One key aspect of modern digital devices is that technical specifications are easily copied and replicated: mega-pixel count in cameras, storage capacity in music players or processor speed in personal computers are the same everywhere. As a result, they provide only poor distinguishing factors for consumers when it comes to choosing between different brands.Though we don't agree on various points from her article (i.e. a one-size-fits-all approach...but that's for another article), her premise is spot-on: If you add certain features to your product innovations, what will prevent your competitors from doing likewise? Fighting for customers must go beyond simply adding features.
Get operational quickly. Bootstrappers don't mind starting with a copycat idea targeted to a small market. Often that approach works well. Imitation saves the costs of market research, and the start-up entering a small market is unlikely to face competition from large, established companies.Once your business is profitable with positive cashflow, you'll see great business product ideas presenting itself:
Once [your startup is] in the flow of business, opportunities often turn up that they would not have seen had [you] waited for the big idea.The moral: Stop searching for the perfect business product idea. Instead, sell something quickly. Those great product ideas will soon come knocking on your door.
We love to preach to our clients: never stop improving. Companies that fail rest on their laurels, becoming apathetic after a successful product launch. Sure, you probably brought in millions from a specific product; but if you don't innovate it further for your clients, your competitor might just do it for you. McKinsey & Company's S. Patrick Viguerie and Caroline Thompson has this explanation on how companies fail:
First, shifts in demand or superior offerings from competitors undercut the leader's value proposition. Second, competitors come along with acceptable substitutes or prices so much lower that the leader's productivity or cost position is undermined.
Viguerie's and Thompson's explains further that unsuccessful companies tend to throw all their eggs in one basket, and seek growth from it unwisely:
Third, the leader makes some radically mistimed or otherwise unsuccessful big bets. Growth only exacerbates these strategic risks.