outlined above, can have a huge influence on the success of your new small business. Even if you’re not able to implement major differentiation strategies at the onset, you can still prioritize small habits like excellent customer service and reliability, which can still help to differentiate you from the competition.
****
Derek Miller is the CMO of Smack Apparel, the content guru at Great.com, the co-founder of Lofty Llama, and a marketing consultant for small businesses. He specializes in entrepreneurship, small business, and digital marketing, and his work has been featured in sites like Entrepreneur, GoDaddy, Score.org, and StartupCamp.
Subscribe to our weekly newsletter for industry news and business strategies and tips
Subscribe to our weekly newsletter for industry news and business strategies and tips.