Slaying Goliath: How Small Companies Can Compete Against Their Large Competitors
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Transcript of Slaying Goliath: How Small Companies Can Compete Against Their Large Competitors
SLAYING GOLIATH:How Small Companies Can Compete Against Their Large Competitors
Foreword ....................................................................................................................... 1
Chapter 1: Capitalizing on Your Advantages ...................................................................... 2
Strategy 1: Creating an Information Advantage ................................................................. 3
11 Ways to Maximize the Information You Generate from the Outside World .................. 4
Strategy 2: Creating a Time Advantage ............................................................................ 7
Strategy 3: Creating a Scope Advantage ......................................................................... 10
Strategy 4: Creating a Scale Advantage .......................................................................... 12
Strategy 5: Creating an Innovation Advantage ................................................................. 14
Why Innovation is Challenging for Large Companies................................................... 15
Strategy 6: Setting Your Operating Point Closer to the Funnel Singularity .......................... 17
Chapter 2: Attenuating Larger Companies’ Strengths ....................................................... 20
Strength 1: Great Senior Managers and Top Technical Talent ........................................... 21
5 Tips for Leveraging a Smaller Team of Technical Talent ........................................... 22
Strength 2: A Technology Platform in Place with Customers ............................................. 23
Strength 3: A Deep Patent Portfolio and Ongoing New Patents ......................................... 25
Strength 4: User Comfort with a Product’s User Interface Look and Feel ........................... 26
Strength 5: Well-Established and Plentiful Customer Relationships .................................. 27
3 Types of Large Company Customer Relationships .................................................... 28
Strength 6: Well-Developed Distribution Channels........................................................... 29
Strength 7: A Brand Name and Reputation .................................................................... 31
A Template for Creating and Understanding Brand Associations .................................. 33
Chapter 3: Defending Against Larger Companies’ Attacks ................................................ 34
The Nature of Large Company Attacks ........................................................................... 35
5 Factors that Influence How Aggressively Large Companies Attack ............................ 36
How to Defend Against Large Company Attacks .............................................................. 37
Chapter 4: Executing Against Execution ......................................................................... 41
Genetically Engineer Your Organization .......................................................................... 43
Create Challenging Focal Points .................................................................................... 44
Sample Goals for Every Department ......................................................................... 45
Measure Progress and Make Frequent Adjustments to Close Gaps ................................... 46
Be Flexible .................................................................................................................. 46
Wake Up to Your Current Situation ................................................................................ 47
End Note .................................................................................................................... 49
Appendix .................................................................................................................... 50
Slaying Goliath: How Small Companies Can Compete Against Their Large Competitors | 1
We’ve all heard the story of David and Goliath. It’s a classic
metaphor for small versus big, smarts and strategy versus
power and resources. It’s an allegory that promotes hope for
the little guy. When bigger competitors appear too large to
attack, David’s triumph is a reminder that there’s vulnerabil-
ity somewhere — you just have to identify and attack it.
Of course, that’s often much easier said than done. David
never had to go up against the likes of IBM, Computer
Associates, BMC, or Microsoft. Some expansion-stage tech-
nology companies wage that war every day and it’s not one
that most of them win. That doesn’t mean that there aren’t
opportunities in markets where Goliaths exist, however.
Let’s say that you’re the CEO of an expansion-stage com-
pany in a $2 billion market and your behemoth competitor
already owns 60 percent of it. Yes, they’re dominating, and
trying to defeat them is an uphill battle you can’t — and
probably shouldn’t — fight. However, there’s still 40 percent
of that $2 billion market that your behemoth competitor
does not control. If you can manage to take 5 percent of the
total remaining market and steal as little as 1 percent away
from that big competitor, you’re looking at potential revenue
that exceeds $50 million.
The challenge is actually identifying your biggest competi-
tors’ vulnerabilities and formulating a plan of attack. What
can you do better than those competitors? What market pain
point are they ignoring? What advantages does your smaller,
nimbler business have relative to customer engagement, tal-
ent management, or new market opportunities?
