Begin by understanding your customers' needs and wants, not by focusing on what you want them to buy.
Milton Chang
By the time you have chosen the products to launch your new business (see Laser Focus World, September 1995, p. 75), you have probably also chosen the market you want to target and have decided how to position the company. In this article, I cover the nitty gritty of what people do in marketing and sales--that is, how to get the word out to your potential customers, make them think of you and contact you, convince them to buy, and keep them happy afterward so they will come back again and again.
Ultimately, a business exists to serve customers with the right products, to create a relationship with them, and to keep them happy with every aspect of that relationship. A professor at the Harvard Business School coined the phase "staple yourself to an order" to help companies think through every facet of the customer's experience from the customer's point of view--calling the company to get information, placing the order, receiving the product, getting service, and ultimately thinking of the company again for the next purchase.1 By so doing, you begin to understand who the decision-makers are and what is important to them. You then focus everything you do on them.
So you want to consider marketing as your company's Customer Advocate Department. Marketing people start by thinking from the outside: what customers need and want, how to differentiate the product from what other companies offer, what alternative solutions are available to customers, and so on. Operations people start by thinking from the inside: what the company can realistically do with its available resources and capabilities. In a healthy company, everyone puts serving customers well first, but the marketing/operations dichotomy provides a positive tension to help people come up with optimum solutions.
In our industry, we tend to focus on technical performance. New Focus decided to go with "simply better" as our image, and we have done everything possible to make sure every product offers an advantage, either in performance or in price, in order not to betray that trust.
It's impossible to overemphasize the importance of your company's image. Singer, the sewing machine company, was purchased out of bankruptcy for very little money several years back. It turns out that, in Eastern Bloc countries, Singer had a big reputation for reliable products, and people remembered. Singer now does a booming business capitalizing on its image in Eastern Europe and China, selling not only sewing machines but also household appliances like refrigerators and washing machines.
People buy intelligently. Big companies often make the mistake of trying to "push" new products onto the consumer by creating a demand. That strategy is expensive, and it rarely succeeds if the product is inferior. It's far more efficient to respond to market pull, which you can think of as the natural inclination or flow of the customers' decision-making processes. You take advantage of this pull by understanding customers' needs and wants rather than focusing on what you want them to buy. Needs are easily understood by potential customers, so you educate and convince them that your product can serve their needs better than what is available. It's always easier to sell an improvement than a totally new anything.
For most scientific products, you can get a good estimate just by talking to a few knowledgeable people. In addition to leaders of the field who would use your product, you can talk to magazine editors, professional-society staff and volunteers, and marketing and business people. Once you start the investigation, people will refer you to other sources of ideas. Your questions will become more specific as you develop insights and begin to understand the nuances of what customers need.
When we started Euphonix, a company that makes audio mixers for professional recording studios, our product offered substantial advantages over the competition because it's computerized, compact, and less expensive. We estimated the size of the market by finding out the sales figures of existing companies. In effect, we were saying a mixer is a mixer. We were far off the mark, however, because the people in broadcasting, live stage, movie post-production, and studio recording all had different requirements for software, even for physical size. Studios that rent space preferred large consoles to impress their customers, but performing artists building home studios wanted compact systems that blend in with their furniture. To get the right answers about the size of the market for a specific product, we had to learn to ask the right questions. That process of distinguishing between different types of customer is known as market segmentation.
Gear up your business to meet a market demand that is smaller than you estimated. That strategy makes you conservative, but it's better than running out of money by overexpansion. One common mistake is to ramp up the business to meet a demand that you forecast by extrapolating from early sales results. Your first customers are invariably early adapters and the opinion leaders you targeted. You can expect the rate of sales growth to drop after the initial rise because it takes time to get the word out and convince the rest of the community to become customers. Geoffrey Moore refers to this phenomenon as the chasm in his book Crossing the chasm.2
The lowest price at which you can sell your product is based on the "cost of goods sold," which includes direct material and labor costs plus manufacturing overhead. As a rule of thumb, you should price a technical product at twice your cost of goods sold to stay healthy and grow the business. For instruments, the cost of goods should be about 30% of the selling price (that is, the gross margin should be 70%) to cover the additional costs of selling and services. For OEM products, you can build a successful business with a gross margin as small as 30%.
That sounds simple enough. The problem is that small companies generally don't know what their real costs are. They don't know how to allocate overhead or to track expenses accurately. For example, you put in heroic hours in the beginning to get the job done, but you can't expect the people you hire to do the same. Make sure to base your cost calculation on the assumption of a 40-hour week.
