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Ask HN: just found a big competitor for my niche. What do I do?

3 pointsby leanstartupnoobabout 14 years ago
I have been talking with some local martial arts studios about building tracking software for their businesses using a SaaS model. As part of the research process I stumbled across this company:<p>http://www.mindbodyonline.com/ http://www.inc.com/inc5000/profile/mindbody<p>On one hand I feel like my solution will be a better fit for my customers, but this company provides a very compelling and similar solution that is already built.<p>Has anyone been in a similar situation? How did you handle talking to customers about the competitor to learn how you could do a better job?

3 comments

michael_dorfmanabout 14 years ago
What's the problem, exactly? It's a rare (and usually unprofitable) niche that has no competition, and if you don't have competition when you start, you'll likely run into it later.<p>You already say that your solution will be a better fit for your customers; if that's the case, it should be simple for you to draw up a mental list of differentiators that can constitute your "unique value proposition", and pull these out when a prospect asks why they should choose you. (Hint: price is not always a great differentiator.)<p>If you run into prospects who are already using the competing solution, ask them how it's working out for them, and what kind of things they wish it did differently.
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ozziegooenabout 14 years ago
Competition is only real when a significant number of your potential customers know of it. It sounds like a relatively small percentage of people know of mindbodyonline (obviously the groups you have talked to haven't). So the only danger is if both that company and your company become huge; and that's not something to be worried about now.
HerraBREabout 14 years ago
Even if the products are very similar, you can still compete on price or customer service - or just marketing.<p>If you get there first and/or make some deals with organizations (martial arts clubs tend to talk to each other a lot and organize themselves into hierarchies), you could still carve out a chunk of the market.