Many businesses face a very common problem.
Customers often ask:
“Can you give me a cheaper price?”
As a result, companies slowly fall into a difficult cycle:
When competitors lower prices, you lower yours
Competition becomes more intense
Profit margins become smaller and smaller
Eventually, the business turns into a company that can only compete on price.
But at the same time, we see some brands that operate very differently.
For example:
Apple products are often more expensive than competitors
Nike shoes are rarely the cheapest option
Yet consumers are still willing to buy them.
Why does this difference exist?
The reason is usually simple:
Some companies sell products, while others build brands.
In most industries, when customers only compare prices, it usually means one thing:
The market sees little difference between options.
If customers believe all products are similar, they will naturally choose:
The cheapest one.
This is why many businesses struggle as competition grows.
Once a company enters a price war, three common problems appear:
1️⃣ Profit margins become very low
2️⃣ Customer loyalty is weak
3️⃣ Competition becomes increasingly aggressive
Eventually the business enters a cycle:
Lower price → More competition → Even lower price
If we observe how businesses compete, we can generally divide them into three categories.
The first type of company competes purely on price.
The main characteristic is:
Little to no differentiation.
Customers choose them mainly because their price is lower.
However, this model carries a major risk.
If another competitor offers a cheaper price, customers will easily switch.
As a result, price-based companies often experience:
Low profits
Unstable customer relationships
Difficulty achieving long-term growth
The second type of company focuses on product advantages.
These companies emphasize:
Product features
Technology
Quality improvements
Customers choose them because the product itself is better.
Compared to price-driven companies, this model is stronger.
However, in many industries, product advantages can eventually be copied by competitors.
So relying only on product features may not create long-term dominance.
The third type of company is brand-driven.
Brand companies do not rely only on price or features.
Their biggest advantage is:
Trust.
When customers trust a brand, the decision-making process becomes much easier.
For example:
Many people automatically think of
Apple when buying smartphones.
Many consumers think of
Nike when purchasing sportswear.
In these cases, the brand becomes a shortcut for decision-making.
Customers are no longer comparing only price or specifications.
They are choosing the value and identity represented by the brand.
The true power of branding is perceived differentiation.
When a brand becomes established, customers begin considering factors such as:
Whether the brand is trustworthy
What values the brand represents
Whether the brand aligns with their identity
This is why some brands can maintain higher prices while still maintaining strong demand.
Branding transforms competition from product comparison into value comparison.
For many companies, the word “brand” feels abstract.
But in reality, branding usually develops from a few important elements.
Clear positioning
A company must understand:
Who it serves
What problems it solves
What makes it different
Consistent content and communication
Brands are rarely built overnight.
They grow through consistent:
Content
Stories
Customer cases
Customer experiences
Consistent value expression
Successful brands usually maintain the same core message over time.
This consistency allows the market to form a clear perception.
In business, companies usually move toward one of two paths.
The first path is:
Price competition.
On this path, businesses continuously reduce prices, profit margins shrink, and competition intensifies.
The second path is:
Brand competition.
On this path, companies build trust, value, and recognition, allowing them to move beyond pure price comparison.
In simple terms:
Companies without brands must compete on:
Price.
But companies with strong brands have the power to:
Set their price.
This is why some brands continue to grow larger, while others remain trapped in endless price wars.
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