Business considerations can have a lot to do with prices. Federal Express didn't lower its prices when the US Postal Service introduced next-day service because it knew that its customers use FedEx for assurance of on-time delivery. New Focus provides an opposite example-- we priced our tunable lasers very low to discourage competitors from entering the market because we know our costs will come down as we go up the learning curve.
Another important concept in pricing is price/volume elasticity, that is, how much you can increase the sales volume by decreasing the price. About ten years ago, Uniphase slashed the price of HeNe lasers to meet the cost goals of hand-held scanners, then invested to reduce production costs and make it a profitable business. You want to estimate the elasticity to maximize the total profit over the duration of the product life. In our field, people buy a product because they need it more than they want it, so the price/volume curve is less steep for industrial than for consumer products.
In many countries, people expect discounts as a business lubricant. Some companies in our industry also play games with prices in order to make sales. At New Focus, we don't think it's fair to treat people differently, but we don't think we lose too many sales by not giving discounts. By treating everyone the same, we keep our business simple, which ultimately results in lower prices for everyone.
Customers are risk averse. They don't want to spend money to make a mistake. Sometimes they avoid buying a new product because they don't want to look stupid when someone asks them how it works. Remember, people want to be proud of their decisions and to have something to talk about. If you wish to be a good salesperson, do everything possible to put yourself in the customer's shoes.
One sales representative at Iris Medical Instruments consistently outsells others by a factor of three. When I asked for his secret, he replied, "Ask for the order." Sometimes you'll find that a buyer is waiting to be asked because a decision will bring a sense of relief. Good salespeople stay in close contact with all their customers and know where they stand. And good salespeople can usually make good sales projections.
Your distribution channel, the way you get your product into customers' hands, is an important strategic issue because it can significantly impact your cost structure and the way you interact with customers. Most companies in our industry sell to their domestic customers factory direct. Some companies employ local distribution agents (sales representatives who run their own companies) to call on customers when the product requires a local presence to sell or service the product. The rationale is that a customer enjoys one-stop shopping where a salesperson can take orders for ten or more companies at the same time. In recent years, we've seen a trend in which retired technical people create a business to represent two or three companies in a region near their home. If you deal with them, you pay a commission, 15% or so, to avoid the cost of calling on a customer yourself. It's an effective and inexpensive way to have knowledgeable local representation.
Most companies in our industry use sales reps overseas. In most cases, these are exclusive arrangements. You send all the customer inquiries in a given country to them, and they take care of the rest, charging whatever price they see fit. These arrangements, however, have often worked out to the detriment of the US company.
To represent you properly to a customer, a rep must understand your product and your company thoroughly. So a successful relationship takes investment on both sides at a time when the company and its products are both evolving rapidly. Unless everyone involved makes a significant commitment, including the salesperson who calls on customers on your behalf, the working relationship will suffer--the reps may become not much more than high-cost order-takers preoccupied with keeping you away from "their"customers to gain control of the situation.
New Focus took a different tack. We sell factory direct in every country except Japan, where it's customary to buy through reps. Above all, Mr. Maruyama, our rep at Indeco in Japan, is someone I have trusted and worked with for 25 years. In Europe, customer feedback to our direct approach has been overwhelmingly positive. They learn of our products by reading our ads and catalogs, and they communicate efficiently with us electronically when they need sales or service information. We probably could have achieved a deeper penetration with reps--approximately 40% of our sales are overseas, whereas 50% is typical in our industry. But our customers are paying significantly less because they can buy from us directly.
All of us are selling our skills and services. When funds dry up or we run into career difficulties, we may need to redeploy our underlying strengths and capabilities. Money and jobs are out there, really! We'll emerge stronger, but perhaps serving a different set of "customer" needs. With that philosophy, our options are unlimited.
REFERENCES 1. Benson P. Shapiro, V. Kasturi Rangan, and John J. Sviokla, "Staple yourself to an order," Harvard Business Review, July/August, 1992. See also Keeping customers and Seeking customers, two Harvard Business Review books edited by Shapiro, Rangan, and Sviokla.
2.Geoffrey Moore, Crossing the chasm, Harper Collins, 1991.
3. Roger Fisher and William Ury, Getting to yes: negotiating agreement without giving in, Houghton Mifflin, New York, NY, 1981; paperback: Penguin Books, New York, NY, 1983.
Reprinted from and Copyright © Laser Focus World--October 1995
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