According to a Harvard Business School study,
approximately 75 percent of startups with venture funding will eventually fail.
The same study found that a similar percentage of small businesses will fail
within the first ten years of existence.
Of course, the primary reason for most business
failures is an inability to profitably attract and retain customers. While
there are many different types of business models out there, from software as a
service, to marketplaces, to ecommerce businesses (and many others), there are
a few common mistakes that business leaders make when trying to attract
customers.
Here are ten of the most common, but often
overlooked, reasons why your startup isn't able to attract enough customers to
become successful.
1. Missing
product-market fit
Product-market fit is the single biggest reason why
businesses fail. If the product being offered is not aligned with the needs and
wants of the target audience, it won't matter how good your marketing or sales
teams are -- you simply will not be able to attract enough of the right
customers to build a sustainable business.
As Eric Ries described in The Lean Startup,
an effective way of testing product-market fit is by building an MVP
(minimum viable product) that you then share with the target audience. By
listening to customer feedback, you and your team will be able to find
product-market fit over time.
2. Misaligned
product-channel fit
Second only to product-market
fit, product-channel fit is another critical business component that
entrepreneurs must perfect in order to build a sustainable business. Channel
refers to the marketing channels that a business employs to promote the
product. Depending on the business model and the product in question, your
business will be a good fit for some channels and a bad fit for others.
For example, Pinterest and Quora were able to grow
their products quickly by harnessing the power of organic search. That channel
fit well with the products offered by the respective companies, and with the
desire of the target audience to quickly discover fascinating new content.
On the other hand, organic search might be a poor
performing channel for an ecommerce business. The reason is that it can be
difficult for a business to rank well organically in a world where giant
ecommerce companies and review-oriented media outlets rank highly for most
relevant keywords.
Instead, an effective channel might be social media
ads, like those offered by Facebook and Instagram, which employ
machine-learning algorithms to find and engage ideal customers.
3. Poorly
trained salespeople
Businesses that rely upon a sales team to acquire
new customers must make sure that those salespeople are some of the best
trained, smartest and most compassionate members of the organization.
After all, it's the sales team that will represent
the company each and every day to members of its target audience. If
salespeople don't understand the market, or how the product is positioned
within the market, it will be incredibly difficult to acquire new customers.
You should benchmark your sales-team performance
compared to your industry. Are salespeople performing at or above this
benchmark? If not, it's possible that the sales team is a weak link within your
organization.
4. Confusion
about the ideal customer profile
Each person within your company should know who
your ideal customer profile (ICP) is. Members of your team should know the
demographic and psychographic makeup of ideal customers. They should know how
to find them, and how to speak their language in order to engage with them as a
marketer, salesperson or customer-service representative.
If there is misalignment within the organization
about the ICP, or worse, if your organization does not have an ICP, it will be
challenging to craft a customer experience that appeals to prospects.
5. Impractical
pricing strategy
Can your product be obtained at a reasonable price
that makes sense to members of the ICP and to the economic buyer? Remember, you
are not always selling the individual in your ICP; you may need to use your ICP
as a champion within the target organization who then needs to
convince his or her boss that your product or service is worth the investment.
Make sure that your pricing strategy makes sense to
your ICP and to the economic buyer. Otherwise, it will be difficult for
prospective customers to see the value of your product, relative to the price.
6. Lack of
market education
Is the target market aware that your business
category exists in the first place? If not, you should consider building a
market education campaign to make people aware that a solution to their problem
is out there.
Take a page out of the marketing playbooks of
pharmaceutical or biotech companies. These organizations are constantly
developing category-defining products that did not exist before. The first
thing these organizations do is educate doctors about the problem and offer
their solution.
They do the same with the general public through a
mix of traditional and digital advertising. Once the market is educated, buyers
are more receptive to the solution prescribed by the doctor.
7. Inaccurate
lead-scoring
Businesses that sell to other businesses often
employ a lead-scoring system to determine what leads should be sent to the
sales team, and what leads should be held for further nurturing. If the
lead-scoring system is not working properly, that may mean the sales team is
being sent unqualified leads, and its members may lose faith in the marketing
team. Another possibility: The sales team is not being sent qualified leads,
and therefore the sales team will be unable to hit quota.
The criteria for the lead scoring system should
constantly be reviewed to ensure that the right leads are sent, while leads
that are not a fit are kept for nurturing.
8. Dysfunctional
lead nurturing
All types of businesses can and should employ a
lead-nurturing system based on email workflows (also called automated emails).
Ecommerce businesses that send out a regular
newsletter can engage customers that might otherwise forget about the brand;
and B2B businesses that send well-timed automated emails can engage prospects
just in the nick of time.
In fact, a study by McKinsey & Co. found
that marketing email is the second most effective way to acquire new customers,
second only to organic search, and well ahead of social media. Ensure that your
business has a healthy lead-nurturing system in place to generate customers
consistently over the long run.
9. Dissatisfying
customer service
The average person will tell 16 other people about
a poor customer service experience according to an American Express study.
If your business is providing dissatisfactory customer service or support, the
problem is surely costing you customers. That means ten poor customer service
experiences will result in a minimum of 160 other people viewing your business
in a negative light.Poor customer service may also be preventing your
organization from attracting new customers through word-of-mouth referrals. The
same American Express study found that the average person shares a positive
customer service story with nine other people.
10. Disruptive
competitor
While we often think of startups as disruptive
organizations, by nature, it is certainly possible that another business is
offering a more attractive product or service that is robbing your organization
of customers. A good way to determine this is to speak with people in your
target audience. Ask them about the solutions they currently use and why they
chose them. If a disruptive competitor is out there, you will eventually learn
about it through speaking with customers.
Conclusion
There are a number of plausible reasons why your
business is unable to attract enough customers. Some of these reasons may be
unique to your industry, but many plausible explanations are shared among
businesses of all kinds.
Before looking for less-obvious answers, be sure to
review the 10 reasons listed here to see if any of the common mistakes outlined
are causing your business serious challenges. -(Credit: Entrepreneur)
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