This article was last updated on 18 October 2022.
I often ask consultancies: "If someone asks your past client what you, as a consultancy, do, what would be the answer? Will your client be able to say without hesitating or having to think for more than five seconds what your firm brings to the table? Will their answer encourage others to hire you?"
Let’s talk about positioning. More specifically, today, I’d like to explain why every consultancy must regularly audit their positioning, why positioning matters, and how to conduct a self-assessment.
Let’s start with the basics – defining positioning.
Positioning is a company's place within a marketplace. It’s a statement, the way it is perceived on the market, and the parameters the consultancy sets for their own work and engagement with clients.
A strong positioning statement follows the following structure: XYZ
Here’s my positioning statement:
I help consultancy firms improve revenue and profit by winning the right clients as the go-to experts
Positioning makes it easy for prospects to understand what a consultancy does and how it does it. However, it goes deeper than that. Strong positioning acts as a shield. Consulting firms can use it to protect their time and expertise. They use it to determine which projects and clients to take on, easily determining which ones do not fall in the scope of their narrowly defined expertise. A firm's positioning is how its leadership can filter incoming requests.
I already briefly mentioned that a clear positioning statement makes it instantly clear to prospects whether a consultancy is a good fit for their needs. I’d like to dive a little deeper into this topic.
There are so many opportunities for consulting companies on the market at the moment. No, really, they can be found left and right. The demand is there. However, so is the supply. The consulting market is highly competitive. Clients have more options than ever and, thanks to the magic of the internet, they can do their own research and pre-qualify firms and individual consultants before they even speak to them.
So how can a consultancy stand out in this saturated market? How can it monetize on the sea of opportunities in a way that doesn’t burn out its employees? How can it navigate the market in a consistent, organic way, qualifying prospects and cherry-picking clients?
That's right – it starts with positioning.
Of course, I’m not going to claim that this is the only thing that matters. Far from it. However, it’s an important cog in the overall consulting mechanism. It’s one of the foundational elements that firms should build upon, which means they have to get it right.
All of the following elements of a consulting business are built upon the foundation of positioning:
And so much more
You see, success in sales is a side effect of strong positioning. If a consulting firm establishes themselves as an expert, an authority in a narrow field, and shows that they can resolve important pain points for the target audience, the firm will not have to stress about the lack of clients.
Such consultancies will not have to prove their value over and over again. Their body of work will do all the heavy lifting. They will not have to follow up on their proposals. Their target audience will see the impact they can make in their organizations. They will not have to take on any project that comes their way. They will be able to select the ones that fit in their pipeline and growth plans.
What a consultancy does – the audience it caters to, the prototypical problems it solves for them, and how it goes about solving those problems – stems directly from the firm's positioning. It defines the consultancy's specialized area of expertise, sets priorities, and defines the body of work.
Recommended reading: (Case Study) Replicate the Secret of This Highly Profitable Consultancy
Due to the importance of positioning, I recommend that every consultancy assesses it on a regular basis. Here is a checklist that I’ve developed over the years that will help consulting leaders understand whether their firms' positioning is hindering their success or facilitating it:
I encourage consulting leaders – consulting owners, partners, and team leaders – to answer these questions honestly. This will give them a very clear idea of how their firm is positioned.
A consultancy's positioning is weak when its employees are in a constant client-pleasing mode, when leadership is worried about revenue, when consultants deal with execution and get cc-ed on hundreds of emails from lower team members, when leadership regularly approves discounts to win bids, when clients don’t know how to recommend this firm, when its body of work doesn’t have a clear focus, and when its audience is too broad.
A consultancy with strong positioning, on the other hand, doesn't stress out about following up with prospects, its employees feel confident about their value as consultants, they provide clients with honest feedback, the firm receives premium fees, its consultants get invited to speak, they share their knowledge through thought leadership content generously and regularly, and are invited by prospects to come on board in an advisory capacity.
Recommended reading: How Consultancies Can Get Started With Value Proposition Design (Without Getting Overwhelmed)
I see many consulting firms on the market make the same mistake – rushing to pitch their services without putting in enough effort into their positioning. It always seems so counter-intuitive to me. It makes growing a consulting business that much harder.
Without strong positioning, consultancies do not have a proper framework to organize their priorities, client work, and sale processes. What’s more, their target market has no clear idea of what they do, how they do it, and why what they do is of value.
I advise all consulting leaders to take out a piece of paper and a pen and go back to the drawing board. If they get the foundation right, the rest will follow.
Recommended reading: Positioning in Consulting Is an Exercise in Irrelevance and Here’s Why
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