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Eureka! Finding your Unique Selling Point

As discussed in what’s a unique selling point, your unique selling point is your differentiator which separates you from your competition. Now we know how important this differentiator is to your small business, it’s now time to get to work and determine your unique selling point.

A Unique Selling Point Helps Your Small Business Stand Out From the Crowd

A Unique Selling Point Helps Your Small Business Stand Out From the Crowd

What Isn’t a Unique Selling Point

Before you start putting your small business under the microscope, it’s important to understand the attributes which are not unique selling points. Many businesses focus their promotional efforts on these factors. Don’t make the same mistake:

Great service: You claim to offer great service? Guess what: So does everyone else. Offering great service is fundamental to any business, it’s not a unique selling point. However, if you can promise and demonstrate a unique method of providing great service, such as free weekend delivery, 24/7 free phone support or reply paid postage, your service levels can be used as a unique selling point.

Low prices: You may have dozens of competitors. The reality is, only one business can offer the lowest price. And for this privilege, this business has their margin squeezed. But even worse – another competitor can enter the market at anytime with an even lower price. Enter the price war, which leads to balance sheet nightmares and endless dinners of baked beans on toast. It is dangerous to focus on being the lowest price. It’s better to focus on offering exceptional value.

Location: You may be contemplating opening a business in an area without competition. Sounds like a good opportunity. Perhaps. May be in the short term. However, competition could soon come knocking, either in the form of another bricks and mortar business or an online business. Don’t feel that your small business location provides a sustainable competitive advantage. It’s not a moat against competition.

How to Determine Your Unique Selling Point

You know your business better than anyone. To determine your unique selling point take a moment to assess the following:

1. What do your customers love about your business?

Ask them personally. Send your customers an anonymous online survey. Watch their behaviour both in your store and on your website.

2. What can you do that your competition can’t?

Look at the product and service range of your competitors. Compare it to your range. Are there any gaps that you can exploit? If so, capitalize on the gaps, make customers aware of your superior offering and stay one step  ahead of your competition.

3. Is there an area that no competitors currently satisfy?

Do you have a competitive advantage that your competitor simply can’t match? Perhaps it is your size, number of employees, opening hours, onsite installation, product hiring, a guarantee or returns policy?

 

4. Can you bundle regularly used products/services together and offer a value pack?

Think about the total solution that your customers are trying to achieve. This solution can rarely be met with just one product. Is there anything else you can naturally bundle to help solve their problem and create value? Could you offer a free first service with your product, free installation, a free book or 50% off a complementary product?

If two small businesses are selling an identical product, the customer will make a selection based on price. You need to transfer the customers comparison from price to value by supplying an offering that provides more at an acceptable price point.

5. Can you pair up with another business to create a unique product offering?

Think of the purchasing patterns of your customers. Do they need to purchase complementary items before or after visiting your small business? If so, there may be an opportunity to directly offer these products or services or establish a referral relationship with another trusted provider.

6. Can you bundle your product with a service, or vice versa?

Think outside the square. Can you bundle your product with a service? Or a service with a product? This could be a key point of difference for your small business, demonstrating real value to your customers.

7. Can you improve your trial period, guarantee or servicing levels?

 

Take the risk away from your customers. Make them feel that it’s you that’s taking the risk – not them. Offer an extraordinary guarantee that will blow your customers away and leave the competition trembling.

“If everyone is thinking alike, then somebody isn’t thinking.” -George Patton

 

Implementing Your Unique Selling Point

Your unique selling point doesn’t just stay an abstract objective, filed in a dusty report. You need to bring your unique selling point to life with a simple, short statement. Your unique selling point must be actively threaded through all your business communication. Yes, this includes advertising, brochures, business cards and receipts. It can never be over communicated. As a rule of thumb, if you’re getting sick of seeing your unique selling point, you’re doing a good job.

“If you have an important point to make, don’t try to be subtle or clever. Use a pile driver. Hit the point once. Then come back and hit it again. Then hit it a third time-a tremendous whack.” -Winston Churchill

It is critical that your entire business can consistently deliver on this promise at every opportunity, year in and year out. This will help cement your selling point in the minds of customers and increase their trust in your small business.

What factors have influenced you in choosing one business over another?

Unique-Selling-Point-Orange-Apple

What’s a Unique Selling Point/Proposition?

Your small business needs to be remarkable. It needs to stand heads and shoulders above your competition. When customers actively compare your small business to your competition, you want them to be compelled to choose you to the exclusion of everyone else. Sounds right? To do this, you need to be able to find your unique selling point and consistently deliver it.

Be Unique: Great Small Businesses Stand out from the Crowd

Be Unique: Great Small Businesses Stand Out From The Crowd

Why do I Need a Unique Selling Point?

Each year the world is deluged with more brands and more choice. 2006 saw over 58,375 new products introduced throughout the World. This was more than double the number introduced in 2002.* Ouch. This means that your business has more and more competition and more and more clutter and noise to cut through.

As mentioned on the keys to small business success, a unique selling point is the differentiating benefit that your small business has over your competition. It’s the message aiming to cut through the clutter which drives customers to your small business. Your unique selling point needs to be different, relevant and valued by your target customers so they choose your small business to the exclusion of all others.

Your unique selling point must be simple to express and easy to understand. It must also be threaded through your entire business; from your business cards and catalogues, to your invoices, receipts and email signatures. You can never over communicate your point of difference. In short, if you’re sick of seeing your unique selling point you’re implementing it correctly.

You should also only focus on one unique selling point. This is easier for customers to identify with and remember. It also strengthens your focus and protects it from the competition.

*J Gerzema, E Lebar The Trouble with Brands, 2009

Brands that Successfully use a Unique Selling Point

OK, let’s step away from the theoretical classroom for a moment to see how real brands successfully champion a unique selling point.

  • Photoshop: The premier image manipulation software
  • Harley Davidson: The original motorcycle
  • Dyson: The bagless vacuum cleaner that doesn’t lose suction
  • Dove Soap: The soap with moisturising cream
  • IKEA: Great value furniture you assemble yourself
  • Wikipedia: The comprehensive free online encyclopedia
  • Gatorade: The sports energy drink that helps you regain energy faster
  • Black Berry: Access and send information anywhere, anytime
  • Amazon: Get any book shipped to your door

It’s important to understand that these brands champion these selling points through consistent messaging over many years, usually decades. This consistent messaging helps solidify their unique selling point in the minds of customers, guarding it against competition.

Sure, there may be moisturising soaps apart from Dove, or a better motorbike than Harley Davidson – but it doesn’t matter. These brands have already won the minds of customers. Their perception is reality in the minds of their target customers.

And in business, perception is more important than reality.