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How many times have you lost an opportunity to a competitor? It’s happened to me countless times over the years, and it never feels good. It’s even worse when I’ve invested hours—sometimes way too many—into crafting the perfect proposal, sometimes while ignoring the knot in my stomach arising from something my subconscious mind is telling me.

My subconscious seems to know that my efforts are in vain, while my conscious brain powers on blindly. “What alternative is there?” I might have asked myself, instead of wasting countless hours on deals that never happen. Fortunately for me, this was a lesson learned long ago, because lucky is the enterprise that thrives long without understanding it.

There is an alternative to a world where battling the competition in a crowded IT services market seems the norm, and while it’s a fundamental concept of Marketing 101, there are only a few firms that master the art of positioning. Not only is it one of the more nuanced and difficult marketing principles to embrace, the benefit of strong positioning — commonly referred to as differentiation, is mostly unrecognized by all except those who consciously and successfully address it.

Differentiation is the single most important building block of a successful B2B marketing effort and is a critical factor in any MSP’s overall success. Take a look at the top 10 percent of MSPs under $20M as measured by financial performance, and you’ll see example after example of firms who understand and leverage the concept of positioning to their advantage. The stronger a firm’s position, the less likely they will face stiff competition in the pursuit of closing a sale.

What is positioning, really?

A firm’s brand position is, in its most simplistic form, nothing more than the answers to some variation of the following questions:

  • What do you do?
  • For whom do you do it?
  • What’s better about how you do it?

Positioning is the intersection of a firm’s chosen discipline, its target market, and its unique value proposition. Having quality answers to the underlying questions related to discipline, target market, and unique value proposition yields competitive advantage.

Discipline

The discipline of an MSP is the combination of competencies, services, tools, and partnerships that the firm leverages to solve customers’ problems. Discipline may be broad, narrow, or anywhere in between. In my experience, most MSPs tend to try to do too much. Leadership may feel the need to incorporate a broader offering of services to create more value for the firm’s clients, but too often this comes at the expense of deep expertise. Discipline is an area where specialization can strengthen an MSP’s position and result in greater and more valuable differentiation.

Target market

Successful MSPs avoid trying to be all things to all customers, and part of that equation involves narrowing the universe of possible buyers to a manageable subset. In the B2B space, two criteria by which professional services firms most often narrow their target market are buyer industry and geography. Some firms use both, selecting an industry and a relatively confined market, such as a city or state to define their audience. Firms sometimes zero in on solving a particular problem or type of problem, and though they may work across multiple industries and multiple geographies, they may find the unique nature of the problems they solve goes far enough to limit the target audience. Similar to discipline, specialization around target market can also result in greater differentiation through deeper expertise.

Unique value proposition

While discipline and market are easily understood, there is infinite subtlety and debate to be found surrounding the concept of a firm’s unique value proposition, or UVP. I usually think of UVP as “the adjectives of differentiation”: Bigger, badder, stronger, cheaper, faster, to name some possibilities. Remember, you’re answering the question, “Why are you better than your competitors?”. It may not be as simple as one word, but your UVP needs to be simple enough to easily explain. It must imply value to the customer, and ideally it’s not easy for competitors to copy.

By developing and articulating a position defined by your firm’s discipline, its target market, and a unique value proposition, you may be ahead of most MSPs already. Is your discipline narrow enough to separate you from most of the other providers? If not, can you seek advantage through deeper than average expertise related to the problems faced by your target market? Is your company able to create unique value for your customers, whether through proprietary processes, deeper knowledge, or another unique advantage? These questions need asking, and they demand honest answers.

If you don’t feel like you’ve developed a strong brand position,be honest about it and don’t despair. With some hard work and dogged dedication you can differentiate your firm. Read on for a couple more ideas.

Other elements of brand positioning

Point of view

Your opinion matters. And it really matters when it impacts the way that your firm approaches solving customers’ problems. In marketing we refer to this concept as “point of view”. We see point of view reflected in tag lines and commercials, and savvy firms understand its power. The more controversial a point of view, the more likely it will have strong appeal to some portion of your target market. It’s most effective, too, when your point of view influences other aspects of your position, whether discipline, target market, unique value proposition, or any combination thereof. 

A point of view might explain what’s wrong with the way the rest of the world approaches solving the same problems that you do. It may explain how you go about identifying priorities in a unique way and why that’s better. It might explain how and why your firm uniquely measures success. Whatever angle it takes, a strong point of view can do a lot to shore up what may otherwise be a relatively weak brand position.

Reasons to believe

Got proof that your firm delivers on its promise? Then find a way to incorporate that into your firm’s messaging. Go beyond describing what you do, for whom you do it, and the value you bring by talking in specific terms about why prospects should believe you. Testimonials and case studies are one form of proof, and you may also turn to performance statistics, or a clear and unambiguous explanation of why your firm is able to create value that others can’t.

Not leveraging positioning

It’s absolutely painful to see a managed services provider invest heavily in marketing and advertising when they haven’t done the tough work of differentiating itself. With a broad offering, a “do-everything-for everybody” mentality, and no attempt to dig beneath the surface of generic problems and solutions of the masses, such investment is in vain. At best, ROI from such activity is less than optimal.

The benefits of differentiation

When firms adopt a strong position and leverage that position to differentiate themselves in the marketplace:

–They more easily win and maintain the trust of prospects and customers.

– They speak the language of their target market.

– They know exactly whom they need to reach and persuade.

–They see the quantity and quality of sales leads improve.

– They spend less time qualifying prospects.

– They create a competitive advantage that increases their power in the sales process.

–They encounter less competition.

Stand alone with confidence

The benefits of strong positioning go beyond eliminating competition, nearly all of which positively impact a firm’s profitability. Contact Digett today to learn more about how we help MSPs like yours eliminate the competition and reap the advantages of a well-positioned managed services firm.

Photo:  patpitchaya / Shutterstock.


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Mark Figart

Posted by Mark Figart

Mark is a digital marketing pioneer who has revolutionized the way technology service and solution companies have approached marketing for over 15 years. Through speaking engagements, consulting, and ongoing leadership of the digital agency he founded in 2001, Mark shares his unique perspective on the "why" and "how" of marketing, helping MSPs see and understand the critical role of marketing through a more logical and actionable paradigm.

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