Competitive Intelligence: The Business Intelligence Process Part 3

Does your business put a priority on its business intelligence process? Does it monitor your competitive analysis, marketplace trends and its understanding of market change? And most importantly, does it put a priority on making changes as a result of insights from this analysis? This will be a four-part series. This third part will discuss how a business should conduct a competitive intelligence. Whoever tries the most stuff usually wins.
competitive intelligence
Do you employ competitive intelligence?
 
Here are links to all parts of this series:
How Is Your Business Intelligence Process Part 1 Overview
The Business Intelligence Process Part 2 Market Analysis
The Business Intelligence Process Part 4 SWOT Analysis
Before we continue, let me ask you a question. 
What works best for competitive analysis in your business? We would love to hear what it was. Would you do us a favor and post it in the comments section below? It would be greatly appreciated by us and our readers.
 
The ultimate goal of all the points I list below is this: eliminate the fluff from your marketing strategy and focus only on the things that work.
Do you want to freshen up your business success abilities? Have you thought about looking at your competitors for inspiration as well as good ideas? Checking out what other companies are doing can often help you brainstorm your own business tactics.
In this article , you’ll discover how to analyze your competitors’ to inspire new ideas and improve your competitiveness.
business intelligence process
Business intelligence process.

 Why Look at the Competition?

Researching your competitors not only provides an overview of your industry, but it also gives insight into the current habits of the audiences you’re targeting.
By answering a few key questions, you’ll see what kinds of ideas are most effective for the customers you want to reach.
No business attribute is more important today as that of adaptability, as many, many businesses are on the brink of irrelevance unless they change as fast as change itself. Your strategies do run out of steam, get old and become ineffective … you need to keep refreshing them based on your anticipation of the next change.
A competitive analysis is critical in helping with your anticipation of market and customer change. Read on to understand why.
 A vigorous competition watch kills two birds with a single stone – helps with  better understanding of rival tactics and opens a window through which you can see your own problem areas. Further, I’m sure you’d agree that knowing where you stand is highly important.
Still looking for reasons to use competitive analysis in improving business success? Read through the following reasons and find out for yourself.
Identify opportunities to serve newly acquired and prospective customers.
Determine the size of the market – identify service gaps and areas for self-improvement where competition is exploiting at the moment.
Find the tested ways to cater target market.
Update and add unique value propositions.
Conclude if your marketing strategies are effective.
 
Obtain an understanding of what your competitors have done that has been successful without re-inventing the wheel.
Isolate trends that make a positive difference.
 

Competitive intelligence … who are your competitors?

Most companies believe they know who their competitors are. But when we do a little research on identifying them, they are usually surprised by the results. Here are the questions and facts you need to know and be asking yourselves:
Whether you work internally or were hired as an outside resource to help with your client’s SEO campaign, you probably have some idea of who the competition is in your space. Some companies may have good offline marketing but poor online marketing.
If you’re looking to be the best, it’s a good idea to do your own research and see who you’re up against.
In my experience, it’s always good to find and verify 5-10 competitors in your space from a variety of sources. You can use tools for this or take the manual approach.
Make sure to capture the basic information for each competitor including their company name, location, and website. These tools will be useful at a later time. Record these in the “competitor research” tab of a spreadsheet.
 

Standard Google searches for competitors

This is pointing out the obvious, but if you have a set of keywords you want to rank for, you can look for trends and see who is already ranking where you want to be. Don’t limit this to just one or two keywords, instead get a broader list of the competitors out there.
To do this, simply come up with a list of several keywords you want to rank for and search for them in your geographic area. Make sure your Geographic preference is set correctly so you get accurate data.
  1. Collect a list of keywords
  2. Search Google to see which companies are ranking in the local pack
  3. Record a list of the companies’ names and website URLs in the spreadsheet under the competitor research tab.
Outside of the basics, I always find it’s good to see who else is out there. Since organic and local rankings are more closely tied together than ever, it’s a good idea to use 3rd party tools to get some insight as to what else your website could be considered related to.
This can help provide hidden opportunities outside of the normal competition you likely look at most frequently.
What should you find about your competitor and where?
A local store is not your competitor online if they don’t offer their service via the internet. Your competitors based online could be entirely different. Examine new and emerging players in the market.
Evaluate the premise of your rivals – if you share similarities, look for areas where a certain edge can be established and nurtured.