If you are going to succeed in a David versus Goliath type of
battle, you must be able to show your customers and pros-
pects the value of a business that’s focused on one product
and one pain point. You’re not going to try to sell them a
suite of solutions that they don’t need — just the thing that
fixes their problem.
“Slaying Goliath: How Small Companies Can Compete
Against Their Large Competitors” is intended for CEOs and
senior executives of expansion-stage companies and shows
you how to build a long-term defensible competitive advan-
tage over larger companies. Specifically, you’ll learn how to
capitalize on the natural advantage your smaller company
has over its larger competitors, minimize those larger corpo-
rations’ inherent strengths, and execute against your vision
in a way that allows you to keep your foot on the gas and the
pressure on bigger competitors to respond.
The bottom line is that winning in a market that’s dominated
by a big business isn’t easy. But it’s not impossible. Remem-
ber, all you need to excel is a very small piece of their pie.
So, what’s your Goliath’s biggest weakness (or your crowded
market’s biggest need) and how well is your company posi-
tioned to go after it?
Scott Maxwell Senior Managing Director and Founder OpenView Venture Partners
Foreword
Slaying Goliath: How Small Companies Can Compete Against Their Large Competitors | 2
Chapter 1:
Capitalizing on Your AdvantagesIn theory, David shouldn’t have had a chance against Goliath. After all, Goliath was a grizzled
warrior with a coat of armor and a massive sword. David, on the other hand, was at least half
Goliath’s size and showed up to the battle with little more than a sling and five stones.
But that didn’t seem to hinder his confidence. That’s probably because David recognized that his
opponent’s advantages (brute strength and size) could also be turned into disadvantages that he
could capitalize on. The same principle holds true for expansion-stage technology companies. This
chapter outlines six strategies that can help small, expansion-stage technology businesses recog-
nize and take advantage of their competitive advantages and use them to expose their much
larger competitors. In the end, that’s the fastest and easiest path to winning the battle against
any proverbial Goliath.
Slaying Goliath: How Small Companies Can Compete Against Their Large Competitors | 3
Strategy 1: Creating an Information Advantage
Expansion-stage companies have the natural advantage
of being closer to their customers than large companies
are. Make the most of this by increasing the flow of
information into your company.
What melts more slowly, a small snowball or a large one? All things being equal,
the large snowball will melt more slowly because its outer layer of snow insulates
the snow inside. By contrast, more of the snow in the small snowball is exposed to
the outside world, and it therefore reacts to the environment faster.
Big companies have the same basic geometry as a large snowball. Most of them have a
much harder time getting a true feel for their outside world (i.e., their customers, market,
and competition) than small companies do. This has nothing to do with the quality of the people who work there or the com-
pany itself, it’s just a natural disadvantage that large companies have relative to small ones.
So how can you exploit this opportunity? First, create an advantage by maximizing the information you generate from the outside
world (i.e., your customers, non-customers, competitors, suppliers, and others outside of your company’s walls). Then exploit that
advantage by using this information to make adjustments to all aspects of your business (e.g., product features/functions, pricing
approaches, specific technologies, customer service process, marketing messages, distribution approaches, etc.).
Unfortunately, as companies evolve, they naturally lose touch with their customers. The good news is that every company has
the opportunity to increase the flow of information coming in. If you address this issue early in your company’s life, you will
have a tremendous advantage not only against larger companies, but competitors your own size, too.
Slaying Goliath: How Small Companies Can Compete Against Their Large Competitors | 4
11 Ways to Maximize the Information You Generate from the Outside World In a rapidly expanding digital world, it’s tempting to gather exceedingly large amounts of data simply for the sake of collecting
and having access to it. However, hoarding volumes of data won’t do you much good if it’s not actually useful.
In fact, it will likely just overwhelm your team. Instead, the key to maximizing your information-gathering efforts is to uncover
truly valuable information — not data — that is contextually relevant and beneficial. Ultimately, that can be achieved by
performing one or all of these activities:
ONE. Expose all of your employees to your customers.
Your employees walk around with mental models of your customers, including their needs, the tech-
nology that will best meet their needs, how they interact with your product, the best approaches to
helping them resolve issues, and the marketing messages that will best resonate with them. Your
employees use this mental model to help them make decisions. The better their mental model aligns
with reality, the better their decision-making. That’s why everyone in your organization, or at least all
key decision makers, should be interacting with customers to better their understanding of them.
