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We all face giants, those competitors who seem to have more people, budgets, and resources than we can ever hope to have. And despite the uphill fight, we're asked to not only compete but also win. Worse, we're asked to assume this Herculean task with smaller budgets and fewer people than we had last fiscal year.

On paper, it sounds crazy—in person, it sounds even worse, of course—but it's the reality we're working under. We're all being asked to do more with less. So what are we supposed to do?

In Killing Giants: 10 Strategies to Topple the Goliath In Your Industry (Portfolio, March 2011), I explain not only why it's possible to battle goliath but also why it's a means to the best work you'll ever do in your career.

Our best thinking comes when we're faced with constraints. Maybe we're just better art critics than we are artists, but given the need to focus within the confines of the possible we find a surprising insight: Though our resources may be limited, our ingenuity is freed.

We're in an age of ideas now, and our worth to our employers is no longer bound by the economic resources put in our care. Our value springs from the quality of our ideas, the passion we bring to breathing life into them, and the discipline we apply to their execution in the market. There is no shortage of this new resource: It's us, and what resides in our heads and hearts.

Do you need to topple the giant in your industry? Are you asked to play the hand you've been dealt as skillfully as possible? Here are three ideas you can put to work today to win the fights you're not supposed to win.

1. Seize the microphone

Who is the voice in your market? Is your giant controlling the dialogue, or is there just a lot of noise, with the major players all jockeying for bragging rights in the "speeds and feeds" outlets? If no one is the voice, be the voice. Even if you're not the biggest player. Especially if you're not the biggest player.

Consider Go Daddy, a company that was languishing with a 16% share in the domain-name registration business when it swung into action after realizing that customers simply hadn't heard of them. Founder Bob Parsons launched his response in 2004, the company's first Super Bowl. "The decision to run the ad on the Super Bowl was right as rain," he told me.

You may not like its ads—many don't, including Barbara Lippert of Ad Week, who described them as "the lowest of the low." But as a student of marketing, you can't deny that Go Daddy ads succeed in selling domain names. The company's focus on advertising as a "commercial" activity, driving incremental volume, is in stark contrast to the "advertising as theater" mentality so prevalent in the current marketing literature.

Go Daddy's willingness to step up to and seize the microphone has made it not only the top player in the industry but also one that is growing at a faster rate than any of its competitors.

2. Win in the last three feet

Don't grind your teeth because the giant you face is spending millions on splashy marketing campaigns and product launches—focus instead on stealing their customers. Any time a giant drives millions of consumers to storefronts or search engines, you're going to have access to the most qualified traffic you'll ever have. So enter the conversation at the point of purchase, and concentrate on winning in the last three feet.

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Killing Giants: Three Rules for Toppling the Goliath in Your Industry

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Stephen Denny

Stephen Denny is managing director at Denny Leinberger Strategy, which focuses on spotting business performance trends and giving clients the tools and insights to act on them so they can achieve real-world financial results. He is a co-author (with Paul Leinberger) of Unfiltered Marketing: 5 Rules to Win Back Trust, Credibility, and Customers in a Digitally Distracted World.

LinkedIn: Stephen Denny

Twitter: @Note_to_CMO