Competitive intelligence – How to do it effectively

Taking a sneak peek at competitors requires a little undercover work from your office and occasionally doing walk around surveillance.
See this article: How to become a data scientist in 2019
Here are some things you should consider:

 

Acquisition approach

Look for rivals’ social media engagement – how frequently they respond to their clients, are their social media reps doing a decent job or not and subtle indicators of customer acquisition via self-promotion.
What to review: The Business Intelligence Process Part 4 SWOT Analysis

 

Unique value propositions

Learn how your rivals are playing the game, so you can beat them to the punch.  The unique value proposition sheds light on the fraction of clients that your rival is fixated on.

 

On-line strategy

How many followers do they have? Are their posts mostly internal, external or a mix of both?
How on-brand are their photos? Do they show the product or service in each shot, or do they follow a more lifestyle-oriented content strategy?
What hashtags do they use?

 

Competition store walk through

Occasionally put your customer hat on and do a simple walk through of your key competitors’ store. From a customer’s point of view, what are the strengths and weaknesses? Which ones could you employ to make your business better?

Tap local business leaders for local intelligence / advice

Never hesitate to reach out and ask local business leaders their opinions on trends they are seeing and how they see your business in relation to its competitors.

Compare your website value versus your competition

Our research has shown customers will visit at least three websites before making a purchase. The larger the purchase, the more sites they’ll visit. Therefore, you need to look at your website in the context of your competition.
Seek to understand the customer journey as they move from one website to the next. Pay attention to the promotion incentives your competitors offer and how they compare to yours.
If the competition’s website is easier to use, offers more enticing incentives, and contains more compelling messaging, you will have a hard time generating online leads.

 

trends and shifts
Be on the lookout for trends and shifts.

 Trends and shifts

Watch for marketplace trends and shifts. Look at the fringe of the environment, for that is where trends first appear.

 

Anticipation

Work at developing anticipation of changes in your market.
Study how trends start to interact with each other as well as customers and businesses.

 

Useful tools

 Rival IQ

Rival IQ is perfect for getting full intelligence coverage on what your market is about. You can setup landscapes (up to 30 sites in the pro version) in your category or content publishing niche, find the hottest and most engaged (hello conversion possibility) topics and channels.
You can spot gaps where your competition is not present and mine the top 100 SEO keywords for search volume, traffic share and search rank positions.
You can go deeper and map up the entire editorial flow for each channel and get topic ideas. You can also see what changes RivalIQ does to titles, Meta descriptions and social bios and even track web site changes (design and mostly home page).
 

 Site Alerts

Site Alerts is another great tool for looking under the hood to see what your competitors are using technology-wise (which ecommerce platform, mail provider, plugins, tech enhancements). It’s great for seeing what social referrals work best for them and what percentage of traffic they represent.
What to study now: Business Blog … Learning from the Best Examples
Additionally, you can see what other traffic sources they get (and the share for each) and a list of referral sites, related sites, and organic keywords.

Google Alerts

Google Alerts are great little inventions because they allow you to track virtually anything and have it delivered either to your email or RSS. What kinds of stuff should you be tracking? The name of our competitor’s company, their employee names, their CEO, product names, locations, mentions of new features, etc.
What kinds of media are you looking for? Their blogs, social profiles, photos, videos, Flickr accounts, Facebook pages, etc. ? Why? The more you know, the better off you are to make smart decisions.

Twitter

Follow your competitors on Twitter. Follow their employees. Follow the people that engage most often with your competitors. Follow the people your competitors are following. Private lists are a goldmine for researching.

 

The bottom line

Continually rework all of your techniques, particularly your discrimination and value proposition. We recommend short revisits on these topics every 3-4 months.
The key to success here is realizing that this is a marathon and not a sprint. If you examine the competition in the top areas mentioned above and create a plan to overcome, you will win long term.
Monitoring your competition is a small, but important component of a successful digital marketing plan. No business exists in a vacuum, so you must be aware of your environment.
content writer
Will you be the one to stand out? Please join the competition below.
 
 Need some help in capturing more improvements for your staff’s leadership, teamwork and collaboration? Creative ideas in running or facilitating a team or leadership workshop?
 
