Situation: A company has developed a leading local position in an important new technology. The CEO is concerned that the company’s suppliers may try to move into their market and replace them. What’s the best strategy to counter this threat? How do you establish the company’s brand?
Advice from the CEOs:
- Exhibiting high growth is the company’s best shot – whether to preserve exclusivity in the company’s geographic area or to build the company’s brand. Aggressively build the company’s service presence to build a sustainable advantage.
- The primary question is – What is the objective? The objective is to build the company’s own presence and brand.
- What would happen if another, better technology was launched? Wouldn’t the company want to offer this?
- Think Web 2.0+. Build the company’s website as the place to go to discuss the technology, share thoughts, designs and software, and easily source prototypes – provided by the company. Let users define the site and the market for the company.
- The bottom line: exclusivity may not be in the company’s best interest if it inhibits access to the best technology. Strive to build the company’s brand instead and be opportunistic on the exclusivity issue.
- What markets have gone through similar development? What can you learn from them?
- Document other rapidly changing markets. Hire a current undergraduate or MBA student to research how these markets have developed.
- Select a target vendor with multiple locations and do a deal with them to locate your technology and service in their locations.
- Look at a franchise for which the company’s technology is a compliment and see whether franchise owners are open to adding the company’s technology in their locations.
- Does the company have a partnership strategy? How can they accelerate strategic development?
- Where is the place to focus?
- Who is the perfect partner for this focus?
- Identify the most promising markets and use partnerships to accelerate penetration of those markets. Write partnership agreements so that once an area is developed the company has the option to take it over. This is a classic market development strategy.
- Give away some of the company’s margin to partners in lieu of salaries or commissions to support market development.
- Look for partners in key locations in the company’s territory. Do a demo at a Starbucks where engineers like to hang out.
- Hire a sales or business development person to work on partnership development.
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