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Senior Sales Consultant (South London) The nature and
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Sustaining Competitive
Advantage
What is your Personal Strategy?
By Tom
Stovall & Dustin Grainger Stovall Grainger Inc.
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| More progressive sales professionals realize that tomorrow's
competitive advantages will certainly be different from today's
this is
simply the nature of competitive strategy. |
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Think about the
following assertion within the context of what you currently value offering. "I
am the 'quality and customer focused' purveyor of my organizations' products
and services." Many say that quality and service may no longer be a competitive
differentiator. Besides, what two individuals ever defined those things the
same way? And from the perspective of the physician, is there real competitive
ground to be gained here? Some believe that quality and service are now simply
the price of entry into the market.
Change seems to be the key variable
that drives the phenomenon of competitive advantage or disadvantage.
Strategists for certain, develop a comfort with change! The pace of change in
all of our personal and professional lives is dramatic. Stovall Grainger Inc.
consults within the healthcare arena almost exclusively, and the pace of change
is incredible here! We believe that it is even greater than that seen in the
high tech marketplace over the past several years. Our observation of this
constant white water of change includes two issues that make less strategic
folks uneasy. First is the fact that there does not seem to be a substantive
scenario for what healthcare delivery will look like in the near future and
second, there does not seem to be even a brief respite from constant change.
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So, in order to remain
competitive personally, do you need to be stealthy, small and nimble? We
recently addressed this issue in an article entitled "A Rapid Expeditionary
Force in Selling." And according to Gary Hamel and C. K. Prahalad in their book
Competing for the Future, it is not enough for a company just to get smaller
and better and faster. As important as those tasks may be, a company must also
be capable of fundamentally reconceiving itself, of regenerating its core
strategies, and
(this one may scare you!) of reinventing its industry.
Fear not however
.not every "blip" on the radar screen necessitates a full
blown strategic inflection point! Just realize that strategists constantly have
their finger on the pulse of change in order to take advantage proactively of
opportunities that manifest therein. As hockey great Wayne Gretzky once said,
it isn't enough to "
go to where the puck is
" one must "
go to
where the puck is going to be."
Now another question to consider. If
part of strategy is about "sticking to your knitting" and not trying to be all
things to all people, then how can you be flexible enough to proactively change
while not abandoning your competency base? We believe that many individuals and
organizations use the flexibility and change argument to defend against not
making strategic decisions! |
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So, how comfortable
are you in looking at the future and basing strategy off of your assumptions?
Remember, your competitive advantage, uniqueness and territory leadership today
does not necessarily mean that you will hold this leadership in the future.
Consider the dual questions listed and challenge yourself to answer
both versions.
- Which customers are we serving today? Which customers will we
serve tomorrow?
- How do I currently access my customers today? How will I
access my customer tomorrow?
- Who are our competitors today? Who will be our competitors
tomorrow?
- What is the basis for my personal competitive advantage today?
What will be my competitive advantage in the future?
- What skills or capabilities make me unique today? What unique
skills and capabilities will I need in the future?
- Finally, ask yourself what might you need to do and with what
level of urgency to close the gaps that may manifest between your current
capabilities and your future assumptions.
Strategists know that
there is no such thing as "maintaining" a service capability or product
leadership. They realize that continued growth relies upon the ability to
"reinvent" ones products and services based upon the changing needs of
customers. Strategists are always seeking to discover new solutions because
they are willing to look (within the bounds of healthcare compliance
challenges) far beyond standard methods of conducting business. When was the
last time you sat down with your most important physician customers and had
discussions about what they believed to be the future paradigm of their
organization / market / world? These discussions tease out the raw material for
your customer's long-term vision. Help them to see where your products and
services align with their ability to achieve their vision and you will become
an invaluable strategic partner! |
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Some observations of
people and organizations that are likely to thrive in a rapidly changing and
competitive environment:
- Strategists are looking for new competitive space to stake out.
They believe that creating the future is more challenging than playing
catch-up, but it is also much more rewarding.