Call today for a FREE consultation or a FREE quote. Learn about some options to scope your job.
Call Mike at 607-725-8240.
All you get is what you bring to the fight. And that fight gets better every day you learn and apply new ideas.
When things are not what you want them to be, what’s most important is your next step. Call today.
Test. Learn. Improve. Repeat.
Are you devoting enough energy continually improving your continuous learning?
Do you have a lesson about making your learning better you can share with this community? Have any questions or comments to add in the section below?
 
Mike Schoultz is the founder of Digital Spark Marketing, a digital marketing and customer service agency. With 40 years of business experience, he blogs on topics that relate to improving the performance of your business. Find them on G+Twitter, and LinkedIn.  
Digital Spark Marketing will stretch your thinking and your ability to adapt to change.  We also provide some fun and inspiration along the way. Call us for a free quote today. You will be amazed at how reasonable we will be.
  
More reading on a business process from Digital Spark Marketing’s Library:
Change Management Case Study… 7 Volatile Challenges to Overcome
Network Connection … 23 Actionable Tips for Relationships
10 Growth Hacking Tactics … What Would Peter Drucker Say?
  Like this short blog? Follow Digital Spark Marketing on LinkedIn or add us to your circles for 3-4 short, interesting blogs, stories per week.
 

Market Analysis: The Business Intelligence Process Part 2

Whoever tries the most stuff usually wins. Does your business put a priority on its business market analysis process? Does it monitor your competitive analysis, marketplace trends and its understanding of market change? And most importantly, does it put a priority on making changes as a result of insights from this analysis? This is a four-part series on critical elements of business intelligence. This second part discusses the benefits of a market analysis and how to conduct it most effectively.
market analysis
Conducting a market analysis.
Here are links to all parts of this series:
How Is Your Business Intelligence Process Part 1 Overview
The Business Intelligence Process Part 3 Competitive Analysis
The Business Intelligence Process Part 4 SWOT Analysis
The market analysis is a key element of any business intelligence strategy. Do it right, and you will have a clear idea of the path down which you are headed. A good market analysis will enable you to lure investors, sidestep pitfalls, and most importantly, attract customers.
Bear in mind that all business markets are different, and they may be creating business plans and strategies for different reasons or audiences. If your business is quite small and you know your customers inside and outthis may not be the best use of your time. But that is usually not the case.
What is next? Network Connection … 23 Actionable Tips for Relationships
If you are seeking funding, market analysis is going to be key data to convince your audience that your business idea has the facts and hard numbers to back it up. Or if you are seeing new trends in your market, it may be time to conduct an update to your market analysis to determine the best course of business action needed. With that said, let’s explore the details of writing a market analysis.

What is a market analysis?

A market analysis is exactly what it sounds like: determining the characteristics unique to your particular market and analyzing this information, which will help you make decisions for your business.
By conducting a market analysis, you will be able to gather valuable data that will help you get to know your customers, determine appropriate pricing and ways to market to customers and figure out your competitors’ vulnerabilities.

Market analysis and your business plan

It’s smart to write a business plan, especially if you are beginning a new business venture. Even if you’re a sole proprietor or don’t intend to borrow any money to get your business off the ground, it’s important to have a clear plan in place. The market analysis isn’t just one part of a successful business plan—it’s one of the best reasons to write one.
A solid business plan complete with market analysis will be invaluable. You’ll need to identify your potential customers and attract investors, and it will help you to be clear about what you want to do with your business, both now and in the future.
The time you spend doing the research and putting it all together will come back to you many times over in business success and problems avoided.
In addition, a market analysis is a great measuring stick you use over time to see how far you’ve come, and it allows you to make projections based on data rather than guesswork. Because you’ll know the size of the mountain you’re about to climb, you’ll be able to pace yourself and prevent problems in the future.

