The race to the bottom is
unforgiving and relentless.
I ordered some straw hats for
a small party. The shipper sent them in a plastic bag, with no box, because it
was cheaper. Of course, they were crushed and worthless.
I wrote a note to the
company's customer service address, but they merely sent an autoreply, because
it was cheaper.
And they don't answer the
phone... you guessed it, because it's cheaper.
Of course, you have
competition. But the big companies that are winning the price war aren't
winning because they've eliminated customer service and common sense. They're
winning because of significant advances in scale and process, advances that
aren't available to you.
Organizations panic in the
face of the floor falling out from under their price foundation, and they often
respond by becoming a shell of their former selves. Once you decide to become a
cheap commodity, all of the choices you made to be a non-commodity fall victim
to your pursuit of cheap.
Cheap is the last refuge for
the marketer who can't figure out how to be better.
The alternative is to choose
to be worth it, remarkable, reliable, a good neighbor, a worthy citizen,
leading edge, comfortable, trusted, funny, easy, cutting edge or just about
anything except, "the cheapest at any cost."
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