High Tech Start-Ups: Sacrifice

High Tech Start-Ups: SacrificeOne of my favorite marketing books is The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing: Violate Them at Your Own Risk (Al Ries, Jack Trout).  Each chapter is a few pages, gets right to the point and gives a real-life example.  It’s easy to pick up and put down without forgetting what you’ve read before. My favorite law is #13: The Law of Sacrifice.

You have to give up something in order to get something.

Ries and Trout point out that there are three things you can sacrifice: product line, target market and constant change.  They give several examples of companies (Fedex, Smucker’s, Staples and others) that sacrificed one of these three things to increase revenue, improve margin and gain market share.

I think there is something to be learned here for high tech start-ups.

High tech companies are almost always started by engineers; and engineers can do anything - and often do.  Most of the technology that high techs introduce to the world could be applied to a number of problems.  And, it probably can.  So, what usually happens is the it-can-do anything technology is thrown at the wall like spaghetti to see what sticks.  The spaghetti approach, while perfectly understandable, can cause problems:  lack of focus, unfinished products and features, employee chaos and market confusion.  While the first three are internal challenges that can be sorted internally, once the market is confused it is hard to unconfuse it. So, while it’s OK to have long term vision and a five year road map; make some sacrifices in your outbound communications and make sure your messaging is simple, consistent and focused on one (or a small set of) problems and markets.   If you tell the world that you do it all, you probably won’t be believed. What have you sacrificed lately?


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