Meet the MasterMinds: Suzanne Lowe on Competing to Win
Suzanne
Lowe, President of Expertise Marketing and author of Marketplace
Masters: How Professional Service Firms Compete to Win,
believes that "too many professional service firms
compete by trying not to fail rather than by trying to win."
We tapped Lowe's twenty years of experience
in services marketing by asking her what it takes for consultants
to become Marketplace Masters.
MCNews: How would you characterize the
current state of professional service firms' marketing efforts?
Lowe: Most firms are not proactive
marketers. Rather than doing the hard work of marketing--like
learning more about their clients than they already know,
stretching to gain untapped competitive advantage, or measuring
the results of their strategic initiatives--most firms
stick to the seemingly safer path of acquisitions or incremental
improvements to existing services.
The result is that most consultants are selling
the same thing in the same way for the same price.
MCNews: Many clients are critical of the
industry's lack of differentiation. In today's market, which
differentiation strategies are working for consultants--and
which are not?
Lowe: It's surprising to me that, all of a sudden, everybody's
interested in the subject of differentiation. Unfortunately,
it appears to me that many firms are employing differentiation
strategies that have been less than successful.
For instance, differentiation on service delivery
is not that effective. Telling clients that your firm
will be the most responsive, customized, excellent, or the
best at listening is not going to give a firm a long-term
competitive edge.
Every consulting firm can beef up its service
delivery capabilities to be more available, more responsive,
and deliver higher quality. But differentiating your firm
on client service will only give you an advantage for about
two weeks--maybe. Some firms claim that it works for them
because none of their competitors can be as client-focused
as they are. But it's the most copyable of all differentiation
strategies.
I would say it will work today, maybe tomorrow,
but you won't have much of a preemptive competitive advantage
on that alone because it's too easy for others to duplicate.
MCNews: Which differentiation strategies
do work?
Lowe: Simply put, the most effective
differentiation strategies are those that are difficult
to copy. One that I think will emerge is differentiation
based on the client experience. And I'm talking about the
client's emotional experience. You may have read Joseph
Pine and James Gilmore's book, The
Experience Economy.
That presents a very challenging concept for
professional service firms: that we should intentionally
provide a uniquely favorable emotional experience for our
clients. We may think clients are just buying a transaction--tax
advice, IT implementation, or organizational strategy. Well,
what's more difficult to copy and more competitively preemptive,
especially with first mover advantage, is the emotional
experience.
Maybe the experience you are going to deliver
is tranquility or confidence. Or maybe you want to deliver
entertainment or humor. Consider how Southwest Airlines
completely shook up the commoditized airline industry with
the experience it provides to passengers.
Some professional service firms are starting to work on
this very strategy.
MCNews: Consultants have their own ways
of interacting with their clients. For example, some behave
collaboratively, while others are more aloof. Is that what
you're talking about?
Lowe: Yes, but it's not only behaving
in a certain way. That's only one element of delivering
an emotional experience. It's the intentional delivery of
an experience that causes and stimulates a strategically
intended response from the client.
For example, there's a restaurant in Chicago--Ed
Debevic's, which is a 1950's style diner. People don't go
there because they're desperate for a hamburger or hot dog.
They go there for the retro atmosphere and to get yelled
at by that gum-popping waitress.
Obviously, there are variations on the theme.
And delivering emotional experiences is much easier when
there's a product- or a retail-oriented support system.
I've documented eleven or twelve different foundations of
differentiation. Some are older, dustier and easier to copy
because people have figured out how to do that. The elements
of differentiation that are working today are the ones that
are difficult to copy, are operationally deep and usually
more complex to implement.
MCNews: Can a firm's culture be part of
its marketplace strategy?
Lowe: Sure. But many firms think culture
is only something that needs to be proclaimed to the world,
when in fact it's more deeply nuanced and integrated than
that. It imbues all of their operational approaches and,
in fact, should be harnessed to their competitive advantage.
As an example, consider a firm whose main
"personality DNA" reflects a lack of self-esteem.
There are firms like this, believe it or not! Everyone
in the firm is a worrywart, concerned about their competitors
sneaking up on them and stealing clients. How does that
culture impact their market behaviors in a way that benefits
them competitively?
Well, they meticulously double check themselves
on the accuracy and completeness of every work product.
They are aggressive in gathering and using competitive intelligence,
and they are focused on training and developing their professionals.
It also means they push for innovation because they're so
worried they're not good enough that they are driven to
stay ahead.
