Intuit Blog
|
Support
Point of Sale
|
GoPayment
|
Payroll
|
Quickbooks
|
Website Services
Intuit
Sign In
Register
Blogs FAQs and Tips Forms QuickBooks Compatible Software Small Business Articles User Voice Watch, Listen, and Learn We Hear You
Accountants' Corner Educators' Corner Meetup SCORE Small Business Development Centers Women's Resource Center
  • Forums
  • Library
  • Get Help Locally
  • Marketplace
  • Calendar
  • Live Events
Leaderboard
Hide Advanced Search
 
All of these words
Any of these words
This exact phrase
None of these words
In this forum
With posts written by
With posts from
to
mm/dd/yy
mm/dd/yy
Show Advanced Search
Home   Library   Small Business Articles   Every Business is a Commodity Business
hide
01/26/2012 at 02:08PM PST
We’ve seen a scam e-mail regarding Intuit tax information floating around today. This e-mail was not sent or authorized by Intuit. If you ever wonder whether an e-mail from Intuit is real or fake, please refer to the link below.

Thank you

http://security.intuit.com/security-alerts.php

Every Business is a Commodity Business

Time to face the facts. Given nothing to prove them wrong, here's what your prospect believes - one business is just like another. Any accountant can complete my tax return, any electrician can install a ceiling fan and any restaurant can fill me up.

Now, I didn't say it was true, in fact, you know it's not true, but there you sit doing nothing about it.

If you can't find a way to differentiate your business from every other business that says it does what you do, and, if you can't communicate that difference in a way that really matters to a narrow target market, then you're basically in the commodity business. If I can't tell how one business is different than another, then I will use the only thing I can measure - price. Yes, the driving force in the commodity business is always price.

In case you haven't discovered this yet, price is a crappy place to compete. I assure you that there is someone out there willing to go out of business faster than you.

So how do you get out of the commodity business?

Find something that separates you from your competition, become it and speak it to everyone you meet. Quality isn't it, good service isn't it, fair pricing - not it. These are all expectations. A difference is in the way you do business, the way you package your product, the way you sell your service, the fact that you send cookies to your clients, the fact that you show people how to transform their lives - it's in the experience you provide.

I have an exercise for you. I want you to answer this question: "What do you do for a living?" The trick though is that I don't want to hear what your title or profession is, I want to hear how what you do for a living is going help me get what I want.

Most small business is done face to face or over the phone. So, when you can come up with a statement that makes me beg to know more about what you do for a living…then you will climb out of the commodity business and into the premium business (As in, you can charge a premium for your services.)

Here's a simple formula that will help you with your answer to the "What do you do" question.

"What Do You Do For A Living?" I (Verb) + (Target Market) + (Something that matters to the target)

I teach small business owners how to triple what they make (marketing coach), I show women owned businesses how to grab a huge share of federal grant money (consultant), I ease the fears of expecting parents (financial planner), I create financial rescue plans for the financially stranded (credit counselor), I bring comfort to the hot and sweaty (heating and cooling company), and I show contractors how to get free from their business (attorney).

Do you get the idea here? Making a statement like this forces you out of the commodity business and immediately begins to communicate how you are unique. You know, I'm feeling like going short on pork bellies today.
 

John Jantsch is a veteran marketing coach, award winning blogger and author of Duct Tape Marketing: The World's Most Practical Small Business Marketing Guide published by Thomas Nelson - due out in the fall of 2006.

He is the creator of the Duct Tape Marketing small business marketing system. You can find more information by visiting http://www.ducttapemarketing.com.

Back to top
 
Latest Site Activity
Pause Feed
Memere
51 secs ago
Memere
replied to
downloading
mmanju
1 min ago
mmanju
replied to
Vendor refund
NMRP
2 mins ago
NMRP
replied to
Statement and Invoice charg...
SkinnyRaven
3 mins ago
SkinnyRaven
replied to
invoice total is actual total
Memere
5 mins ago
Memere
replied to
duplicate copy download
Community Home Help with Intuit Products Start & Grow Your Business Help for Accountants Small Business Blog Join us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Watch us on YouTube Meet us on LinkedIn
About Intuit | Careers | Register Your QuickBooks | QuickBooks Affiliate Program | Privacy | Legal | Contact Us | Our Hosts
© 2012 Intuit, Inc. All rights reserved. Intuit and QuickBooks are registered trademarks of Intuit, Inc.
Terms and conditions, features, support, pricing and service options subject to change without notice.
TRUSTe - Privacy Standards and Principles
Intuit Websites - Create the perfect site
Intuit Small Business
QuickBooks Accounting Software
Small Business Grants
QuickBooks Online Accounting
Intuit Payroll Services
Intuit Credit Card Processing
Intuit Business Directory
Intuit GoPayment
Intuit Small Business Education
Intuit Small Business Blog
Love a Local Business