TWO. Ask your salespeople.
Salespeople generally have a very good view of how prospects and customers perceive all aspects of
your company. Speak to several of them to help separate the overarching themes from the one-off
situations. Conduct pipeline reviews to study each prospect situation to see where you stand in the
process. Perform loss reviews as well. Most loss reviews come from the salesperson’s presumptions.
A better approach is to ask the prospect why he or she chose a competitor and for feedback on what
you can do better.
THREE. Study your customer service interactions.
Tracking trouble tickets is one of the best ways to determine how your customers are doing with your
product and how you are servicing them. If you have customer service reps, listen to the phone calls,
ask them about their interactions, give them a few questions to ask your customers, and then gather
the feedback. Once a trouble ticket is closed, ask your customer for feedback on the process.
Slaying Goliath: How Small Companies Can Compete Against Their Large Competitors | 5
FOUR. Monitor the Internet.
Monitor social networking sites, Internet forums, message boards, blogs, and other sites. There is a
tremendous amount of information available online. Most people reading this already know what to
do. If you don’t, enter your company and product name into Google and start reading.
FIVE. Ask your customers.
Once customers have purchased your product, most will be willing to give you detailed feedback
because they want you to continue getting better. User conferences, advisory boards, and surveys
are great ways to get information. Another approach is to sit down with customers periodically to
really get to know them.
SIX. Ask industry analysts.
Some product markets have industry analysts who cover providers, customers, and prospects.
Good analysts tend to have an accurate pulse on the perceptions in the market. Be careful,
though, because they often have a large-company bias.
SEVEN. Use your website.
Incorporate Web analytics into your website and then mine the results for useful information.
Beyond building better usability and conversion into your website, the Web data can be very useful
for improving various functions. For example, visitor interaction with your product pages can tell you
a lot about their interests. Interaction with your customer self-service pages can tell you a lot about
their issues with your products.
EIGHT. Use your product.
Incorporate data gathering into your product and then mine that data for useful information. When
the product is browser-based, it’s a pretty straightforward process of instrumenting your Web inter-
actions with the customer using Web analytics. When the product is on the customer site, the issues
become trickier because privacy issues are more amplified and many customers do not want infor-
mation flowing out of their computer systems. That said, many customers will still allow the infor-
mation sharing if it’s done properly.
Slaying Goliath: How Small Companies Can Compete Against Their Large Competitors | 6
NINE. Find out what your competitors are doing.
Make a list of things you would like to know about your competitors and then get creative about how
you are going to (legally and ethically) get the information. Study their websites, visit their booths at
conferences, and use resources such as Hitwise, Compete, and Alexa.
TEN. Find out what related companies are doing.
Do the same things you would do to find out more about your competitors, but also call the person
who shares your role at a related company and invite them to lunch. Ask about their best practices.
You can probably get and share some good ideas, as both sides will be more open given you are not
competitors.
ELEVEN. Share what you’ve learned.
Work this knowledge into your management meetings, company wiki, e-mail, management reports,
employee feedback systems, and all other vehicles you have to manage/monitor progress and commu-
nicate internally.
This list is intended to generate ideas, not mandate all of the things you need to do right away. If you try to do too much, you
will water down your efforts and actually get less useful information. Remember it is information, not data, that you are looking
for. Also, you need to spend the vast majority of your time building a great product and then selling and servicing it. Start with
the easy steps, and increase the activities as you grow.
A natural question is, why can’t large companies execute against the same tactics? They can, and some do. But they still have
the natural disadvantage of being the large snowball. If the large company and the small company execute these tactics equally
well, the small company will have the edge.
Slaying Goliath: How Small Companies Can Compete Against Their Large Competitors | 7
Strategy 2: Creating a Time Advantage
Large companies have a natural disadvantage as they grow because it takes them
longer to get things done. An expansion-stage company, however, can turn on a dime.
As companies grow, solid communication between employees becomes much more difficult. To try to have perfect communication,
the employees would have to spend all their time communicating internally, rather than focusing on customers.