Now would they ever actually announce to the
marketplace that they have a lack of self-esteem? No, but
they could align their market behaviors around their cultural
DNA, their personality profile. And that does translate
into appropriately successful competitive behaviors.
I believe that culture can be a powerful
market strategy, but most professional firms are not yet
intentionally developing the alignment of their culture
with their go-to-market strategy.
MCNews: Let's shift to the concept of thought
leadership. What is your perspective on using thought leadership
as a differentiator?
Lowe: During my years in marketing,
I have been at once pleased by and worried about the emphasis
on thought leadership. It makes people stretch their basis
of expertise and stay current with the state of the thoughts
regarding their craft. That's a good thing, right?
But what is not good is to simply stay slightly
ahead of the incredibly low common denominator that is out
there. That does not ultimately serve clients or substantively
improve one's expertise base. In fact, it works against
true innovation.
Thought leadership works when it becomes
the basis for robust new services--reengineering, the balanced
score card, and so on. These methodologies were born
from thought leadership, and they became value-added service
propositions that clients paid billions of dollars for.
Those are examples of effective thought leadership.
But the thought leaders who came up with those methodologies
did a lot more than write an article or two. They engaged
in deeply integrated innovation exercises.
Thought leadership simply as a promotional strategy advances
the state of thinking in a very minimal way. And I do
believe many consulting and professional service firms use
it as a crutch. On the other hand, thought leadership can
be a powerful marketing strategy when it's followed and
supported by a robust service.
MCNews: Most firms ask their consultants
to sell and deliver services. Is that, in your view, the
best way to sell services?
Lowe: I would like to challenge not
only consultants but the professional service profession
as a whole for spending so much time on training professionals
to sell. Why try to make them do something so many struggle
to do well?
Wouldn't firms have more competitive success,
maybe even save money by using business developers? Why
go through this massive training effort and require all
people who want to be partners to become rainmakers?
Look at the way this model works in engineering
and construction management. Some civil, mechanical and
structural engineers are so technically oriented that they
can barely talk to another person. But they can plan and
construct buildings that will never fall down. In that field,
business development and operations people work together
very effectively. And clients gobble it up.
MCNews: You've suggested that data mining can make marketing
two to three times more effective. Can you describe how?
Lowe: You know about the proliferation
of contact management databases? Well, it's been my experience
that consultants have become overly enamored with contact
management databases for the purpose of relationship management.
But they fail to use these tools for real competitive advantage.
If done well, relationship management can,
of course, create a competitive edge. There are many pieces
of information that can be captured and organized to provide
valuable perspectives. But currently, patterns in the way
clients buy are too anecdotally captured. They're not captured
with a keen eye to discovering nuances. So I'm suggesting
that data mining as a practice needs to be much more wholeheartedly
embraced.
MCNews: How can consultants use data mining
more effectively?
Lowe: A good example is the Numerica Group, which is
a UK business consultancy and accounting firm. Their contact
management system is linked to their practice management
system, which is then linked to their accounting system
so that they can discern where profit margins are being
trimmed.
Then you can see where softness is developing,
where competitors are starting to make inroads, where proposals
are being lost. That's one of the more simplistic examples
of this, but most firms have not yet built their technology
infrastructure to enable data mining opportunities to surface
in a competitively preemptive way.
One could argue that it's not profitable to do so, but I
think that argument is rapidly losing traction.
MCNews: If you could give a consultant
one piece of advice, what would it be?
Lowe: Understand the environment in which you do business.
Whether you're in a change management practice or a new
products development practice, or whatever, you're there
because the marketplace has asked for it. But that's never
going to stay the same. It's got to change.
I'll give you an example. I recently visited
a management consulting firm and the CFO took justifiable
pride in telling me about how much they honor their employees.
They are uniquely positioned in the marketplace. Their people
are deeply satisfied with the work they do, and they have
an incredibly low attrition rate. It's a great place to
work.
That culture also benefits their clients,
who are well served because the consultants are happy to
be collaborating on important and cutting-edge projects.
My reply was cautionary. I said I guess that means you don't
think the marketplace is ever going to shift, right? My
point was that they are too focused on themselves, rather
than on the long-term, ever-evolving needs of their clients.
MCNews: Thanks for your time.
Find out more about Suzanne Lowe, her book
and services at www.marketplacemasters.com.
You can find out more about Suzanne Lowe,
her company and her book, Marketplace
Masters : How Professional Service Firms Compete to Win,
at www.expertisemarketing.com.
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