 I came across an eight-year-old article the other day entitled Discovering New Points of Differentiation, by Ian MacMillan and Rita McGrath (not online, you can buy it from HBS).
It provides a rigorous approach to identifying ways to differentiate
your company from competitors on more than just product or service.
Here's a synopsis:
The first step is to map the 'consumption
chain', the various points at which your customers and potential
customers 'touch' (or could touch) your product or service:
- The point of first awareness (e.g. through marketing materials or advertising)
- The point of locating your product or service (initial purchase or direct pitch)
- The point of making the decision between your and competitors' offerings
- The point of ordering and purchasing your offering
- The point of receiving delivery of your offering
- The point of inspecting and processing receipt of your offering
- The point of installing or implementing use of your offering
- The point of paying for your offering
- The point of storing your offering between uses
- The point of moving your offering from one location to another
- The point of using your product or service
- The point of receiving support services from you
- The point of returning or exchanging your offering
- The point of repairing, maintaining and upgrading your offering
- The point of disposing of your offering
Many
companies today are using what has become known as 'cultural
anthropology' -- observing the purchase, delivery and use of your
offering by customers, from the customer's perspective, to find ways to
improve it, and this technique can also be used to explore
differentiation opportunities.
The second step of the approach is to ask the who, what, when, where and how questions at each of the 15 touch-points:
- Who:
Who is with the customer at this touch-point, and how do they influence
the customer, and who else might be with the customer at each point who
could have an impact on the customer experience?
- What: What is
the customer doing at each touch-point and what might they prefer to be
doing, what problems might they be encountering (not necessarily due to
your offering) and what else could you do to mitigate any problems or
enhance their experience?
- When: At what time of
day/month/year/life do customers reach this touch-point in using your
offering, and when else might they be used?
- Where: Where
physically are your customers at each touch-point, where might they
rather be, and where else might they benefit from using it?
- How:
How does your offering meet the customers' needs, how could it do so
better, and how else might they use your offering at each touch-point?
What
you end up with is a 15 x 5 matrix, in which each cell is analyzed for
differentiating opportunities. Suppose for example your offering is
nursing care and you're looking at touch-point 11, the point of using
your service. You might differentiate by who (i.e. what qualifications,
what age, gender etc.) provides the care, or who you take with you who
might offer synergistic services. You might differentiate by what you
do (e.g. offering additional massage services to bedridden customers,
or using a holistic healing process). You might differentiate on when
you offer your service (e.g. 24-hour on-call, or only when you receive
an emergency signal from the customer's beeper). You might
differentiate by where you offer the service (in the customer's own
home, or in a mobile fully-equipped van). And you might differentiate
by how your service meets the needs not only of the patient, but of the
patient's family and other caregivers, perhaps with supplemental
training and counseling.
These are just examples off the top of
my head. The authors provide more extensive examples. I kind of like
the idea of merging the 'How' and 'What' questions with the Strategy Canvas
and the six utility levels (productivity, simplicity, convenience,
risk, fun & image, and environmental friendliness) that Kim and
Mauborgne suggest in their Blue Ocean Strategy book (sample canvas illustrated above).
Is differentiating different from innovation? Looking at Christensen's three types of innovation
-- sustaining, low-end disruptive and new-market disruptive, I'd
suggest that since your focus is on existing and potential customers,
this differentiation approach is best suited to sustaining innovation
and, in some cases, low-end disruptive innovation (when your cultural
anthropology uncovers over-served customers). In that sense MacMillan
and McGrath's approach is more at the incremental, continuous
improvement end of the innovation spectrum. As Christensen has pointed
out, sometimes an intense focus on customers can actually blind you to
the opportunities for more radical innovation with entirely new
customer sets and new markets.
Nevertheless, I like the rigour of this approach, and I think it makes a useful addition to any innovator's toolkit.
|