BLUE LION Karate Academy - Article 3

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How Are You Beating Your Competitors Tomorrow? By Carol Etter, P.E Carol Etter is founder and president of Helion Consulting, www.helionmanagement.com, and has more than two decades of experience in management consulting, business planning and operations. This article, the third of a four-part series, was originally published by State Business Louisiana, www.statebusinessmag.com, in its Fall 2003 issue. The most dangerous way to look at the future of your business is the Scarlet O’Hara model: “I’ll think about that tomorrow. After all, tomorrow is another day.” Beating your competition takes planning and forethought. If you are working only to stay even—to keep the customers you have and grow business on a day-to-day basis—you will find your business slipping years behind. Beating your competitors requires you to think far into the future to see what innovations are going to change your industry. Those are factors that can cripple your competition as you benefit from them, but only if you anticipate them, identify them and make them part of your business model. Before you start down the list of everything you’re doing and have done to meet and surpass your competitor’s service, price and selection, think for a moment about those competitors. If you’re like most business owners, the competitors you list are businesses that provide the same products or services you do. If you own a hardware store, you’ll list other independently owned hardware stores, along with Lowe’s and Home Depot. You’d better have Wal-Mart on that list because if there isn’t one in your area today, there will be tomorrow, and they are experts at beating their competition years down the road. Your competitors are those clear-cut rivals. But they’re not your only competitors, and they may not be the competitors who matter in the long-term. Just 20 years ago, the U.S. Postal Service was the primary correspondence carrier. The organization was complacent and believed it had a lock on the business. It did, until technology and entrepreneurship came in the back door. Federal Express, United Parcel Service and other delivery firms offered businesses fast service with guaranteed pickup and delivery. And shortly thereafter, fax machines became commonplace. Page 1 of 4


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