terça-feira, julho 07, 2015

Não há alternativa, não se pode ser neutro (parte III)

Parte I e parte II.
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E continuo a leitura de "Differentiate or Die: Survival in Our Era of Killer Competition" de Jack Trout.
"Choice Can Be a Turnoff
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Choice can actually hinder the motivation to buy.
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Too many choices spelled confusion. And confusion spelled, ‘‘No thanks.’’
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People are so overwhelmed with choice that it tends to paralyze them. Too much choice makes people more likely to defer decisions. It raises expectations and makes people blame themselves for choosing poorly. You don’t expect much if there are only two pairs of jeans to choose from. If there are hundreds, you expect one to be perfect.
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Choice Can Be Cruel
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With the enormous competition, markets today are driven by choice. The customer has so many good alternatives that you pay dearly for your mistakes. Your competitors get your business and you don’t get it back very easily. Companies that don’t understand this will not survive. (Now that’s cruel.)
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You Have to Be CarefulIf you ignore your uniqueness and try to be everything for everybody, you quickly undermine what makes you different....
If you ignore changes in the market, your difference can become less important.
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Don’t bet that all this will calm down. We believe that it will get worse for the simple reason that choice appears to beget more choice."
E reforço o sentido do título desta série...
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Não se pode ser neutro, não se pode ficar parado...
Num arquétipo de escalada, ficar parado é ficar para trás.
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O que é que a sua empresa está fazer para não ficar para trás?



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