Page 54 - 100 Great Business Ideas: From Leading Companies Around the World (100 Great Ideas)
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• Constantly looking at all competitors: this keeps the business

    lean and focused on what matters. In France, there has been
    an established lower-cost competitor since 1981—the TGV
    high-speed train. This has meant that many of the disciplines
    needed for competing with low-cost operators have been
    developed over many years.

• Using all available resources: competing has meant employing all

    of the assets and advantages that a big industrial carrier has in
    order to counter low-cost operators—including brand, market
    position, and operational strengths. Often a competitor’s strategy
    is to build market share with temporary low prices and then to
    raise them. An active and patient approach can help to reduce or
    remove the threat of competitors.

In practice

• Actively communicate your brand values—what it is that makes

    your organization and product special and preferable.

• Benchmark your business against other organizations.
• Meet with customers and understand their perceptions and

    needs.

• Understand, strengthen, and preserve the causes of success in

    the business.

• Find out why customers prefer you to your competitors.
• Review competitors’ strengths and weaknesses regularly.

    Develop an action plan that, over time, will minimize these
    strengths and exploit weaknesses.

• Develop and refine products and the tactics used to sell, taking

    into account your understanding of the competition.

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