Importance of a market analysis

Although the terms “marketing” and “marketing analysis” can both be described as games of information, they are not to be confused. Marketing encompasses all of the activities that go into promoting a product or service. A market analysis is the actual assessment of the target population, competition, and needs for marketing that product or service.
The marketing analysis process can be broken down into six steps:
  1. Defining the problem
  2. Analysis of the situation
  3. Obtaining data that is specific to the problem
  4. Analysis and interpreting the data
  5. Fostering ideas and problem-solving
  6. Designing a plan
So, why should you embark on the market analysis process? The primary reasons are:
  • To determine if there is a market for your products or services
  • To establish the need for developing a marketing plan
  • To ascertain market information that will assist in the sale of your product or service

 Market Analysis Process

To begin the market analysis process, answer the following questions. These questions will enhance your understanding and knowledge of your target market and industry, and ultimately determine:
Is there a need for my product or service?
What defined market am I trying to reach?
What specific companies are servicing this market?
Are they successful?
Are there other companies servicing this market with a similar product?
Are they successful?
What is their market share?
Is the market saturated or wide open? If so, why?
What is the size of the market?
Is it a growing market?
Is the industry stable, volatile, growing or trendy?
How can I penetrate this market?
How do my competitors reach the market?
What are the business models of my competitors?
What do customers expect from this type of product or service?
What core competencies must the product or service have?
What are customers willing to pay for this type of product or service?
What is my competitive advantage?
Some direct ways to collect data useful for you answering these questions include:

Mail questionnaire

Is useful when extensive questioning is desired. This type of format allows the respondents to complete the questions at their convenience. They may be more willing to fill out personal or family sensitive issues since the mail questionnaire can be returned anonymously.
The questions must be simple and the directions easy to follow, since no interviewer will be present to assist.
The response rate to consumer survey questionnaires is roughly 25 percent. Response rates less than 25 percent may not be representative of the market. Only the individual interested might respond, skewing the data. Mail surveys are economical if a large number of people respond.
On the other hand, if the response rate is low, this can be a very expensive proposition. This format is slow and requires extensive time to design, disseminate, collect and analyze responses.
 

Telephone surveys 

These are growing in number, and they can be fast and effective. In this format market, researchers can ascertain answers to simple questions quickly. Telephone interviews allow the interviewer to probe and learn what the respondent is thinking.
If the market researcher is attempting to gather personal or family sensitive information, this is a poor tool.
Numerous firms exist for telemarketing surveys. One thousand respondents may be reached in a single evening when 50 interviewers are placing telephone survey calls. With immediate data entry into computers, results can be attained instantaneously. This format has gained popularity due to the speed and high response rates.
 

Personal interview surveys

These surveys can be effective for maintaining a respondent’s attention. In this format, the interviewer is present in order to explain difficult directions hopefully leading to better responses.
This type of interview is common in the retail and industrial setting. To reduce the cost of locating consumers, interviews are sometimes performed on-site. A random selection of consumers is questioned. Having a well-trained interviewer helps to decrease the chance of biasing the response.
There are a number of negatives to the personal interview survey. It is more expensive than a mailing or phone call, and at times the respondents won’t objectively answer all questions, especially ones dealing with sensitive family issues.
 
observation
Lots of observation.

 

Observation

With observation, researchers try to learn what the subject does naturally. Observations should not influence the consumer’s behavior. Observation methods are common in advertising research.

Market analysis requirements

Your market analysis should include an overview of your industry, a look at your target market, your own projections for your business, and any regulations you’ll need to comply with.

Industry description and outlook

This is where you’ll discuss the current state of your industry overall and where it’s headed. Relevant industry metrics like size, trends, life cycle, and projected growth should all be included here.
This will let banks or investors see that you know what you’re doing, and have done your homework and come prepared with the data to back up your business idea.

target market
Establish a target market.

 Target market

In the previous section of your market analysis, you were able to look at the general scope. In this section, you’ve got to be specific. It’s important to establish a clear idea of your target market early on.
A lot of new entrepreneurs make the rookie mistake of thinking that everyone is their potential market.  To put it simply, they’re not.
This is a good thing—by focusing on your real customers, you’ll be able to direct your marketing efforts efficiently while attracting loyal customers who will spread the word about your business. The target market section of your business plan should include the following:
User Persona and Characteristics: You’ll want to include demographics such as age, income, and location here. You’ll also need to dial into your customers’ psychographics as well. You should know what their interests and buying habits are, as well as be able to explain why you’re in the best position to meet their needs.
 
