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Are You a ‘Whatever’ Business Person?

February 28th, 2008 · 6 Comments

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Photo Credits: Mikhael747

You know the drill: it’s noon and you and your co-workers are planning lunch.

You: Where should we go?
Co-worker 1: Oh, I don’t know, where do you want to go? (turning to co-worker 2)
Co-worker 2: I don’t know, whatever, anything’s fine with me…

Suddenly, something as simple as grabbing lunch morphs into the Battle of the Clueless.

While ‘I don’t know, whatever’ is sometimes the sign of a genuine state of confusion, most of the time it is not. It’s just laziness. Coming up with ideas, studying the options and, above all, making a decision, is hard work, so most people just put the burden on somebody else: where do you want to go?

If you want to be a leader, it is your job to make decisions, and to ask the right questions so that other people can make them themselves.

To help others make decisions (and increase the odds that those decisions are the ones you want them to make) start by offering specific, but few, alternatives. People are more likely to make a decision when faced with a small, manageable number of options.

For example: ‘what do you want to eat: Chinese or Italian?”, works better than: ‘what do you want to eat?’ and certainly much better than: ‘what do you want to eat? There is a Japanese place around the corner, next to a pizza place that’s also pretty good, and then next block there’s a good Chinese place, ah, wait, but we can also try this new sandwich shop, now, if you don’t mind, there’s the mall down the road, they have a food court you know, perhaps they have something there….

Many small businesses make the mistake of trying to be all things to all people. Conventional wisdom tells us that if we limit our options or specialize we will lose business. How many times have you heard: ‘Oh, we do it all! We can design your website, print your brochures, handle your PR, print your business cards and optimize your site for the search engines, whatever. You name it, we do it!

Bad. Being all things to all people is lousy branding and it doesn’t work.

I also see this unfortunate trend in blogs. You look at the sidebar and see 45 different unrelated categories. There is no underlying theme, and the whole thing is a big, unfocused mess. And then the blogger in question wonders why his blog is not getting any traction…

‘Whatever’ is not a positioning strategy. It is a mistake at best and a lazy cop-out at worse.

People and businesses need to find the right niche, specialize, and be the best option (or even better, the only option) for their customers. You need to brand yourself . You will not lose business. It may be a little more difficult at the beginning, but by choosing a differentiated position (and sticking to it) you’re more likely to achieve success than with an indiscriminate, shotgun approach.

In summary:

Being a leader means making decisions, and helping others make decisions (usually by giving them specific, but few alternatives). Your biggest decision is to chose your brand identity. You need to take the time and effort to assess your strengths and weaknesses, and the threats and opportunities in the marketplace, and chose only one activity where you can be the best. Then, stick with it .

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Tags: Branding

6 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Scot Herrick // Feb 28, 2008 at 7:08 pm

    One of the more interesting tactics I’ve used in my career is to offer a solution to a problem — often an extreme solution — so that the other person or people in the group have something to attack.

    It’s difficult to create from nothing. It’s a lot easier to take something already there and criticize it in order to make it better.

    Besides, you get 80% of what you wanted in the first place because you’re the one that came up with a solution!

  • 2 Adam // Feb 28, 2008 at 9:37 pm

    great story to intro this post - it’s funny, this happens to me so often and im usually the one who makes the decision…

  • 3 Mario Sanchez // Feb 28, 2008 at 11:09 pm

    @Scot Herrick: Great tip Scot! I’m going to try that more often.

    @Adam: Thanks. True, It’s a very common situation, and one that can tell a lot about people by the way they react to it. I’m glad you’re the decision maker…

  • 4 Matt // Feb 29, 2008 at 8:09 am

    Interesting intro story since i’m sure most of us have been in that situation at least once. I find that simply naming a few options I can remove the ones I don’t want which makes actually picking one easier. For example if I had to choose between: Pizza, Subs, Thai and Mexican the first two would instantly drop off since I eat them too often and I’m left with a simple choice (especially since they’re very different from each other)

  • 5 Andy Greider // Mar 5, 2008 at 9:12 am

    When given a choice to be unique, most people choose to imitate others - this is why chains and other large entities are successful.

    As a small business owner, it is VERY important to stand out from the crowd and make a solid impression. You must be the thought leader, the rainmaker and the decision provider.

    When you are searching for a way in the door, specifics work much better than generalities. The more specialized, the easier the entry. You can’t be all things to all people, but you can be one thing to many…and then once you are in the door - the other things you excel at become evident…but you can’t lead with all of them.

    Pick something, brand yourself (see my link for an example how) - and specialize - become one thing to all your customers and then let them ask for more.

  • 6 Mario Sanchez // Mar 5, 2008 at 4:51 pm

    @Andy Greider: great points Andy, especially your last paragraph. It echoes one of the main takeaways in Meatball Sundae: it is easier to find products for your customers than it is to find customers for your products. Couldn’t agree more.

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