PERSONAL /COMPETITOR
SPECIAL WHAT I LEARNT FROM MY COMPETITOR(1)
When Apple launched its
4.7-inch iPhone 6 and 5.5-inch iPhone 6 Plus in September 2014, not many were
surprised, because there had been enough reports indicating that Apple was
ready to move beyond phones with a 4-inch screen. That did not stop tech
commentators from pointing out after the launch how Steve Jobs had rubbished
big phones and said no one would buy them. But Samsung, LG and other handset
makers had shown Apple that big handsets did sell and people couldn't have
enough of them. Apple could not continue to ignore the demands for a larger
phone so it took a leaf out of its competitors' books and followed suit. Apple
may not admit to learning from its rivals but in this case, it clearly did.
Following your rivals'
actions closely and learning from them, whether they are successes or failures,
is par for the course -in fact essential -in any competitive arena. Some have
no trouble acknowledging their competitors' contribution to their growth.
Younis Khan is a case in point. The Pakistani batsman said earlier this year
that he owed his success as a number three batsman in Test cricket to Rahul
Dravid, who had advised Khan on his batting technique.
ET Magazine asked a
cross-section of achievers -in business, sports and politics -what is the most
valuable lesson they have learnt from their competitor. Their responses range
from key learnings specific to their field to insightful life lessons. Read on!
Create Brands in Consumers'
Minds, Not on the Shop Floor“
Rajiv Bajaj, managing director, Bajaj Auto
CLAIM TO FAME: Brought the
company back from the brink as a motorcycle maker to reckon with, with models
like Pulsar and Discover
THE LESSON: I have learnt
valuable lessons from all my competitors. And I need not necessarily see them
as two-wheeler or four-wheeler makers. It began in the 1980s when I was in
college. I constantly grappled with why Bajaj, so overwhelmingly dominant in
the scooter world, was a laggard in motorcycles. We were always at No 4, the
last. Inside our company, views differed. Some thought because we entered the
segment last, we lagged. I was not convinced. Look at Maruti. It came 30 years
later than Hindustan Motors -and has led the market.
A few argued that because
Bajaj was so convincing a leader in scooters it couldn't lead in other
segments. I disagreed. Being strong in a segment cannot be such a huge
liability in the others.
Some felt that Bajaj
dealers were a problem - they were complacent, not hungry. Others blamed
Bajaj's advertising; yet others felt rivals had superior product quality. That
too didn't make much sense to me. There are so many products with issues around
quality but they still do well in the market.
Today, we are good in big
motorcycles but have not been able to do much in smaller bikes. Similarly
Suzuki is doing so well in big bikes but not in small ones. And Hero MotoCorp,
big in small bikes with half of the domestic market, has not been able to do
much in the bigger bike segment. Similarly, Hero lags in scooters. Honda is big
in scooters but small in motorcycles. And TVS has a virtual monopoly in the
moped segment but barely has double-digit share in scooters and motorcycles.
Similarly, in the small three-wheeler segment, we have close to 90%
marketshare. But in big three-wheelers Piaggio is the leader.
People have no problem
buying Tata trucks. But in cars Tata Motors is struggling.
Mahindra is strong in SUVs
but is struggling to move into other segment. Toyota and Honda have prestigious
mid-size car brands in India but are today struggling with Etios Liva and Brio,
respectively.
Logically you feel a
strength in one area should extend to another. But it does not happen that way.
Alec Issigonis, doyen of the British car industry, once said: “Fashion dates.
But logic is timeless.“ I have my spin to that one: “Fashion dates but
perception is timeless.“
So here's what I have
learnt from my competitors. Marketing is not logical. Better is not different.
I am an engineer and as an engineer you think that if we make a better product
the customer will switch. But customer switches not because it is better but
because it is different. And, finally, customer satisfaction and customer
acquisition are not the same thing. Kaizen, quality improvement and the like
can help you get customer satisfaction but not customer acquisition. The latter
is a very different game.
The biggest lesson I learnt
is that the leaders are not those who create products but who create
categories. It's not about selling products but selling perceptions. Bajaj
scooter was selling creating a category not a product. Being first to create a
category matters. Look at our scooter, the three wheeler, Maruti 800, our
Pulsar. Think of a successful company and its products and you will see how
successfully it created a new category. I feel the same will apply for our
quadricycle Qute. It has no new feature or technology. But it does create a new
category in the four-wheeler segment. Technology and quality is important but
not sufficient and necessary condition for success. Newton said your solution
has to be innovative only in the context of the problem you are solving. And I
think it is really true.
To me, brand means only one
thing -did it create a new category? As a company, we have to create brands in
the minds of people, not on the shop floor. And that's a big learning that my
competitors have taught me.
(As told to Malini Goyal)
ETM27DEC15
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