Market size: This is where you want to get real, both with the potential readers of your business plan and with yourself. Do your research and find out who and where your competitors are, and how much your customers spend annually on your product or service. How big is the potential market for your business?
 Keep exploring: 10 Growth Hacking Tactics … What Would Peter Drucker Say?

Projections

Market share: When you know how much money your future customers spend, you’ll know how much of the market you have a chance to grab. Be practical, but don’t sell yourself short. Make sure you are able to explain how you came up with your numbers.
 
Pricing and gross margin: This is where you’ll lay out your pricing structure and discuss any discounts you plan to offer. Your gross margin is the difference between your cost and the sales price. Again, be realistic yet optimistic. Optimistic projections not only serve as a guide, they can be a motivator.

Regulations

Are there any specific governmental regulations or restrictions on your market? If so, you’ll need to bring them up here and discuss how you’re going to comply with them. You will also need to address the cost of compliance. Addressing these issues is essential if you are seeking investment or money from a lender, and everything has to be legally squared away and above board.

 

 

How to do the research

Market analyses vary from industry to industry and company to company. The hard truth is that some of the information you wish to include may not be publicly available. A little estimation is okay, but the bulk of your numbers need to be based on facts. Here are some good places to start your market research:
Your current customers: If your business is already up and running, your current customers are an invaluable resource. They are your existing market. You can use online surveys or social media to gather feedback about buying habits, needs, and other psychographic information.
U.S. Census Bureau: Here’s where you’ll find demographics you can use to figure out your market share. There is plenty of other information you can use in your market analysis here as well.
Business.gov: The go-to place for national industry information, as well as links for state and local resources.
U.S. Small Business Administration: The SBA offers industry guides, development programs, and local resources, as well as loan guarantees when the time comes.
Bureau of Labor Statistics: The BLS is the place to find out where your industry has been and where it is headed.
Commerce.gov: The U.S. Department of Commerce has a lot of good general information that you may be able to use, depending on your industry.

The bottom line

Continually rework elements of your market analysis, particularly your discrimination and value proposition.
The key to success here is realizing that this is a marathon and not a sprint. If you examine the competition in the top areas mentioned above and create a plan to overcome, you will win long term.
Monitoring your competition is a small, but important component of a successful digital marketing plan. No business exists in a vacuum, so you must be aware of your environment.
Will you be the one to stand out?
Need some help in capturing more improvements for your staff’s leadership, teamwork, and collaboration? Creative ideas in running or facilitating a team or leadership workshop?
 
Call today for a FREE consultation or a FREE quote. Learn about some options to scope your job.
Call Mike at 607-725-8240.
All you get is what you bring to the fight. And that fight gets better every day you learn and apply new ideas.
When things are not what you want them to be, what’s most important is your next step. Call today.
Test. Learn. Improve. Repeat.
Are you devoting enough energy continually improving your continuous learning?
Do you have a lesson about making your learning better you can share with this community? Have any questions or comments to add in the section below?
 
Mike Schoultz is the founder of Digital Spark Marketing, a digital marketing and customer service agency. With 40 years of business experience, he blogs on topics that relate to improving the performance of your business. Find them on G+Twitter, and LinkedIn.  
Digital Spark Marketing will stretch your thinking and your ability to adapt to change.  We also provide some fun and inspiration along the way. Call us for a free quote today. You will be amazed at how reasonable we will be.
  
More reading on a business process from Digital Spark Marketing’s Library:
Change Management Case Study… 7 Volatile Challenges to Overcome
Business Blog … Learning from the Best Examples
The Business Intelligence Process Part 4 SWOT Analysis
  Like this short blog? Follow Digital Spark Marketing on LinkedIn or add us to your circles for 3-4 short, interesting blogs, stories per week.
 
 

Business Intelligence Process: Ways to Master Business Improvement

Whoever tries the most stuff usually wins. Does your business put a priority on its business intelligence process? Does it monitor your competitive analysis, marketplace trends and its understanding of market change? And most importantly, does it put a priority on making changes as a result of insights from this analysis?
business intelligence process
You need a business intelligence process.
This is a four-part series on critical elements of business intelligence. This first part discusses an overview of business intelligence and the three types of business intelligence that are most critical to the average business.
Here are links to all parts of this series:
The Business Intelligence Process Part 2 Market Analysis
The Business Intelligence Process Part 3 Competitive Analysis
The Business Intelligence Process Part 4 SWOT Analysis

What is the meaning of business intelligence?

