To maximize profit, managers have pursued the Holy Grail of becoming number one or two in their industries. Recently, however, new measures of service industries like software and banking suggest that customer loyalty is a more important determinant of profit.

--James Heskett, et. al., “Putting the Service-Profit Chain to Work,” Harvard Business Review

Product companies seek to become market-share leaders. To do this, they look to launch and manage a portfolio of differentiated products that have specific features most appealing to a specific target audience for a reasonable (but as high as possible) price.

According to the famous and widely accepted PIMS (Profit Impact of Marketing Strategies) study, profit increases with market share. So, of course, product companies (and sometimes those that are marketing professional services) seek market share as a core strategic objective.

The jackpot situation for a product company is to

  1. Uncover an unmet market need for a product within its capability to develop and market

  2. Make that product unique or as much as possible unlike products already available in the market

  3. Launch the product with a strong marketing and branding campaign, supported by market research, that shapes the “personality” and appeal of the product so it can gain market share as quickly and aggressively as possible

  4. Develop the product to be difficult to imitate, also difficult to imitate quickly, thus keeping its hold on this profitable market for as long as possible

That is the widely accepted model of product marketing taught in many business schools and advocated by many management and marketing consulting firms. Therefore, when presented with a new business plan or product offering, we classically trained business types are programmed to ask questions such as these:

  • How large is the market?

  • What will make your offering unique?

  • How will you communicate your marketplace differentiation?

  • What are the barriers to entry?

  • What will prevent other firms from copying you and rendering your product a commodity, thus erasing any market differentiation you might enjoy, pressuring your prices, and squeezing your profits?

Unfortunately, the above business model and questions do not usually apply to professional services firms.

What many of us know and learned from respected business thinkers about market research, launching new services, branding, and differentiation can become an Achilles heel if applied to our service firms.

How can following such (seemingly) solid business thinking hurt us?

Consider the following scenario: a business consultant trained in classical “business and marketing strategy” tries to help a would-be entrepreneur to start a business that will succeed financially and grow.

Here is how their conversation might develop:

Consultant: Nice to meet you. I am looking forward to discussing your potential new business venture. What kind of business are you thinking of starting?

Entrepreneur: Glad to meet you, too. I'm a lawyer (or accountant or consultant or engineer—this story applies to all) and have been for 20 years at well-known law firms and want to make a go of it with a few other partners of mine. I'm going to start my own law firm in Boston.

Consultant: Great. I'm going to ask you a few questions to help you evaluate the viability and potential of your new business and help you with your marketing strategy. Ready?

Entrepreneur: As I'm new to professional services marketing, I'm looking forward to it. Fire away.

Consultant: What's the size of the market?

Entrepreneur: I have no idea, don't plan to find out, and probably won't because it's not really important. Suffice it to say, there's enough business for me to start a firm and grow it.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Mike Schultz

Mike Schultz is president of RAIN Group, a global sales training and performance improvement company, and director of the RAIN Group Center for Sales Research. He is the bestselling author of Rainmaking Conversations and Insight Selling. He also writes for the RAIN Selling Blog.

LinkedIn: Mike Schultz

Twitter: @mike_schultz

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