Ask HN: just found a big competitor for my niche. What do I do?
I have been talking with some local martial arts studios about building tracking software for their businesses using a SaaS model. As part of the research process I stumbled across this company:
http://www.mindbodyonline.com/ http://www.inc.com/inc5000/profile/mindbody
On one hand I feel like my solution will be a better fit for my customers, but this company provides a very compelling and similar solution that is already built.
Has anyone been in a similar situation? How did you handle talking to customers about the competitor to learn how you could do a better job?
5 comments
[ 6.4 ms ] story [ 22.4 ms ] threadYou already say that your solution will be a better fit for your customers; if that's the case, it should be simple for you to draw up a mental list of differentiators that can constitute your "unique value proposition", and pull these out when a prospect asks why they should choose you. (Hint: price is not always a great differentiator.)
If you run into prospects who are already using the competing solution, ask them how it's working out for them, and what kind of things they wish it did differently.
At this time the other company has a more "feature rich" solution already built which is very similar to what I would provide. My product is basically vaporware today.
I'm wondering how to approach my customers about this other site without pushing them to that solution. Sounds like you are suggesting to use a strong list of differentiators. That seems like a good idea.
Talking to some of the other guy's customers sounds good too.
One awesome book that's helped me with this is "Spin Selling" by Neil Rackham. It's a straightforward method to having productive sales discussions and is based on a quantitative grounding. Their approach is discussion based and a co-exploration, so you're just talking to uncover needs instead of pushing your product. Go check it out.
If you get there first and/or make some deals with organizations (martial arts clubs tend to talk to each other a lot and organize themselves into hierarchies), you could still carve out a chunk of the market.