Four Reasons Why Differentiators Fade Away

I’ve talked ad nauseum about the need for a firm to differentiate itself from its competitors. If your firm engages in “me too” marketing, prospects have no reason to choose you.

But what about companies that DO differentiate themselves…and suddenly stop doing so?

There are four reasons why companies could stop differentiating themselves:

  1. The differentiator no longer exists.
  2. The differentiator is no longer important to prospects.
  3. The market has changed and the differentiator is no longer applicable.
  4. The differentiator still exists, but the company forgot about it.

Let’s look at these in turn.

The differentiator no longer exists

Sometimes companies gain a temporary competitive advantage that disappears as other firms catch up. But more often, the company only pursues the differentiator temporarily.

 In 1985, amid anxiety about trade deficits and the loss of American manufacturing jobs, Walton launched a “Made in America” campaign that committed Wal-Mart to buying American-made products if suppliers could get within 5 percent of the price of a foreign competitor. This may have compromised the bottom line in the short term, but Walton understood the long-term benefit of convincing employees and customers that the company had a conscience as well as a calculator. 

From https://reclaimdemocracy.org/brief-history-of-walmart/.

Now some of you may not remember Walmart’s “Made in America” banners, but I can assure you they were prevalent in many Walmarts in the 1980s and 1990s. Sam Walton’s autobiography even featured the phrase.

But as time passed, Walmart stocked fewer and fewer “Made in America” items as customers valued low prices over everything else. And some of the “Made in America” banners in Walmarts in the 1990s shouldn’t have been there:

“Dateline NBC” produced an exposé on the company’s sourcing practices. Although Wal-Mart’s “Made in America” campaign was still nominally in effect, “Dateline” showed that store-level associates had posted “Made in America” signs over merchandise actually produced in far away sweatshops. This sort of exposure was new to a company that had been a press darling for many years, and Wal-Mart’s stock immediately declined by 3 percent. 

From https://reclaimdemocracy.org/brief-history-of-walmart/.

The decline was only temporary as Walmart stock bounced back. And 20 years later, the cycle would repeat as Walmart launched a similar “Made in USA” campaign in 2013, only to run into Federal Trade Commission (FTC) enforcement actions two years later.

The differentiator is no longer important

The Walmart domestic production episodes illustrate something else. If Walmart wanted to, it could have persevered and bought from domestic suppliers, even if the supplier price differential was greater than 5%.

But the buying customers didn’t really care.

Affordability was much more important to buyers than U.S. job creation.

So while labor leaders, politicians, and others may have complained about Walmart’s increasing reliance on Chinese goods, the company’s customers continued to do business with Walmart, bringing profitability to the company.

And before you decry the actions of consumers who act against their national self-interest…where was YOUR phone manufactured? China? Vietnam? Unless you own a Librem 5 USA, your phone isn’t from around here. We’re all Commies.

The market has changed

Sometimes the market changes and consumers look at things a little differently.

I’ve previously told the story of Mita, and its 1980s slogan “all we make are great copiers.” In essence, Mita had to adopt this slogan because, unlike its competitors, it did NOT have a diversified portfolio.

This worked for a while…until the “document solutions” industry (copiers and everything else) embraced digital technologies. Well, Fuji-Xerox, Ricoh and Konica did. Mita didn’t, and went bankrupt.

The former Mita is now part of Kyocera Document Solutions.

And stand-alone copiers aren’t even offered.

The company forgot

Before Walmart emphasized “Made in America” products, former (and present) stand-up comedian Steve Martin was dispensing tax advice.

“Steve.. how can I be a millionaire.. and never pay taxes?” First.. get a million dollars. Now.. you say, “Steve.. what do I say to the tax man when he comes to my door and says, ‘You.. have never paid taxes’?” Two simple words. Two simple words in the English language: “I forgot!”

From https://tonynovak.com/how-to-be-a-millionaire-and-not-pay-any-taxes/.

While the IRS will not accept this defense, there are times when people, and companies, forget things.

  • I know of one company that had a clear differentiator over most of its competition: the fact that a key component of its solution was self-authored, rather than being sourced from a third party.
  • For a time, the company strongly emphasized this differentiator, casting fear, uncertainty, and doubt against its competitors who depended upon third parties for this key component.
  • But time passes, priorities change, and the company’s website now buries this differentiator on a back page…making the company sound like all its competitors.

But the company has an impressive array of features, so there’s that.

Restore your differentiators

If your differentiators have faded away, or your former differentiators are no longer important, perhaps it’s time to re-emphasize them so that your prospects have a reason to choose you.

Ask yourself questions about why your firm is great, why all the other firms suck, and what benefits (not features) your customers enjoy that the competition’s customers don’t. Only THEN can you create content (or have your content creator do it for you).

