Competitors often have feature parity for standard use cases. To stand out, focus the conversation on how your product performs in the worst-case scenarios—like a dashcam operating at -20 degrees. This shifts the evaluation from a simple feature checklist to a discussion of reliability and premium quality.
Don't overwhelm an enterprise buying committee by pitching all of your product's features. Instead, survey each member to find the 2-3 features that resonate most broadly. Focus all messaging and demos on just those features to create a clear, concentrated value proposition.
When launching into a competitive space, first build the table-stakes features to achieve parity. Then, develop at least one "binary differentiator"—a unique, compelling capability that solves a major pain point your competitors don't, making the choice clear for customers.
Using the Kano model, brands should focus on "delighters"—unexpected features that create immense satisfaction. Competing solely on standard performance attributes leads to homogeneity. Instead, find something your competitors do badly and excel at it to gain outsized attention.
Instead of matching rivals' strengths, identify their weaknesses or overlooked details, like a poor coffee program. Focusing on these neglected areas allows you to create a unique, best-in-class experience and gain a competitive foothold. Guidara's team calls this 'reverse benchmarking.'
Instead of guessing your competitive advantage, ask potential customers which other solutions they've evaluated and why those products didn't work for them. They will explicitly tell you the market gaps and what you need to build to win.
Resist the instinct to explain what a feature is and does. Instead, first explain *why* it was built—the specific business problem it solves and why that's relevant to the prospect. This framing turns a feature walkthrough into a personalized 'test drive'.
Don't wait for customers to ask about your value. Assume they view you and your competitors as commodities. It's your job to proactively explain why you're different and what additional value they receive for your price, effectively telling 'the rest of the story' beyond the basic product features.
Don't assume even sophisticated buyers understand your unique technical advantage, like a "fuzzy logic algorithm." Your marketing must translate that unique feature into a tangible business value they comprehend. Your job is not to be an order-taker for their feature checklist, but to educate them on why your unique approach is superior.
To escape price comparisons in a commoditized market, shift the conversation from cost to risk. Use industry statistics to highlight the expensive, unforeseen problems that occur with cheaper alternatives. Position your higher-priced service as the logical choice to avoid those costly failures.
Don't just list all your features. To build a strong 'why us' case, focus on the specific features your competitors lack that directly solve a critical, stated pain point for the client. This intersection is the core of your unique value proposition and the reason they'll choose you.