Leadership

Listen To Competitors–Not Customers

01.06.10, 03:10 PM EST

The accepted wisdom that the customer is king is all wrong.

That's the start to my latest Forbes column (Read here.)  Think about it.  What would Apple be if it had listened to its customers?  An out of business niche PC company by now.  What about Google?  A narrow search engine company – anyone remember Alta Vista or Ask Jeeves or the other early search engine companies?  No customer was telling Apple or Google to get into all the businesses they are in now – and making impressive rates of return while others languish.

But today Google launched Nexus One (read about it on Mobile Marketing Daily here) – a product the company developed by watching its competitors – Apple and Microsoft – rather than asking its customers.  In the last year "smartphones" went to 17% of the market – from only 7% in 2007 according to Forrester Research.  There's nothing any more "natural" about Google – ostensibly a search engine company – making smartphones (or even operating systems for phones like Android) than for GE to get into this business.  But Google did because it's paying attention to competitors, not what customers tell it to do. 

No customers told Google to develop a new browser – or operating system – which is what Chrome is about.  In fact, IT departments wanted Microsoft to develop a better operating system and largely never thought of Google in the space.  And no IT department asked Google to develop Google Wave – a new enterprise application which will connect users to their applications and data across the "cloud" allowing for more capability at a fraction of the cost.  But Google is watching competitors, and letting them tell Google where the market is heading.  Long before customers ask for these products, Google is entering the market with new solutions – the output of White Space that is disrupting existing markets.

Far too many companies spend too much time asking customers what to do.  In an earlier era, IBM almost went bankrupt by listening to customers tell them to abandon PCs and stay in the mainframe business —– but that's taking the thunder away from the Forbes article.  Give it a read, there's lots of good stuff about how people who listen to customers jam themselves up – and how smarter ones listen to competitors instead.  (Ford, Tribune Corporation, eBay, Cisco, Dell, Salesforce.com, CSC, EDS, PWC, Dell, Sun Microsystems, Silicon Graphics and HP.)