How To Eliminate Your Competition By Being Distinct

Written by Lawrence Deon


So how do you eliminate your competition without bloodshed?

To compete with other businesses nowadays (especially online) you need something that nobody else can copy. A one of a kind so to speak!

You must distinguish yourself from your competition. Distinction is something that clearly makes your business different from all of your competitors and sets you apart.

In order to effectively distinguish yourself from your competitors you must know who your competitors are andrepparttar niche they market to.

That means you must identify your exact target audience?

If you can’t do that, you will have little or no success in to creating any kind of distinction.

The easiest way to create distinction is to think like your target audience or customers. Know their exact needs, wants, goals, problems and interests and improve on them by adding distinction! Use your brainpower. Ask yourself questions like: How can I set myself apart from my competition? What could I offer my niche that my competition can't? What can I do to put my business atrepparttar 127080 top ofrepparttar 127081 pile?

If you keep asking these questions your mind will eventually start shooting out more ideas than you can handle. One of those ideas might provide you withrepparttar 127082 distinction you're searching for.

If you can't find something that your competitors aren't already doing don’t panic. Pick a service that you mutually offer and improve on it.

Here Are A Few Ways To make yourself Distinct & Outsell Your Competition

The keys to outselling your competition are to compare your product to theirs.

When you findrepparttar 127083 differences between products, use your findings to improve your product. Below are 12 things you can compare and improve upon to outsell your competition.

Price - Can you offer a lower price? Can you offer a higher price and increaserepparttar 127084 perceived value of your product? Do you offer easier payment options than your competition?

Sales Lessons from Bob Vila

Written by BIG Mike McDaniel


Sales Lessons from Bob Vila There’s more to what he does than meetsrepparttar eye

by BIG Mike McDaniel

With so many different programs, and reruns and re-packaging of older programs, we can assume there are few people onrepparttar 127079 planet who do not know about Bob Vila. Starting withrepparttar 127080 original "This Ol’ House" programs on PBS in 1979, Bob Vila and his empire, have grown into a major force inrepparttar 127081 Home Improvement Television genre.

The professional salesperson can learn a whole lot more from Bob Vila than how to screet concrete or put mud onrepparttar 127082 drywall.

Bob Vila is a study in brand awareness. Bob isrepparttar 127083 brand. The challenge was getting people to recognize, and ultimately respect Bob Vila, as THE home improvement expert. Whatever he did before that first TV program is inconsequential as is whether or not he can saw a board of drive a nail (something he does verl little of on his show).

Bob Vila became a household name. Brand awareness torepparttar 127084 highest degree. So high in fact that Sears asked him to be a spokesperson and that killed his deal with PBS (his first network gig). Now Bob has "Home Again with Bob Vila", "Bob Vila’s Guide to Historic Homes" and others plus specials, books and tapes and even "Bob Vila’s Home Design" series on two CD’s (handsomely packaged, of course). They are recyclingrepparttar 127085 first PBS shows and calling them "This Ol’ House Classics". Bob is a TV pitchman, too. He sells credit card debt reduction and every product Sears can come up with, plus a closet full of books and videos.

This didn’t happen by accident, but by clever design. The design element continues today, every time you see him onrepparttar 127086 tube. How did he do it? Simple, all he did was tell allrepparttar 127087 people on TV to call him by name, over and over. A lot like subliminal advertising. You don’t realize you are gettingrepparttar 127088 message. A typical segment of any of his programs, past or present, might go like this:

Bob: Today on our show, Fred Murtz is going to show us how to cut a board with a handsaw. Welcome to our show Fred.

Fred: Thanks, Bob, glad to be here.

Bob: You’ve been cutting boards for a long time

Fred: I sure have Bob. I got my first hand saw at age seven, from my grandpa. I brought several saws to show you, Bob.

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