How Professional Knowledge Firms Can Differentiate Their Way to Success
E-Book, Englisch, 208 Seiten, E-Book
Reihe: Wiley Professional Advisory Services
ISBN: 978-0-470-87751-7
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Positioning for Professionals shows how awell-defined value proposition can help professional service firmscreate their own success instead of copying the success of others,including such concepts as:
* How and why professional service brands become homogenized
* Why standing for everything is the same as standing fornothing
* Why there's no such thing as full service
* Deep and narrow as a strategic imperative
* Why it's better to be a profit leader than a marketleader
* Differentiation and price premiums
* How to map your brand on the matrix of relevance anddifferentiation
* How to define a value proposition that will make your firmintensely appealing to the customers who want you for what you dobest
Based on the proven premise that the most profitable businessstrategy is not to aim at the center of the market, but rather atthe edges, Positioning for Professionals is written forleaders, managers, and other senior executives of service companiesin with a particular emphasis on professional service firms.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction.
Chapter 1 Size Is Not a Strategy.
Maintaining Pricing Integrity.
Better to Be a Profit Leader than a Market Leader.
Why Bigness Doesn't Lead to Greatness.
Hired to Be Effective, Not Efficient.
Chapter 2 How and Why Brands Become Homogenized.
The Urge to Copy.
The Folly of All-In-One.
Line Extension Is Not Branding.
There's No Such Thing as Full Service.
The Natural Fear of Focus
Chapter 3 The Mature Company's Identity Crisis.
Differentiation and Price Premiums.
Columbus, Not Napoleon.
The Diffusion of Identity.
Landing in No-Man's Land.
Strategy at the Edges.
Not Best Practices, but Next Practices.
Chapter 4 Expanding Business by Narrowing Focus.
There's No Such Thing as a General Market.
Vertical Success versus Horizontal Success.
The Strategic Value of Going Deep.
Chapter 5 Positioning as the Centerpiece of BusinessStrategy.
What Are You Really Selling?
Becoming Hard to Imitate.
Two Critical Dimensions of an Effective Value Proposition.
A Category of One.
A Brand Is the Customer's Idea of the Product.
Natural Outcomes of a Powerful Value Proposition.
Chapter 6 Building Brand Boundaries.
Brand Boundary 1: Calling.
Brand Boundary 2: Customers.
Brand Boundary 3: Competencies.
Brand Boundary 4: Culture.
The Confluence of Calling, Customers, Competencies, andCulture.
Chapter 7 Validating the Value Proposition.
Be Rooted in the Future, Not the Past.
The Value Proposition Team.
Asking the Right Questions.
Chapter 8 Without Execution, There Is No Strategy.
Services.
Staffing.
Self-Promotion.
Systems.
Staging.
Executing a Positioning Strategy with Alignment Teams.
Rebuilding Your Ship While at Sea.
Chapter 9 Getting Paid for Creating Value.
The Perils of Cost-Based Compensation.
Changing the Language.
Pricing as a Core Competency.
Why a Value-Based Approach is in the Client's BestInterest.
The Alignment of Incentives.
Creating a Virtuous Circle.
Chapter 10 A New and Better Way to Price ProfessionalServices.
Forms of Value-Based Pricing.
The Right Clients for Outcome-Based Agreements.
The True Meaning of Partnership.
Uncovering Missed Opportunities to Make Pricing a CoreCompetency.
Key Questions in Setting a Value-Based Price.
If Complex Global Companies Can Do It, So Can You.
Better Time Tracking Is Not the Answer.
Thinking of Compensation Plans as a Stock Portfolio.
Setting the Stage for a Value-Based Approach toCompensation.
A Declaration of Value.
Appendix A: The Before-and-After Survey.
Appendix B: More Ways to Differentiate Your Brand.
Appendix C: Indicators of the Firm's Success.
Notes.
About the Author.
Index.