| Imagine
your one shop high street business has been doing well until
the opening of a brand new town-centre redevelopment packed
with major retailers, including one of your competitors. What
do you do? Decide to wave the white flag and call it a day?
Or find a way for your business to keep trading alongside
the competition?
It may not necessarily be pressure from larger competitors
that forces a need for change in smaller businesses. Many
traditional industries have contracted and all but disappeared,
giving way to cheaper imports or new technologies. The way
many small outlets have survived is by changing business direction
and finding a niche market in which to operate profitably.
This usually involves a particular group of customers whose
needs they can serve really well.
There are three common situations related to changes in the
market that pose a real threat to smaller businesses.
- The market is expanding and has now caught the attention
of big corporations with their massive marketing and buying
power.
- The market is maturing and it is getting overcrowded or
products are pouring in from abroad.
- The market is declining due to changing habits, out-of-date
technology or population movements.
Each situation involves different threats and offers different
opportunities, but the brave entrepreneur who can plan and
take action can still be successful in any of them.
The threat
There are several ways to react when faced with a threat
to your business:
- You can compete head on – but this usually ends
in a price war that you are unlikely to benefit from in
the long term.
- You can sell out – a good strategy if you can spot
the threat early enough to allow a potential purchaser time
to turn the business round.
- You can change your business model – say by moving
from manufacturing to importing, or to selling by direct
mail or online rather than retail.
- You can find or create a niche market – where you
can find shelter from the mainstream storm.
Pros and cons of a niche market
Operating a business in a niche means looking for groups
of customers with distinctive traits who may be looking for
a special combination of benefits. Consequently, a niche market
is, by definition, limited – but that does not necessarily
mean it is unprofitable. There are several niche sports car
manufacturers in the motor industry that make excellent profits,
for instance.
A niche market exists on the fringes and so is less exposed
to different commercial pressures than larger markets. By
the same token, it has less marketing exposure. Prospective
customers are fewer, but possibly easier to identify and target.
There should also be fewer competitors, but this is because
there is less product to compete over.
Living with the competition
Surprisingly, your best ally can often be your larger competitors.
The key is to understand the dynamics of the market and the
characteristics of the main players, particularly your competition.
That way you can usually get them to help you and keep you
alive rather than squash you. This is because you can develop
a beneficial relationship with them by filling the gaps in
their services.
Most large competitors are quite cumbersome. They can depend
on rigid systems for efficiency that prevent flexibility or
a personal approach. They want to sell neatly packaged (and
managed) solutions and so don’t like non-routine requests.
Growth is their mantra.
What does this mean for you if you face being crushed, squeezed
or starved? The answer is to find a niche that is too small,
too difficult, too variable or too personal for the big corporations
to want to deal with. That said, you have to look objectively
at your business, and see which of these areas you can address
most profitably because of your:
- Specialised skills.
- Greater flexibility.
- Convenient location.
- Unique solutions.
Above all, you need to seek your business’s unique
selling point, or USP.
Businesses under threat need to take the initiative. A small
garden centre, for example, will soon be out-priced by the
big DIY outlets that often have a garden centre in-house.
But these may not offer home delivery of plants, and they
probably don’t have the staff resources to give the
detailed gardening advice that people appreciate.
It is vital to research your potential market thoroughly:
test it and keep monitoring it – be prepared to change
direction again if necessary.
Mining a residual market
A by-product of the various technology revolutions is that
there are often situations where large suppliers abandon a
market because the technology has been superceded. However,
there may be a large number of people who continue to use
it, either because they’re happy with it or they can’t
afford to upgrade equipment. This creates an after-market
for consumables or spares that can last many years.
For example, Gestetner virtually created the market for stencil
duplicators and built a worldwide network. Many competitors
joined in. However, as photocopiers took over, most of the
rivals dropped out or even sold their duplicator divisions
to Gestetner. So, for many years, it enjoyed a near-monopoly
of a gradually declining but still profitable market, particularly
in developing countries.
In another case, a Mini car restorer managed to buy a huge
stock of spares, some of which were very rare, from a distributor
who wanted to get out of what was, as far as he was concerned,
a dying market. Combining this with his restoration activities,
the restorer has created an award-winning business catering
to classic car enthusiasts around the world.
There are many instances, both local and national, where
existing suppliers abandon a market which still has life in
it – either because they are no longer interested or
because they see richer pickings elsewhere. This leaves a
vacuum for people who genuinely know and care about that market
to create a specialist niche business which can thrive for
a surprisingly long time.
When a market is abandoned by a business, it may be prescient
of you to get involved and pick up fantastic bargains from
big suppliers who want to offload their stock. Moreover, they
may be only too pleased to have an outlet still available
for their customers and so will pass their business on to
you.
Handling a niche
What can you do to make inroads into a niche market?
- Look to diversify in areas where you know you can offer
a different service or different product.
- Do plenty of market research. A common mistake that many
business owners make is to misread the market. Remember
that the turnover you need to survive probably requires
customers from a larger catchment area than when you were
offering a more generalised product or service.
- Be prepared to use new channels to reach customers. For
example, Steve Pateman found that men prefer to buy ladies’
shoes for themselves direct, via the Internet or mail order,
rather than via retail outlets.
- Explain your uniqueness in your customers’ terms.
- Study pricing carefully. People are usually reticent when
it comes to discussing money and consequently smaller businesses
often tend to over-price or under-price. Research the competition,
and remember that people will pay more for a specialist
service.
- Remember that a niche business evolves like any other.
You have to keep developing your niche to keep up with customer
demands.
It is a consumer and market led world. It is up to you to
find out what the market wants and make sure you can offer
it in a different and more attractive way than your larger
competitors. However, remember that consumer needs and expectations
are changing constantly and rapidly. What customers wanted
yesterday may not be what they demand tomorrow, so be prepared
to change again.
Back |