Business intelligence (BI) is an umbrella term that includes the applications, infrastructure and tools, and best practices that enable access to and analysis of information to improve and optimize business decisions and performance. It is the set of techniques and tools for the transformation of raw data into meaningful and useful information for business analysis purposes.
Keep exploring: Network Connection … 23 Actionable Tips for Relationships
BI technologies are capable of handling large amounts of unstructured data to help identify, develop and otherwise create new strategic business opportunities.

Goal of BI

The goal of BI is to allow for the easy interpretation of these datasets. Identifying new opportunities and implementing an effective strategy based on insights can provide businesses with a competitive market advantage and long-term stability.
BI technologies provide historical, current and predictive views of business operations. Common functions of business intelligence technologies are reportingonline analytical processinganalyticsdata miningprocess miningcomplex event processingbusiness performance managementbenchmarkingtext miningpredictive analytics and prescriptive analytics.
This is a very large number of business intelligence tools. Most businesses would do very well with these three: market analysis, competitive analysis, and SWOT analysis. These are the ones we will discuss is this 4 part series.
These BI analyses can be used to support a wide range of business decisions ranging from tactical operational to strategic. Basic operating decisions include product positioning or pricing. Strategic business decisions include priorities, goals, and directions at the broadest level.
In all cases, BI is most effective when it combines data derived from the market in which a company operates (external data) with data from company sources internal to the business such as financial and operations data (internal data).
When combined, external and internal data can provide a more complete picture which, in effect, creates an “intelligence” that cannot be derived by any singular set of data.
competitive intelligence
Putting competitive intelligence to work for you?
 

Comparison with competitive intelligence

Though the term business intelligence is sometimes a synonym for competitive intelligence (because they both support decision making), BI uses technologies, processes, and applications to analyze mostly internal, structured data and business processes while competitive intelligence gathers, analyzes and disseminates information with a topical focus on company competitors.
If understood broadly, business intelligence can include the subset of competitive intelligence.

 

Comparison with business analytics

Business intelligence and business analytics are sometimes used interchangeably, but there are alternate definitions. One definition contrasts the two, stating that the term business intelligence refers to collecting business data to find information primarily through asking questions, reporting, and online analytical processes.
Business analytics, on the other hand, uses statistical and quantitative tools for explanatory and predictive modeling.
In an alternate definition, Thomas Davenport, professor of information technology and management at Babson College argues that business intelligence should be divided into queryingreportingOnline analytical processing (OLAP), and “alerts” tool.

 

Market analysis

A market analysis is really exactly what it sounds like: determining the characteristics unique to your particular market and analyzing this information, which will help you make both tactical and strategic decisions for your business.
By conducting a market analysis, you will be able to gather valuable data that will help you get to know your customers, determine appropriate pricing, and figure out your business priorities and vulnerabilities.

Target market

In the initial market analysis, you were able to look at the general scope. In this target market section, you’ve got to be specific. It’s important to establish a clear idea of your target market early on. A lot of new entrepreneurs make the rookie mistake of thinking that everyone is their potential market.
To put it simply, they’re not.
This is a good thing—by narrowing in on your real customers; you’ll be able to direct your marketing dollars efficiently while attracting loyal customers who will spread the word about your business.
The target market section of your business plan should include the following:
 
User Persona and Characteristics: You’ll want to include demographics such as age, income, and location here. You’ll also need to dial into your customers’ psychographics as well. You should know what their interests and buying habits are, as well as be able to explain why you’re in the best position to meet their needs.
 
Market size: This is where you want to get real, both with the potential readers of your business plan and with yourself. Do your research and find out who and where your competitors are, and how much your customers spend annually on your product or service. How big is the potential market for your business?

 The competitive analysis

The competitive analysis is where you dissect your competitors, which is important for a couple of reasons. Obviously, it’s a good idea to know what you’re up against, but it also lets you spot the competition’s weaknesses.
Are there customers out there being underserved? What can you offer that similar businesses aren’t offering? The competitive analysis should contain the following components:
 
Market: How big is the market for goods and services similar to what you plan on offering? What’s the growth rate? Include the general outlook and trends for this market. Who are your main competitors? Are there any secondary competitors who could impact your business?
 
