A colleague of mine was giving a 3-minute, presentation about his company and his services recently. He said he is one of 45,000 registered realtors in Colorado. He went on to acknowledge:
If you don’t have a friend who is already in the real estate business you must not have many friends.
Justin Phillips
After his presentation, we got to chatting. His business is not only in a competitive field (Aren’t all small businesses?) but its also hard to differentiate himself from 45,000 others. As the title of Jack Trout’s book suggests:
Differentiate or Die ©
Competition and differentiation are challenges any business, large or small, don’t you think? It can be hard to look in the mirror and see those specific things that make you and your company different from the myriad of others in your industry. You may not have 45,000 direct competitors, but I bet you have competition nonetheless.
After all, there are thousands (millions maybe) of product companies; even more service providers. Only a few of the most creative; perhaps the most clever: have figured out what their differentiation is in the eye of their customers.
Charles Revlon, the founder of Revlon and an extraordinarily successful entrepreneur, once said about his company: “In the factory Revlon manufactures cosmetics, but in the store Revlon sells hope.”
Charles Revlon
We talked through my colleague’s main points of differentiation; those attributes he likes to emphasize with prospective, new clients. One really stood out to me but not in the way he said it. One of his credentials is he’s a former, licensed architect. Well OK, but if you’re like me, that credentialing statement probably stimulated this thought in your mind:
So what?
We dwelled on this architect thing for a while. I wouldn’t let him move on; employing one of my favorite sales coaching approaches I bet my former sales teams remember well (maybe not fondly, but well):
Let’s go slow here.
Or, as one architect put it:
God is in the details.
Mies van der Rohel
Architectural training (and a license) is what my colleague “has”. Even better, his area of concentration was in space planning. But leaving this credential like that probably causes his prospective clients to think:
So what?
What do his clients “get”? How can he better align his differentiation with what prospective clients need? It reminds me of Patrick Renvoise who said:
If you're selling drills, your prospects really couldn't care less about the drills. What they actually want are the holes.
Our discussion about real estate was coincidentally near and dear to me because my wife and I are in the process of shopping for a new house. One of the biggest mistakes people make when buying a new house, or buying new furniture for their current house, is discovering after-the-fact that it doesn’t fit! “It didn’t look that big in the showroom”, is a commonly heard phrase, true? (And I’m speaking from experience here HaHa!)
To be clear, we aren’t hiring Justin to be our realtor… we have a lot of friends and one of them is in the business. But if we were in need of a realtor, we’d lean towards Justin. Not because of his real estate license (1 of 45,000 in Colorado) but because of his architect license and more specifically his space planning experience.
That differentiation can help his clients bridge the gap between the furniture showroom and their new house.
GAP
When life gets tough we could get a helmet… or… we could leverage the peace and share the power of a positive perspective.
What a wonderful thing for me to read, Justin! You've made my day! Thx, GAP
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