To solve this problem, people divide up into departments and communicate at the department level rather than at the individual
level. They use all kinds of vehicles (phone calls, meetings, e-mails, business process software, blogs, content/information man-
agement systems, and videoconferencing) and a host of other approaches to discuss, review, approve, adjust, and so on.
Even so, department members still have trouble communicating. So they organize into divisions. The divisions communicate
through a low-bandwidth communication pipe called a VP (or an SVP, EVP, or a president), using all of the communication
vehicles noted above. Even then, there are meetings to contend with — the ultimate bottleneck for large companies — where
all of the most important decisions are made.
What are the implications of that departmental culture? One of the most obvious is the production of poorly filtered information
that lacks a prioritized, efficient process for acting on it. For instance, think about the old summer camp game of “Telephone,”
where a number of people sit in a circle and one person whispers a story into the ear of the person sitting next to them. That
process continues until the story reaches the person who originally told it. By then, the story has been interpreted and verbally
annotated to the point where the person who created the story doesn’t recognize it anymore.
Slaying Goliath: How Small Companies Can Compete Against Their Large Competitors | 8
The information flow in larger corporations is very similar. As information makes its way through the organizational pipeline,
it typically is filtered and stripped of key details and nuance, and boiled down to only its most important elements. In the pro-
cess, good information can be lost and bad information can embed itself into the company.
Departmental politics can also create internal issues that eat away at senior managers’ time, forcing them into meeting or
inbox gridlock, and killing their productivity. That not only impacts those managers’ ability to make key long-term decisions on
smaller products or newer markets, it also causes them to lose focus on the one thing that really matters — the biggest needs
of their customers. Even if those senior managers are able to determine the right course of action, corporate hierarchy and orga-
nizational change management can make it difficult to actually get it done.
The result of all these issues is that planning horizons tend to be in years, rather than days, weeks, or even months. It’s the only
way to keep all the groups in rough alignment. So how do you capitalize on the larger company’s disadvantage? By being nimble
and able to pivot. Here are some ways to do so:
Pick a product market that is rapidly evolving or has dynamic needs or tastes. Markets with
needs or interests that change
quickly are perfect for small
companies — the video gaming
industry is a great example. It
is difficult for large companies
to move at the pace of change
required to meet the needs of
these types of markets.
Pick a product market that has significant long-term innovation potential. The innovations that
can take place between a large
company’s release cycles are
tremendous. The large company
essentially designs and launches
its missiles, but by the time they
hit, the innovation has moved
significantly beyond where they
were aimed.
Build your market before the large companies know what hit them. The extreme approach
would be staying in stealth mode
until all the release details are
worked out, and then exploding
into the market. This is much
easier said than done, but the-
matically the idea is to build your
early market quickly before large
companies have time to act.
Use newer technologies and business model components. You are probably aiming at the early adopters, at least
initially, so this approach will be advantageous, or at least somewhat expected, for a smaller company. Also, although
both you and the large company have to go up the learning curve on the new technology, you should be able to do so
more quickly due to your small size.
1 2 3
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Slaying Goliath: How Small Companies Can Compete Against Their Large Competitors | 9
Package your whole product offering to include innovations in product, marketing, sales, and service all at once. When
large companies must create
change in multiple departments
and divisions, small companies’
time-based advantage is amplified
(due to the communication and
decision-making issues).
Rapidly evolve all aspects of your business. Use your informa-
tion advantage — and the obser-
vation that large companies must
have long time horizons — to
rapidly move forward all aspects
of your business, such as your
product, marketing messages, dis-
tribution approach, and customer
service. The key is to get ahead of
the target before the large com-
pany’s missiles land.
Put your senior management, particularly your CEO, out in the field as much as possible. Get
outside the company and meet
with customers, prospects, the
press, industry analysts, and
others. It will give you better
information and another edge over
large companies.
The bottom line is that it takes large companies a significant amount of time to get important things accomplished, and change
is difficult, even for the best companies. Use your smaller size to capitalize on opportunities quickly, change direction rapidly
when you need to, and improve your strategic position.
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