Hardwood Floors June/July 2026
Sales Savvy (Continued) Businesses are facing a pandemic identity crisis. Merger and acquisition activity is high, leaving many organizations resembling blended families. These newly combined companies are one part legacy and one part acquisition. Additionally, product commoditization and service convergence create a camouflaging effect where all options look the same. That is a dangerous position to be in. When buyers see no meaningful difference, they default to the most basic criterion: price. The decision becomes about the core commodity rather than the broader value delivered. Sales leaders recognize this risk, and many believe their biggest threat to growth is an inability to differentiate. Interestingly, when we ask professionals in our seminars to describe their company’s definable and defendable differences, more than half struggle to answer the question clearly. Robert Goizueta, the late CEO of Coca Cola, once said, “In real estate, it’s location, location, location. In business, it’s differentiate, differentiate, differentiate.” You may be outstanding. But the real challenge is to stand out. Differentiation is not a luxury. It is a strategic necessity. Yet companies (and most salespeople) spend too much time trying to fit in and fail to realize that true greatness happens from standing out. Standing out in the marketplace does not happen by accident. It requires deliberate choices and disciplined thinking. Consider the following principles as a guide. It’s not just okay to be different. It is necessary. When a customer says, “I can buy the same thing down the street cheaper,” that is rarely a price objection. It is a failure to-differentiate objection. The same applies when customers claim they can purchase the product online at a lower price. What they really are saying is they perceive no meaningful difference between your offering and the alternatives available to them. If customers believe every option is the same essentially, price will win inevitably. Be more curious about your potential than concerned about your competition. Many sales organizations spend enormous energy trying to beat a particular competitor. While
competitive awareness is important, obsessing over rivals can limit creativity. If your goal simply is to outperform a competitor, you may build something merely good enough, not something that reflects your full potential. Go to market in a way that is so uniquely yours that others compete with you, but you do not compete with them. Innovate. Don’t imitate. One of the biggest reasons companies struggle to differentiate is a lack of imagination or initiative. Instead of creating new value, they wait for someone else to innovate and then copy the idea quickly. But imitation rarely produces differentiation. For example, if you introduce inventory management programs, multiple daily deliveries, and training simply because competitors offer them, you have commoditized your value-added services unintentionally. You become more of the same. True differentiation cannot be borrowed. It must be authentic. Solve unique problems or solve common problems in unique ways. Another powerful way to differentiate is through the problems you choose to tackle. Most companies chase the low-hanging fruit – the easy opportunities that require minimal effort. Yet real differentiation often lies in addressing the challenges others avoid. Ask yourself the following questions: • What problems do competitors shy away from? • What have customers accepted because they believe no one can solve them? • What issue keeps your customers awake at night? When you help customers solve seemingly unsolvable problems, you move beyond being a supplier or service provider and become a partner. Differentiate by the customers you choose. Not all business is good business. One overlooked strategy for differentiation is being selective about the customers you pursue. Imagine the reputation you would build if your company became known for working exclusively with the most progressive, innovative organizations in your market. In this scenario, partnering with your company carries prestige. Customers want to be associated with you because of the company you keep. Conversely, if your client base is dominated by price shoppers and bottom-feeders, the market may assume you compete primarily on cost. Once you clearly define how you stand out, you gain a powerful response to a common customer statement. Imagine a customer saying, “You and the other supplier basically are in the same business, right?” At that moment, you confidently can say, “We may be in the same industry, but we are not in the same business. And here’s why.” When customers clearly understand your differences, the conversation shifts from price to value. You are no longer one option among many. You become the supplier they prefer, the partner they trust, and the benchmark from which others are measured. In markets crowded with look-alikes, differentiation is not optional. It is survival. Paul Reilly is a professional speaker, sales trainer, and author of Selling Through Tough 7LPHV DQG FRDXWKRU RI 9DOXH $GGHG 6HOOLQJ +H LV DOVR WKH FUHDWRU RI &RDFK9$6 DL WKH ÀUVW AI sales coach powered by Value-Added Selling. Contact him at paul@reillysalestraining.com or visit tomreillytraining.com to sign up for the free newsletter.
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