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Achieving
Your Company's Goals Through Differentiation
By Don Levin and Willy Gissen
Companies evaluating prospective suppliers ask,
"How are you unique? Why should I purchase from you instead
of the other guy?" In marketing terms, these are questions
about differentiation, the basis for corporate and product growth.
In a few simple sentences, at most, a differentiation statement
explains a company's or product's basic advantage versus its competitors.
It defines the distinguishing benefit of the firm and its products.
Differentiation is an intrinsic part of a company's mission and
can or should be its slogan as well. Even a product
name (such as "FloMax") can demonstrate differentiation.
A differentiation credo can be expressed in stationery footers,
business cards, press releases, corporate literature, sales letters,
presentations, promotional material, Web sites, advertising and
trade show displays. And it is valid for company identity and allcorporate
stakeholders; recruitment and retention of employees; motivation
of end-users, intermediaries and referral sources; mergers and acquisitions;
and communication with global contacts, suppliers and other business
partners.
Though used for the private sector, the concept of differentiation
is demonstrated in political campaigns. Repeatedly, the candidates
hammer away at why they, not the other guy, should be elected. Television
commercials, even different ones by the same candidate, come back
again and again to the same themes.
The Volkswagen Beetle is a differentiating concept. In the eyes
of many people, Microsoft's attacks on Washington's anti-trust efforts
created an unfavorable differentiation statement. A truly easy-to-use
VCR would be a differentiated product.
Professional service firms consultants, attorneys, accountants,
ad/public relations agencies, health professionals and others
continually strive to separate themselves from the competition.
To attract funding and members, associations and societies do the
same.
Characteristics of Good Differentiation
The following qualities help to define good differentiation
statements:
Simplicity,
Easily grasped by people outside your field,
Convertible into a slogan,
Builds a business-to-business or consumer brand,
Defines a new category or an extension of an existing one,
Ensures entry on a short list of suppliers,
Longevity (expected one to five year's life), and
Easily and continually reinforced.
Considerations
You
can draft your differentiation statement by considering the following:
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Scope:
individual divisions within your company; geographical/international
reach;
multi- or single-product; market segments; applications; government
role, if any; history; and marketplace understanding and assumptions;
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Product:
know-how, patents, expected line extensions and name; Benefits:
cost savings; service; breadth of usefulness; productivity;
maintenance;
packaging; color coding; availability; delivery; help desk;
and ease
of use, understanding, and remembering;
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Corporate:
years in business, anniversaries, financial wherewithal, market
knowledge,
leadership and the stock price history for publicly held companies;
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| Competition:
preempted claims; and |
| Presentation:
A photo or diagram can prove uniqueness. |
The Differentiation Process
Differentiation statements are developed in order
to preempt other companies in the same field. To accomplish this,
statements must be believable, consistent, practical, simple and
straightforward. Preemption demands not only a real comfort level
in using the product (or service) by the consumer or business but
also a favorable image.
Rival companies continually improve their image and product. The
competitive process may require updating differentiation statements.
Still, statements should be composed to last even though they may
be refined from time to time.
Get a preliminary statement written and accepted if you can't expect
to getpermanent agreement among your colleagues at the outset.
Comparative Differentiation Statements
Of course, any company must be defined in terms
of the competition and point out rival companies' limitations and
faults. It must be sure, however, to list the benefits of its products
and avoid being trapped into charges and countercharges with other
firms in the same field.
In politics, negative campaigning is known to move voting percentages
more rapidly than positive campaigning. In business, however, the
purchaser is more likely to carefully study all advertising claims.
Economic decisions command closer observation than voting. In addition,
the purchaser is often an expert in the field, especially in business-to-business
transactions. Since differentiation statements are at the core of
a company's self-definition, CEOs should be sure to project a positive
image for their firms.
Differentiation in Product Development
Instead of differentiating a product that has
already been created, some marketers are able to manipulate product
specifications in order to achieve effective differentiation.
Design, efficiency, consumer and market preferences are pre-product
development areas that can later be essential for differentiation.
In automobile manufacturing, for example, cars are designed and
built with special benefits that differentiate them from the competition.
These features are then touted in advertisements as reasons to purchase
one vehicle or style over another very similar one.
Final Thoughts
Of course, effective differentiation makes investors value one public
company more than another. Another result of a well-crafted differentiation
statement is support for any side issues, causes or charities that
a company promotes. Copyright and other legal protections are intrinsically
tied to differentiation.
Differentiation statements are at the heart of successful publicity
and promotional campaigns and should be carefully composed and dynamically
pursued.
Donald Levin is president of Levin Public Relations & Marketing,
Inc., a full-service communications firm with clients in high tech,
financial services, general industry, academia, consumer products
and the professions. Before founding Levin Public Relations &
Marketing in 1984, he was president of the public relations subsidiary
of The Ted Bates advertising agency, where in less than two years
he doubled the firm's income. Clients included Seiko, Pulsar, Maxell,
London Fog, tourism to Greece and Puerto Rice, two cruise lines
and high tech companies. Prior to that, Mr. Levin was with Hill
and Knowlton, the premier public relations firm. He holds a master's
in management from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and a B.S. in
engineering from City College of New York.
Account Executive Willy Gissen is a Harvard graduate with 10 years
of corporate and civic experience including four years working for
Dennis Mehiel at the Westchester County Democratic Committee and
in his Congressional campaign. He works with clients, creates client
programs, writes press releases, backgrounders and trade articles,
and contacts reporters to generate interviews and other forms of
publicity.
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