Competitive Displacement Strategies =================================== Slide 1: Competitive Displacement Strategies Narration Anna: Most prospects already have a vendor in place. Greg: Winning the deal often means replacing that incumbent. Anna: Competitive displacement proves your solution fixes pain the current one ignores. Greg: Price alone rarely wins; you must show why switching is worth the hassle. Anna: It's like convincing someone to switch mobile phone providers—they need clear benefits to overcome the hassle. Greg: Give them a reason to say the effort is worth it. On-screen text Competitive Displacement Strategies Winning over customers in crowded markets Slide 2: What is displacement? Narration Anna: What is displacement? focuses attention on a concrete part of the work. Replacing an incumbent vendor with your solution, Requires solving pain points the competitor misses, and Common where markets are saturated and contracts lock clients in. Greg: In practice, ask who owns the work, what evidence proves it happened, and what handoff comes next. Use the supporting details as a checklist: Requires solving pain points the competitor misses; Common where markets are saturated and contracts lock clients in. On-screen text What is displacement? - Replacing an incumbent vendor with your solution - Requires solving pain points the competitor misses - Common where markets are saturated and contracts lock clients in Slide 3: Research the incumbent Narration Anna: Step one is studying the incumbent vendor—the tool already running the show. Greg: And don't just read their marketing; reviews, support forums and even job ads reveal the real pain points. Anna: Maybe customers gripe that ServiceNow tickets take three days for a first response. Greg: That's your opening to highlight a four-hour SLA. Anna: Dig into switching costs and integrations to show you understand their reality. Greg: It proves you're not just selling, you're solving problems they already feel. On-screen text Research the incumbent - "Incumbent vendor" = the tool or provider already in use - Analyse competitor features, pricing and support reputation - Gather customer complaints and reviews to find weaknesses - If ServiceNow tickets take 3 days for first response, showcase your 4‑hour SLA - Map internal champions and existing relationships Slide 4: Targeted differentiation Narration Anna: Now that you've spotted the incumbent's weak spots, tailor your pitch to hit them directly. Greg: Saying "we're better" is vague; showing a feature that saves hours is persuasive. Anna: Transparent pricing and ROI numbers help buyers justify the switch. Greg: Nobody wants hidden fees popping up like airline baggage charges at check-in. Anna: Side-by-side comparisons make it easy for them to sell the idea internally. Greg: You're not just different—you're different in ways that matter. Anna: That's how you replace an entrenched competitor. On-screen text Targeted differentiation - Lead with unique value that addresses known pain - Provide clear ROI and transparent pricing - Use side-by-side comparisons to highlight advantages Slide 5: Structured migration plan Narration Anna: Even with a great pitch, migration anxiety can stall the deal. Greg: Bring a clear plan—timelines, tools and who does what. Anna: Explain data migration as moving records, tickets and user accounts to the new system. Greg: Think of swapping Zendesk for ServiceNow using CSV exports, field mapping guides and a three-month parallel run. Anna: Offer pilots or phased rollouts with proof-of-concept testing so they can validate without risk. Greg: Set expectations that enterprise swaps often take six to twelve months. Anna: Provide training and migration support to ease the transition. Greg: When the path is mapped out, disruption fears fade and momentum builds. On-screen text Structured migration plan - Outline steps, timelines and resources for moving off the old platform - Explain data migration: moving records, tickets and user accounts - Offer tooling, data migration support and training - Example: from Zendesk to ServiceNow with CSV exports, field mapping and a 3‑month parallel run - Set realistic timelines—enterprise swaps often take 6‑12 months - Reduce risk with pilots or phased rollouts and proof‑of‑concept testing Slide 6: Land and expand Narration Anna: Big wins usually start small. Greg: Target a single team where success will be visible. Anna: Maybe launch in HR ticket management and track a 50% faster resolution time. Greg: Those numbers make it easy to expand into IT operations. Anna: Quick wins create internal champions who vouch for you. Greg: It's a land-and-expand play instead of an all-or-nothing bet. Anna: Momentum beats massive launches that never get off the ground. On-screen text Land and expand - Start with a foothold project or department - Demonstrate quick wins then broaden adoption - Example: begin with HR ticket management, then move to IT ops after 50% faster resolutions - Track success metrics to justify expansion - Maintain champions to secure renewal Slide 7: Ethics and professionalism Narration Anna: It's tempting to trash the incumbent, but that can backfire. Greg: Buyers respect vendors who focus on their own strengths. Anna: Avoid FUD—spreading fear, uncertainty and doubt about the other guy. Greg: Honour existing contracts and confidentiality agreements. Anna: No one wants a partner who plays dirty. Greg: Professionalism builds trust long after the ink dries. Anna: Ethical wins are the ones that stick. On-screen text Ethics and professionalism - Emphasise your strengths rather than spreading FUD (Fear, Uncertainty, Doubt) - Respect contract terms and confidentiality - Build trust so displacement feels like partnership Slide 8: Roles and career paths Narration Anna: Different roles tackle displacement from different angles. Greg: Sales engineers prove the tech works and design the migration path. Anna: Customer success managers handle stakeholder politics once the pilot lands. Greg: Solution architects plan how the platform will scale across departments. Anna: Juniors gather pain points and coordinate demos. Greg: Senior staff weave the pieces together and keep the long game in sight. On-screen text Roles and career paths - Sales Engineers validate solutions and design migrations - Customer Success Managers manage stakeholder relationships - Solution Architects plan long‑term expansions - Junior reps surface pain points; senior staff orchestrate the swap Slide 9: Key takeaway Narration Anna: Displacement works when you solve a real problem and make change feel safe. Greg: Do the homework, show clear value and keep the process ethical. Anna: In crowded markets that's the difference between a lost bid and a flagship customer. Greg: Win on merit, deliver on promises and the switch will stick. On-screen text Key takeaway Successful displacement solves real pain, eases migration risk and stays ethical.