- Strategists realize that imitating competitive methods is not
going to create competitive advantage. They do not go into a customer meeting
thinking that they have all of the answers and it just depends upon their
ability to ask the right questions.
- Strategists are looking to develop a unique and independent
point of view about tomorrow's opportunities and how to position their products
to meet those opportunities.
- Strategists understand that it may be necessary to unlearn some
of the old habits that got them where they are today. They recognize that it is
not enough to position one's products and services within today's markets. The
challenge comes from looking through uncertainty and developing great foresight
into the whereabouts of tomorrow's markets.
So, what might you
focus on as you challenge your assumptions about your strategic advantage and
uniqueness?
- Benchmarking is not the answer to improved competitive
performance. Benchmarking against your competitors is not conducive to
successful strategic processes. Benchmarking leads to sameness and offers no
competitive advantage. Strategists are always looking for creative ways to
position products and services that are unique. This is tough to do, but very
valuable in terms of outcome.
- Remember, strategists understand that they must both create and
deliver products/services that are of greater value to their customers, or be
able to deliver products that are cheaper. George Day's ("Market Driven
Strategy") comment is essential here: "The essence of strategy is a positioning
statement that sets you, your product or service apart from competitors in ways
that are important to the target customer." If a customer says that your fee
schedule is out of line, they are telling us that they see no advantage in
doing business versus a lower priced competitor. In essence, they see us as
undifferentiated from our competition. Price is indeed a strategy and the worst
possible one when it comes to sustainability and profitability!
- As Harvard Strategist Michael Porter says: "Strategic
positioning means performing different activities from rivals' or performing
similar activities in different ways." This requires understanding of the
"terrain," and a commitment to innovation. We don't necessarily need to invent
something different, just consider how we can help our customers to address
their critical success factors with what we currently have in terms of
resources, products and services.
- Being strategic may mean that we need to take a close look at
how we manage the business and lead or interact with peers. Someone has to
initiate the strategic process! It may mean that we have to reconsider all
aspects of our associations with the marketplace. The old ways of doing
business may not be sufficient to create competitive advantage
anymore.
- Consensus building is nice, but it can also negatively impact
innovation. Usually the issues of trade offs, ownership of risk as well as
innovation seem to get blunted, minimized or thwarted if we wait too long for
consensus
thus another reason why strategy can become difficult. As
high-risk entrepreneurs in this office complex, many of us cannot afford the
delays and competitive disadvantage manifested in consensus. Perhaps that is
why many of us left larger firms!
- There is a place for consensus building but not at the
sacrifice of innovation and creativity. Intel had to literally walk away from
the memory chip business
the very line of business for which the
organization was incepted to prevail. The tough paradigm shift and painful
trade offs yielded the premier maker of microprocessors.
- Michael Porter of Harvard (HBR article "What is Strategy")
again makes a key point for strategists: "Continuous improvement has been
etched on our brains. But its tools unwittingly draw companies toward imitation
and homogeneity. Gradually, managers have let operational effectiveness
supplant strategy. The result is zero-sum competition, static or declining
prices, and pressures on costs that compromise companies' ability to invest in
the business for the long term...Competitive strategy is about being different.
It means deliberately choosing a different set of activities to deliver a
unique mix of value." What will we offer to our customers that will
differentiate us from our competitors?
- Strategy requires us to either perform activities differently
from our competitors or to choose activities that our competitors are not
performing. To do this successfully and without burning resources, one needs to
understand the three most vital prerequisites to strategy: Know yourself; Know
the other; Know the terrain.
- Strategic positions are not easy to find. They require
research, insight, and, in many instances, intuition based upon knowledge. But
we do know that strategic positions begin to open up in times of significant
change.
- Finally, remember that strategy is also about making tradeoffs.
As a strategist, one must be willing to decide what is "on" or "off" strategy.
Focus on those actions that support your strategy and forget those things that
are not supportive.
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About the
author
Tom Stovall and Dustin Grainger are the founders of Stovall
Grainger Inc. They are a consulting and training organization working
exclusively in the healthcare marketplace. They can be reached through their
website at: www.sgbci.com
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