Social Media & Digital Marketing in Singapore

The Problem With Comparing Yourself To The Competition Is….

October 9, 2009 – 8:58 am | by Daryl Tay

At best, you’ll be as good as them.

Today the BLUE blog is finally going live after about two months of planning and preparation. It was literally handed to me on my first day of work and I was told to make it a reality. I gotta say, it has got to be the hardest blog I’ve ever set up, compared to signing up with Wordpress with a click.

But one thing I really enjoyed about working on the blog was that I was never told to look at company X or firm Y. It was really built on the belief that we’d get it started and it’ll evolve organically as time goes by. And when you aren’t thinking within the “box” that competitors or other firms have set, then you have much more room to grow.

Maybe you notice one competitor is on Facebook and another is on Twitter so you decide to go on both just to “keep up”, when that money could have been spent on paid search or SEO and doubled your conversion rate, but you didn’t because your “competitor wasn’t doing it”.

Where would the iPhone be if Apple looked at the existing competitors in the market at the time? How about the Wii if all Nintendo did was look at what was in existence in the form of the Playstation and the Xbox? How much money would then-presidential candidate Obama have raised if he chose to do it the same, “tried and tested” way every presidential candidate had before him, through fund raising parties intead of going straight to the voters via new media? Where will your company end up if all you’re doing is looking over your shoulder?

I’m not saying scoping out the competition is a waste of time, definitely not. But you’ll have strengths that they won’t have and they’ll have weaknesses that you don’t. So whatever they’re doing may not work for you and vice versa.

Take my limited real world “experience” with a bucket of salt, but give me the choice and I’d choose to cut my own blazing path than be a follower. Innovation is key.

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  1. 4 Responses to “The Problem With Comparing Yourself To The Competition Is….”

  2. By Stephie on Oct 9, 2009 | Reply

    Often when you compare, you get complacent and do only slightly better to what you’re comparing yourself to.

    Handphone companies did this before the iPhone came out, refusing to innovate but instead just wanted to lead the consumer on with one or two additional functions and coming out with different colors of the same phone. This complacency caused them to lose their competitive edge & market status once something innovative & revolutionary came out. In a way, it’s happening in the digital camera industry too.

  3. By Jo Jordan on Oct 14, 2009 | Reply

    Congratulations! Will watch it closely!

  4. By Daryl Tay on Oct 14, 2009 | Reply

    @Jo: No pressure!!

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