Article Sphere Logo
 

Business Ethics: Managing Your Relationship With Competitors

By Expert Author: Naz Daud | Article Abstract
Word Count: 539 words | Views: 162 view(s)
As a business, your competitors are just that: competitors. However, the way you treat your competitors may affect how your customers and the media perceive your business, your ethics, and your friendliness. For those reasons, and more, it’s important that you carefully consider how you act with your competitors. In this article we provide guidance on how you can have a good relationship with competing businesses while limiting the impact this will have on your business success. When customers see you have strong ethics in how you deal with your competitors, they will know for sure that you’ll treat them right.

Congratulate Their Success

When a competing business does something well, you should be prepared to say so. If for example, a competing business has managed to gain greater traction than you, then you should point out that they have done really well, and are a good business, while also pointing out the advantages your business is able to offer that your competitors cannot. This is a good demonstration of the strong ethics within your business, and will certainly leave a positive impression.

Recommend Business Their Way

If you and your competitors are able to cater for different categories of customers, then why not recommend them when you can’t offer a service to a certain customer? This will make you look good, and they might also be able to do the same for you in return. In the end, both of you will end up with more business as a result.

Sales and Marketing Strategies

When it comes to sales and marketing, it can be tempting to point out the negative aspects of your competitors. And, in some cases, it may be an essential part of closing the sale. However, rather than criticising your competitor, why not mention both positive and negative points of their service? Such as: “yes, you are correct, Company A is able to offer lower pricing than we can. For customers that are more price sensitive, and that 100% up-time isn’t essential, they can be a great solution. We cater for more IT-dependant organisations and employ 3 times as many engineers per customer. Company A also use an overseas call-centre, which is a great way to keep costs down, and provide a more efficient service, but we prefer to assign each customer a dedicated account manager.”

However, on some occasions your competitors may not provide a good service. In this case, you should be as polite and tactful about your competitors as possible. You should also cite sources, such as articles and media coverage that supplement your point. After pointing out any negative issues, you might also wish to explain how the company responds to the issues you raised. This will show a certain level of objectivity on your part and will demonstrate that your business has strong ethics and is willing to appreciate your competitors’ problems.

Don’t Bite

When a competitor speaks negatively about your business, it can be hard to know what to do. Especially when you want to ensure your business appears to be friendly and considerate of business ethics. Although it’s important to respond to any issues in an articulate way, you should avoid getting involved in any tit-for-tat. This will help your business to keep its reputation intact.
 Naz Daud

About the Author/Author Bio

CityLocal is a business franchise opportunity for work-at-home entrepreneurs. The website has information on what’s happening in your local area through our UK directory. www.citylocal.co.uk and www.citylocal.ie

Article Source: http://www.articlesphere.com/Article/Business-Ethics--Managing-Your-Relationship-With-Competitors/162368

Article Submitted: 2008-09-02 | This Article has been viewed 162 times.

Rate Article

Related Videos

How to Protect Your Ideas
How to Hire the Right Employee for Your Company
8 ethical power techniques
Rues for 8 ethical power techniques
Socially Responsible Investing
 

More "Business Ethics" Related Articles

 
 

Listed below are more articles related to the above article from the "Business Ethics" article category.

People interested in the above article "Business Ethics: Managing Your Relationship With Competitors" are also interested in the related articles listed below:

 
A key element in successful joint ventures is to find someone who has a complementary product. Figure out what it is that you have that's unbelievable, that you know for a fact you do better than pretty much anyone else out there. Use your product to extend the product offering for someone else. You would be following a complementary product, and then you're going to go and say, "Add this to your product mix,” and you can put together a revenue share on that.
The first thing you need to know is that joint venturing isn't just limited to your database. Joint ventures are only limited by your creativity. You can use a joint venture for pretty much anything. Nothing is set in stone, and even if you start out as the middle person putting together deals and you don't have a database at all, you can still make it work.
Courage builds character. It’s the foundation of integrity. It gives you the thrust to make the correct choice and do what is right despite the consequences. Integrity First. It's core value #1 of the U.S. Air Force... embraced by our leadership, taught in our training programs, and a symbol of the commitment and character of the men and women serving our country.
Is integrity lost? I think not... you just get what you think about the most and expect. If you deal with people with integrity, you will always get it in return.
In bankruptcy, a competent judge will frown mightily on a con man style shell game, any spending pattern that does not add up.
How to become your community's lonely hearts matchmaker, resident psychic, or neighborhood horn dog.
Business and profit-making must be tampered with heart and care for environment and others. Failure to do so, will lead to all kinds of problems.
 
Article Directory Home All Categories Business Business Ethics
 

Can't find what you're looking for? Try Google Search!
 
Copyright © 2005 - by Larry Lim, Singapore - Article Search Engine Directory at ArticleSphere.com™
All Rights Reserved Worldwide. All Trademarks and Servicemarks are the property of the respective owners.

Afrikaans Albanian Arabic Belarusian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish German English Estonian Filipino Finnish French Galician Greek Hebrew Hindi Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Irish Italiano Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Macedonian Malay Maltese Dutch Norwegian Persian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swahili Swedish Thai Turkish Ukrainian Vietnamese Welsh Yiddish