Competitor strengths and weaknesses: What is your competition good at? Where do they fall behind? Get imaginative to spot opportunities to excel where others are falling short.
 
The importance of your target market to competitors: Ideally, you’re going after customers whose needs aren’t being met by your competitors.
 
Barriers to entry: What are the potential pitfalls of entering your particular market? What’s the cost of entry—is it prohibitively high, or can anyone enter your market? This is where you examine your weaknesses. Be honest, with investors and yourself. Being unrealistic is not going to make you look good.
 
The window of opportunity: Does your entry into the market rely on time-sensitive technology? Do you need to get in early to take advantage of an emerging market?
SWOT analysis
Employ a SWOT analysis.

Business intelligence process …  SWOT analysis

SWOT Analysis is a useful technique for understanding your Strengths and Weaknesses, and for identifying both the Opportunities open to you and the Threats you face.
SWOT analysis is a methodological tool designed to help workers and companies optimize performance, maximize potential, manage competition, and minimize risk. It is about making better decisions, both large and small. It can help you determine the efficacy of something as small as introducing a new product or service or something as large as a merger or acquisition.
Again, SWOT is a method that, once mastered, can only enhance performance. What makes SWOT particularly powerful is that, with a little thought, it can help you uncover opportunities that you are well-placed to exploit. And by understanding the weaknesses of your business, you can manage and eliminate threats that would otherwise catch you unawares.
More than this, by looking at yourself and your competitors using the SWOT framework, you can start to craft a strategy that helps you distinguish yourself from your competitors so that you can compete successfully in your market.

Using SWOT

Originated by Albert S Humphrey in the 1960s, SWOT is as useful now as it was then. You should plan on using it in two ways – as a simple icebreaker helping people get together to “kick off” strategy formulation, or in a more sophisticated way as a serious tactical tool in the competitive sense.
Consider these questions:

Strengths

What advantages does your organization have?
What do you do better than anyone else?
What resources can you draw upon that others can’t?
What is your organization’s Unique Selling Proposition  (USP)?
Consider your strengths from both an internal perspective, and from the point of view of your customers and people in your market.

Weaknesses

What could you improve?
What should you avoid?
What factors lose you sales?
Again, consider this from an internal and external basis: Do other people seem to perceive weaknesses that you don’t see? Are your competitors doing any better than you?

Opportunities

What good opportunities can you spot?
What interesting trends are you aware of?

Threats

What obstacles do you face?
What are your competitors doing?
Is changing technology threatening your position?
More to learn: Business Blog … Learning from the Best Examples
 

The bottom line

Continually rework elements of your business intelligence, particularly your market and competitive analysis, as well as your SWOT analysis.
The key to success here is realizing that this is a marathon and not a sprint. If you examine the competition in the top areas mentioned above and create a plan to overcome, you will win long term.
custom_websites
Monitoring your competition is a small, but important component of a successful digital marketing plan. No business exists in a vacuum, so you must be aware of your environment.
Will you be the one to stand out?
 
Need some help in capturing more improvements for your staff’s leadership, teamwork, and collaboration? Creative ideas in running or facilitating a team or leadership workshop?
 
Call today for a FREE consultation or a FREE quote. Learn about some options to scope your job.
Call Mike at 607-725-8240.
All you get is what you bring to the fight. And that fight gets better every day you learn and apply new ideas.
When things are not what you want them to be, what’s most important is your next step. Call today.
Test. Learn. Improve. Repeat.
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Mike Schoultz is the founder of Digital Spark Marketing, a digital marketing and customer service agency. With 40 years of business experience, he blogs on topics that relate to improving the performance of your business. Find them on G+Twitter, and LinkedIn.  
Digital Spark Marketing will stretch your thinking and your ability to adapt to change.  We also provide some fun and inspiration along the way. Call us for a free quote today. You will be amazed at how reasonable we will be.
  
More reading on a business process from Digital Spark Marketing’s Library:
Change Management Case Study… 7 Volatile Challenges to Overcome
Network Connection … 23 Actionable Tips for Relationships
The Business Intelligence Process Part 4 SWOT Analysis
10 Growth Hacking Tactics … What Would Peter Drucker Say?
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