please see the bottom of this message to manage your subscription
August 2004 
Click to visit the Marketplace Masters website
 

The Marketplace MasterTM is a monthly email publication on professional service marketing from Expertise Marketing, LLC.

About This Issue
Last month we discussed some of the common reasons why a firm should differentiate itself from its competitors.

Continuing our theme of differentiation, this month we show you which approaches our research has shown to be the most successful and which are less successful.

Talk Back: We want to hear your feedback on the issues raised by these newsletters. See below for this month's Talk Back feedback. Suzanne Lowe

Suzanne Lowe
Author, Marketplace Masters: How Professional Service Firms Compete to Win
President, Expertise Marketing, LLC


The Top 10 Differentiation Approaches

Most professional service firms embrace a marketing strategy that includes differentiation, but many do so unsuccessfully.

They embark on initiatives that they expect will help them reach their goals, but the reality is that many of their efforts fall short.

We found that the more operationally "deep" the differentiation strategies were (for example, those requiring the implementation and alignment of human resources, financial, change management, technology or training and development processes), the more successful they were.

 

Subscribe
Did a colleague forward this newsletter? Sign up to receive your own copy:

News & Events
You can order Marketplace Masters from Barnes & Noble, Amazon, or your favorite online bookseller.

Professional Marketing North America, article on June 2004 speech

AICPA, Journal of Accountancy, Excerpt: Indicators of Marketing Success: Cultural DNA

Mass High Tech article: Incentive to Innovate

CEO Refresher: Marketplace Masters listed among the best books of the year

Management Consulting News article by Suzanne Lowe: Beauty is Only Skin Deep:" Does Your Firm Truly Embrace Differentiation?

BusinessWeek Online article by Suzanne Lowe: Professional-Services: Innovate from the Inside

Marketplace Masters has also recently appeared in PSMJ Resources;Tax Practice Management; Of Counsel; and Professional Marketing, The North American Journal for Marketing Professional Services.

Past Issues
  • Why Differentiate Your Firm?
  •  
  • What is Marketplace Mastery?
  •  
  • 11 Questions for Marketplace Masters

    Please feel free to forward this newsletter to your colleagues.

     

    Rather than dwell on the "why" in this month's article, we will cover the "what" — what works and what doesn't. Those used frequently are shown in blue.

    The Top Ten Differentiation Approaches that Work

    1. Embarked on an advertising campaign (used infrequently)
    2. Added new-to-our firm services that blend into the services of another industry (used infrequently)
    3. Implemented a formal relationship management program to strengthen our bonds with current clients (used infrequently)
    4. Merged with another firm (used infrequently)
    5. Embarked on a public relations campaign (used frequently)
    6. Entered into joint ventures, alliances or referral networks with firms that extend our services (used frequently)
    7. Added new-to-our-firm services that are within our industry (used frequently)
    8. Created a new visual identity (used frequently)
    9. Hired specialized individuals (used frequently)
    10. Improved or evolved our current services (used frequently)

    The Bottom Sixteen

    1. Acquired another firm (used infrequently)
    2. Developed new risk sharing arrangement with clients (used infrequently)
    3. Created new divisions or subsidiary companies (used infrequently)
    4. Increased the speed of our service delivery (used infrequently)
    5. Decreased our prices (used infrequently)
    6. Eliminated services (used infrequently)
    7. Increased our prices (used infrequently)
    8. Sold parts of the firm (used infrequently)
    9. Developed new-to-the-world services (used infrequently)
    10. Developed a new positioning (used frequently)
    11. Repackaged current services (used frequently)
    12. Communicated our firm's positioning through a new motto or tag line (used frequently)
    13. Trained professionals to follow our proprietary methodologies (used frequently)
    14. Reorganized practices or lines of business (used frequently)
    15. Added new variables to our prices (used frequently)
    16. Used new techniques and tools to "deliver" our services (used frequently)

    At Malcolm Pirnie, Inc., an environmental engineering, science, and consulting firm, the leaders incrementally differentiated the firm by making a series of choices to distinguish its service offerings from its competitors. The firm's results as of the writing of Marketplace Masters were impressive:

    • Pirnie became one of the most honored firms in the environmental profession, recognized for engineering excellence in competitions nationwide; many of these projects reflect the firm's differentiation strategies.
    • Always profitable, the firm doubled in size since its initial forays into differentiation.
    • Its employee retention has been higher than industry norms.

    Over 15 years, the firm proactively and repeatedly pursued small changes that led to big transformations. Yesterday, Malcolm Pirnie provided requested engineering services. Today they are a performance improvement consulting enterprise — improving clients' physical facilities and operating, business and even political functionality by employing a discreet set of policies and organizational structures that demonstrate its independence and objectivity.

    Interested in reading more? Send a note to info@expertisemarketing.com to ask for a copy of our differentiation case study on Malcolm Pirnie.


    Take the confidential, web-based Marketplace Masters professional service firm differentiation assessment test for instant feedback on whether your firm is doing differentiation right.


    Talk Back
    Jason Dinwoodie, Director of Communications for Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe offered up some observations during the June PM Forum in New York:



    "It's critical for professional service firms to distill down the fundamental differences between positioning and differentiation. This is a challenge, especially when clarity is so critical; too often we get mired in words and images. Given the intangibility of our services and their complex nature, professional service marketers need to share these concepts with our firm-wide colleagues in a way that is both accessible and enlightening."

     

    What differentiation and marketing approaches work for your firm? We want to hear your thoughts and observations, and feature your firm in an upcoming issue. Write to us at talkback@marketplacemasters.com.

     

     

    Your feedback is important to us. Please contact us with your comments and questions.

    © 2004 Expertise Marketing, LLC All Rights Reserved

    e-newsletter management by Minerva Solutions, Inc.