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Entrepreneur Magazine April 2008 | Underdog Days
Entrepreneur Magazine April 2008 "Underdog Days"
The big guys couldn't take the heat - can you rise to the occasion?
Knowing they had to set their start up apart from the toy behemoths, the Gurocks founded Magic Beans in 2004 and included a baby section. The idea was to get expectant parents (and their friends and family) into he store to shop for baby necessities long before the baby is born to plant the seed that this is also a great place to buy toys after the child is born. "We can capitalize on holidays and Christmas, but when it's slow, we can sell our baby stuff, which is [good] business all year long," says Eli.
That's just the strategy a start up should use when trying to succeed where big companies have struggled. Bring something new to the table, says Vince Crew, founder of Reach Development Services, a strategic growth services firm. "There's no magic solution. You have to be first, cheap or different."
Price matters, but the differentiation, be it a more targeted product offering or a more specialized service, will bring clients to your re-imagined business.
Play up your of-the-community vibe, too, says Crew. "Everyone wants to do business with the neighbor." Let your clients know they wont have to navigate big-business bureaucracy, but will instead get personalized customer service from the start.
"Follow through on servicing the customer before, during and after the sale,' says Crew. The customers at Magic Beans get old-fashioned excellent customer service from Eli,30, Sheri, 31, and their team.
With three stores in Massachusetts as well as a web presence (mbeans.com), company sales are in the seven figures. "Don't feel intimidated that you can't provide the same level of polish and consistency that a big company can," says Eli. "You can be better just by being smart and creative." |