Meet the MasterMinds: Jack Trout Talks Strategy
With
his 1981 classic book, Positioning,
Jack Trout and coauthor Al Ries changed the language and
practice of marketing strategy. In the more than two decades
since then, Trout has authored or co-authored some of the
best-selling marketing books of all time, including
Marketing
Warfare , Bottom-Up-Marketing,
and The
22 Immutable Laws of Marketing.
Trout's latest book, Trout on Strategy, expands on and
integrates many of the key ideas from his earlier work in
an easy-to-read format. MCNews talked with Trout to get
his views on marketing in the consulting business and what
prescriptions he could offer consultants to help them become
better marketers.
MCNews: So much has been written about business strategy
that it's hard to sort through--what is your definition
of strategy?
Trout: There's no end to the jargon-rich writing
on business strategy, so I like to keep my definition simple.
Your strategy describes what makes your business unique,
and what is the best way to get that difference into the
minds of your clients and prospects.
MCNews: How you would assess the state of strategy in
the consulting industry?
Trout: Terrible. Many consultants' strategy is simply
to stay on at their clients, no matter what problem needs
to be solved. It could be a corporate strategy project,
organizational design or implementation work. Lots of consultants
tell clients they can do any project that comes along. They
are trying to be all things to all clients and that's a
flawed strategy.
What's unfortunate is that so many great companies have
followed the advice of consultants and now find themselves
on the brink of disaster. And that's because too many consultants
will tell clients exactly what they want to hear, instead
of being objective advisers who look you in the eye and
give you the good news with the bad.
MCNews: So what are the keys to an effective strategy
for a consultant?
Trout: First and foremost, I'd say specialization.
Clients are looking for the best of breed when choosing
consultants. They'll pick one consultant for creative work,
another for strategy work, and a different one for change
management projects. The client will use consultants they
perceive to be specialists in a coordinated way to achieve
the total result they're after.
General Electric learned the lesson of specialization many
years ago when they launched a concept called the turnkey
power plant. The concept was simple: GE would provide all
of the components that an electric utility needed for a
complete power plant. It was a one-stop shop concept.
But they found that customers wanted to give different parts
of the contract to those who they believed to be the specialists
in those areas. GE may have received the contract for the
turbine generators while other specialists got the contracts
for the controls, switchgears and other components. Even
though GE is credited with inventing electricity, that fact
wasn't enough to overcome their customer's strong desire
to buy from specialists.
Consulting clients are behaving in the same way. They
are buying services from a variety of specialists, not relying
on generalists.
MCNews: Any thoughts on why consultants resist the idea
of specialization?
Trout: Most consultants don't want to be tied to
a single specialty. They want to be as many things to as
many clients as possible. What they fail to understand is
that, once they start to extend into areas outside of their
true areas of expertise, they leave space for new specialists
to creep into their markets and take their place.
The advantage of specialization is that it simplifies
the marketing, selling and buying of consulting services.
If clients understand that you're a marketing strategy consultant,
they won't ask you to help them solve a logistics problem.
They'll know exactly how and when to use your firm and when
to seek help from someone else.
Specialized consultants don't waste scarce resources chasing
projects that are outside their areas of expertise. It's
easier to qualify a prospective client when your specialty
is well defined. It's more efficient and more effective.
MCNews: You've said that strategy "is all about
perception, so don't get confused by facts." What do
you mean?
Trout: Consultants tend to spend a lot of their
marketing time and money discussing their complex case studies,
qualifications and methodologies when they should be working
harder to position, in the minds of their clients and prospects,
how they are differentiated from competitors.
Let me give you an example from the current U.S. presidential
campaign. Both candidates are hoping to gain an advantage
by positioning themselves in the minds of the voters. The
incumbent, George Bush, has a natural advantage, as he's
been pushing his "strong leadership" position
since his first presidential campaign. And that is many
voters' perception of George Bush and his administration.
Bush's opponent, John Kerry, has a different positioning
challenge. He is the lesser-known candidate, so he must
find a way to identify himself in the minds of voters who
don't know him or his political views.
Kerry could attempt to dislodge the voting public's perception
of Bush, which would take a long time. Or he could relate
his own position, in some way, to Bush's positioning to
get his message across.
For example, Kerry could take the stance that Bush is "Strong,
but wrong." That would be a simple, but powerful, way
to use the president's own positioning to create a different
perception in voters' minds.
Consultants have the same opportunity. What's important
is to create a perception in the minds of your clients and
prospects, not just present facts about your firm. And most
consultants are not good at creating that perception.
MCNews: Many consulting firms believe they win with
the quality of their people. Is that an effective strategy?
Trout: No. Every firm makes that same claim. It's
not believable, nor is it a good differentiator. There's
a standard distribution of people in the world and no single
firm has a lock on all of the good people, and clients understand
that.
MCNews: What one thing should a consultant remember
when putting together a strategy for a practice?
Trout: To thrive, specialize. Don't be tempted to
do everything for your clients. It's not good for them or
for you.
MCNews: What's on your reading list these days?
Trout: Three books come to mind. The first is The
Wisdom of Crowds, by James Surowiecki. The second
is Testosterone
Inc.: Tales of CEOs Gone Wild, by Christopher
M. Byron. And finally, I'd recommend The
Tipping Point, by Malcolm Gladwell.
MCNews: Thanks for your time today.
Find out more about Jack
Trout, his books and services.
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