| Can The Sole Practitioner Beat The Big Guy? |
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| Written by Hugh Duffy MBA | |||
| Monday, 24 October 2011 12:54 | |||
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Each and every day, small businesses compete directly against the big guy and succeed. This is done by changing the rules of the game and competing selectively. Over time, the small entrepreneurial firm becomes one of the big guys and we forget about their rags to riches story. At one time, Nike was a start-up operation started by a University of Oregon college track coach Bill Bowerman and his former middle-distance runner. That middle-distance runner was a degreed accountant from the University of Oregon named Phil Knight. Both invested $500 to form a partnership in 1964; today, Nike is a global athletic manufacturer with nearly $20 billion in sales. At the time, Nike sneakers were totally different from Converse, Keds and traditional sneakers on the market. Twenty billion dollars of growth in four decades is pretty impressive, and now they are the global juggernaut in athletic footwear, apparel and sporting goods. Can a small start-up operation with limited funds compete against Nike and other global operators such as Adidas, Reebok and Russell Athletic? Of course. However, the mousetrap must be unique and compelling. In 1996, a former University of Maryland football player named Kevin Plank was convinced that a moisture wicking fabric could help regulate the body temperature of athletes better than cotton T-shirts. With $20,000 of his own money and $290,000 in loans, he started his own athletic apparel company from his grandmother's basement in Washington, D.C. With the prototypes that were developed, his first sale was to Georgia Tech, and 15 years later, Kevin's business does at least $1.3 billion in sales under the name of Under Armour. While I presume that a company like Nike will ultimately acquire Under Armour, Kevin has managed to create an attractive niche in a highly competitive industry. Other examples that come to mind are Samuel Adams, Blackberry by RIM, Whole Foods and Cirque du Soleil. In each of these cases, the people behind these start-ups figured out ways to create a niche in the market without relying on discounting their price. In each example, they command an attractive premium and compete with larger competitors with very deep pockets. With this orientation, you can probably tell that we would not recommend that a new accounting firm compete directly with larger CPA firms by targeting medium- and large-sized businesses providing attest, litigation support, Sarbanes-Oxley and nonprofit accounting services. Instead - and as illustrated by the examples above - a new accounting firm should fly under the radar screen of more established CPA firms, provide a unique selling proposition that resonates with small business owners and play to the strengths of the sole practitioner. Here are some examples of how the small practitioner can win: • Write a newspaper column - As the internet has cut holes into their business model, most local newspapers are struggling financially. As a result, the editorial departments in most local newspapers are starving for reliable content from someone with your expertise. If you are willing to create a unique and compelling point of difference - like Phil Knight did with Nike and Kevin Plank did with Under Amour - you, too, can create a foothold into the market. Be strategic about how you market your practice ... better yet, Just Do It!
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About the Author: Brett Owens is CEO and Co-Founder of Chrometa, a Sacramento, Calif.-based provider of software that records activity in real time. Previously marketed to the legal community, Chrometa is branching out to accounting prospects; gains include the ability to discover previously undocumented billable time, save time on billing reconciliation and improve personal productivity. Brett is also blogger and founder at CommodityBullMarket.com and ContraryInvesting.com, as well as a regular contributor to two leading financial media sites, SeekingAlpha.com and BeforeItsNews.com. |