... Animal?
Check this out from Drew:
Stop trying to be a liger brand!
Posted: 11 Apr 2010 07:38 AM PDT
I've had this conversation about 6 times this past week, so it seems timely to write about it as well.
For some reason -- many companies and brands are not content to be who they are. They feel the need to create some artificial hybrid of themselves.... no doubt because they're afraid they're leaving money on the table, they are missing out on some customers or their revenue is down, so they're going to fish outside of their own pond.
Here's the truth about your brand. If you are a lion -- then be a lion. Be the boldest, loudest, most confident lion you can be.
The minute you decide to become half lion and half tiger... you compromise your own brand. You become less of who you truly are.
I've seen this too many times to think it is a coincidence or fluke. While you are out prowling as a liger...here are the results:
- You chase after business that is outside of your sweet spot -- so it takes up more resources (time, talent, money) for you to deliver what you sold. In other words -- lower (if any) profit.
- You end up working with customers who value something other than what you are best at selling, so in many cases, you are satisfying them but not delighting them.
- Because you are a little (or a lot) outside of your usual scope -- you price your offerings badly -- either giving it away (what did we say about net profits?) or trying to charge a ridiculous amount, just proving that you aren't really an expert in that particular arena.
- While you are working extra hard (see #1 above) to deliver on business you really aren't superior in, you're so busy that you can't chase or win sweet spot business.
In short....you are working harder, delivering less spectacular results and making less money.
I get the short term temptation of trying to be that hybrid -- it's money in the pocket.
But, in the long run, you simply diminish your own ability to be remarkable. To be the brand that goes way beyond delivering satisfaction -- but instead, your customers LOVE you. Those are the companies that are surviving this recession. Those are the companies who enjoy incredible word of mouth business.
If you are a lion -- be the biggest, baddest, boldest lion you can be. You don't (and shouldn't) be anything else.
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