The
old saying “The more things change the more they remain the same” is as
true today as it ever was. When I think back 25 years when I was
building our music business, the media at the time constantly reminded
me that times of change were upon us. In fact my whole life’s journey
has been constant adaptation to change. While I didn’t always like and
embrace it, change was ever present in my top 10 lessons of business
building. (Actually, it was number 6 on my ‘Hit List’ in my first book, A
little Bull goes a long way’.) The same conditions of change existed
for me 25 years ago, so nothing has really changed except the need to
constantly review where you fit into the future of your industry and the
minds of your customers.
It’s
so easy to view the future through the rear-view mirror of past
accomplishments, rather than determine what success looks like in the
new digital world. And the biggest change in modern times is the way in
which the Internet has become an essential conduit for consumers to
research and access goods and services.
25
years ago, if you wanted local news you read the newspaper or watched
the six o’clock news and read trade magazines and attended trade shows
and conferences for business information. Radio and TV were our daily
entertainment outlets, faxes were big news for business, mobile phones
were a luxury item and ‘google’ was yet to become a verb.
So
here’s the paradox for retailers. Do we need expensive showrooms to
demonstrate merchandise, when customers can begin their buying journey
by educating themselves on a tiny hand held device? All that expertise,
knowledge and range is available from the Internet.
I’ve
long held the view that the customer is the most important component of
business building not the profit. The latter will follow if you get the
former right. Success for me came by finding our niche and building a
word of mouth reputation for being the best in our market category. Who
better to help them find answers to their problems and to trust with
purchasing decisions, than us? We definitely weren’t all things to all
people because that’s not what niche marketing is about. If you ignore
your uniqueness you quickly undermine what makes you different. But if
you find your niche and develop a small force within your fields of
expertise that you can own, you will become recognised as the expert in
that niche. So when it came to music and home entertainment - we were
the ‘experts.’
We
made sure that our knowledge was worth sharing and our customers not
only responded; they became the source of future referrals. As a
specialty business, finding our niche and developing ongoing
relationships with our clients wasn’t just instinctive behaviour, it was
key to our survival.
So
if you momentarily patronise my notion that nothing’s changed, except
the way in which we connect with our customers and how they now access
goods and services, then isn’t this worth considering?
Become the expert and customers will find you to help solve their
problems.
Share your expertise to build your business by creating an effective
database that allows you to electronically connect with your clients by
regular E-newsletters. Just like I’m doing now. Promote it on social
networks, webinars, your website and become the information source that
the trade magazines used to be. Shared knowledge and information is the
gateway for new business and the optimiser for existing client loyalty.
To be the best in business today, you need to do what you do best and let everyone know. Like I said…nothing’s changed in 25 years!
