Advice for Beating Your Shop’s Competition
How has Toyota become the dominant company in worldwide automobile sales? After all, it has beaten all of the competition soundly, and now for the first time in 75 years, there’s an outfit selling more than General Motors.
In fact, the company has produced more reliable cars and trucks than anyone else – at a great price point. Toyota has also come up with right-for-the-times hybrid technologies. And, most importantly, the company has figured out what makes an excellent company from within.
So how can you apply the Toyota model to your cabinet shop?
There are three key ways: Identify the competition, produce better products than others do and be a better company than the rest.
Identify Your Campetition
It all starts here: Who are you up against, what do they offer and how do they do it?
You may find that, as a local shop, you’re going head-to-head with the local kitchen dealerships – at least as far as selling kitchen and bathroom cabinet jobs. If this is the case, you should try to find out just what it is these folks provide that you can do better than them. That may be a custom product or service that a dealership may not offer – such as exotic veneers, unusual door styles, detailed shop drawings or fast turnaround times.
The best way to find out what’s going on is to talk to your customers. It always makes sense to ask people who buy from you who else is out there, what they do and, more specifically, why your customer choose them, not you, to do their work for them.
If your customers are builders, go visit them, take them out to lunch. Make it a point to ask them specifically which other shops they deal with.
Go armed with a list of questions: For example, what do those shops offer that is of interest to the builder himself? You may be surprised by the answers. When you hear, “Oh yeah, XYZ Company can always turn an estimate around for us in a couple of days,” that tells you that this kind of speed may be critical to the way that particular builder runs his own business.
Or if you hear, “ABC Company can’t ever seem to deliver on time,” you are being given a great clue as to what your own shop could offer to get a foot in the door.
Ask the builder how often he’s being approached by other shops, and in what manner – phone calls, personal visits, postcards, e-mails?
Or maybe your main market is the designer community. If that’s the case, ask those people what they need from a shop. If the answer is, “Joe’s Cabinet can always give me a sample door so I can show my client what I’ve designed,” well, maybe this is what your shop needs to do with these types of customers.
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