Grab More Market Share: How to Wrangle Business Away from Lazy Competitors
Although McDonald's tested the McCafe' concept--offering specialty coffee and smoothies--many years before the recession hit, the official launch took place in early 2009. Why? Because they knew that was when Starbucks market share was most vulnerable. And, in early 2010, McDonalds raked in $420m, not only stealing a staggering amount of business from Starbucks, but applying so much pressure that in 2009, Starbucks closed over 270 locations. If you want to grow in a slowly recovering economya stagnant economyor even a declining market, your best and only plan is to steal market share from your competitors and to remain reactive to the market's needs. Who Wins During the Recovery will teach professionals how not settle for 1% growth. Ross' research uses rock-solid case studies that teach leaders to leverage the recovery to steal 10-15% market share from competitors. Ross alerts readers to the fact that they must leverage the culture (the public consciousness) to swing dollars towards their organizations. This same discipline will help professionals predict the next human behavior changes in buying habits.
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Grab More Market Share: How to Wrangle Business Away from Lazy Competitors
Although McDonald's tested the McCafe' concept--offering specialty coffee and smoothies--many years before the recession hit, the official launch took place in early 2009. Why? Because they knew that was when Starbucks market share was most vulnerable. And, in early 2010, McDonalds raked in $420m, not only stealing a staggering amount of business from Starbucks, but applying so much pressure that in 2009, Starbucks closed over 270 locations. If you want to grow in a slowly recovering economya stagnant economyor even a declining market, your best and only plan is to steal market share from your competitors and to remain reactive to the market's needs. Who Wins During the Recovery will teach professionals how not settle for 1% growth. Ross' research uses rock-solid case studies that teach leaders to leverage the recovery to steal 10-15% market share from competitors. Ross alerts readers to the fact that they must leverage the culture (the public consciousness) to swing dollars towards their organizations. This same discipline will help professionals predict the next human behavior changes in buying habits.
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Grab More Market Share: How to Wrangle Business Away from Lazy Competitors

Grab More Market Share: How to Wrangle Business Away from Lazy Competitors

by Ross Shafer

Narrated by Richard Tatum

Unabridged — 2 hours, 20 minutes

Grab More Market Share: How to Wrangle Business Away from Lazy Competitors

Grab More Market Share: How to Wrangle Business Away from Lazy Competitors

by Ross Shafer

Narrated by Richard Tatum

Unabridged — 2 hours, 20 minutes

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Overview

Although McDonald's tested the McCafe' concept--offering specialty coffee and smoothies--many years before the recession hit, the official launch took place in early 2009. Why? Because they knew that was when Starbucks market share was most vulnerable. And, in early 2010, McDonalds raked in $420m, not only stealing a staggering amount of business from Starbucks, but applying so much pressure that in 2009, Starbucks closed over 270 locations. If you want to grow in a slowly recovering economya stagnant economyor even a declining market, your best and only plan is to steal market share from your competitors and to remain reactive to the market's needs. Who Wins During the Recovery will teach professionals how not settle for 1% growth. Ross' research uses rock-solid case studies that teach leaders to leverage the recovery to steal 10-15% market share from competitors. Ross alerts readers to the fact that they must leverage the culture (the public consciousness) to swing dollars towards their organizations. This same discipline will help professionals predict the next human behavior changes in buying habits.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176235524
Publisher: Ascent Audio
Publication date: 07/20/2020
Edition description: Unabridged
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