A little postscript: originally I was only going to list three items in this post, but Hana LaRock counsels against this because bots default to three-item lists (see her item 4).

Yes, Walmart IS a technology company

I recently wrote something that mentioned various technology companies, and I initially included Walmart in the list.

Initially.

The post cataloged the companies that former coworkers were now working, and I wrote it knowing that one of my former coworkers was a Walmart. Well, you don’t know what you think you know. It turns out that this former coworker is no longer at Walmart (as I write this, she is at Comcast), but I had THIS entire post written up about Walmart as a technology company. So I’m going to go ahead and post it anyway.

Technology for better living

While many of us don’t think of Walmart as a tech company, in truth it is a tech company, and technology innovations play a key part in Walmart’s corporate dominance in its markets over many other players.

Sometimes Walmart dominates so much that other stores go out of business. This is a 2011 photo of a Sears big box store with subway station in Rego Park, QueensNew York CityNew York. This location closed in 2017. By Jim.henderson – Own work, CC0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=17912322

I was first exposed to Walmart’s technology orientation many years ago, even before Walmarts began opening in earnest in Southern California. At the time I was working for a consumer goods company, and Walmart was one of my company’s customers. Obviously Walmart was a big customer, and big customers have the power to tell their suppliers what to do.

Today’s acronym is EDI

And Walmart wanted the consumer goods company to do EDI.

EDI stands for “Electronic Data Interchange,” and it offers a computerized method for two business entities to communicate business data between each other. Thus, Walmart was asking my employer to transmit data relating to our shipments of product to various Walmart stores, and Walmart incorporated this data into its internal inventory systems.

EDI has progressed a long way since I worked for that consumer goods company (the graphic above does NOT illustrate the flow that my former employer was using), but the basics remain the same.

Electronic data interchange (EDI) is a standard format for exchanging business documents. These documents are exchanged between suppliers and retailers. EDI is made up of two components: translation and communication. During the translation process, the business data is changed into a standardized EDI format.

Once the business document is translated into a standardized EDI format it is communicated (electronically sent) to the intended recipient. Just like with translation, there are various methods of EDI communications available. The method that is used by Walmart and their suppliers is AS2.

Not AS3, not AS1. AS2. Walmart is Walmart.

But not just EDI

And as you may guess, Walmart uses a number of other technologies to keep its mammoth business running. Such as blockchain.

How do you know your food is safe to eat?

This isn’t a question many of us often ask ourselves. But lately, food safety has been in the public eye: 2018 has already seen a large outbreak of E. coli in romaine lettuce and Salmonella in a number of products from eggs to breakfast cereal….

Today, Walmart and Sam’s Club sent a letter to suppliers of fresh, leafy greens asking them to trace their products all the way back to the farm using blockchain technology. Suppliers are expected to have all these systems in place by this time next year.

Again, Walmart is Walmart, and it wanted the suppliers to comply. And the suppliers had some work to do to come into compliance.

The basic requirement for those in far-flung rural areas includes a mobile device with geolocation features, so that other information such as date of harvest and size of the crop can be associated with specific coordinates. In cases where a farm might not be covered by wireless access, the information can be uploaded when there is coverage.

And yes, agriculture has moved far away from the family farm and is now accurately described by the term “agribusiness,” but I’m sure these agribusinesses weren’t thrilled about requiring the capture of geolocation, date, and harvest size data as a mandatory step in harvesting. And if there are any family farms left, they REALLY weren’t thrilled. (Not that small family farms are doing business with Walmart, but these requirements are going to flow down to smaller food sellers also.)

So yes, these data capture and blockchain requirements are onerous from the suppliers’ perspective. But think of Walmart’s perspective for the moment. If Walmart can convince its customers that its foods won’t make them sick, and if Walmart’s competitors can’t do this, then Walmart has a clear competitive advantage.

The retailer was motivated to focus its first “substantive, not symbolic” declaration as a result of several highly publicized E. coli outbreaks in the United States… — including five deaths — that were related to tainted romaine lettuce, according to Frank Yiannis, vice president of food safety and health for Walmart.

And not just Walmart

And these and other modern technologies are necessary for Walmart or any multi-billion dollar firm, or even much smaller firms. As I said, eventually consumers will demand blockchain or similar food tracing from all grocery stores.

Dollar General store in Arlington, Georgia. By Michael Rivera – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=61224685

Yes, even Dollar General is embracing technology, but as far as I can tell it is concentrating on consumer-facing technology and hasn’t adopted blockchain yet. But I could be wrong.

These days, long after my former consumer goods employer went out of business, you’re not going to run your business on a Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet, even if Lotus IS integrated.