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Unwritten rules for competing against peers

18K views 48 replies 20 participants last post by  GregB 
#1 ·
I am wondering if there are some unwritten rules amoung beekeepers about competing in the same market?
I have had a few scenarios this year with friends and fellow beekeepers competing for the same business.

I have one friend who is selling his honey in the same small town where I live and is traveling 1.5 hrs from his home to do it. Isn't there some sort of turf rule? This irks me but I haven't said anything to hime yet.

Another former customer who I've sold packages to in the past, we know most of the same beekeepers, and lives about 15 miles away, is now selling packages this year. What?

Another situation regarding a group of beekeepers who have been purchasing most of the nucs I produced for the last several years, desided to start to buy from a new business that has opened in there area, no problem, but never told me of the change. Should I be upset they didn't notify me or is this just the way people are?

Just curious about what your thoughts are on competing against a friend?

Thanks,
Ron
 
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#2 ·
My take is that's just the way people are. An apple grower told me once, if the guy down the road is 5 cent's cheaper, go down and look and there will be all your customers.
I don't compete against my friends, and will through customers there way if in there area, but as everything money talks. hope the nucs are working out, heard the weather isn't the best down there.
 
#5 ·
what does unwritten rule mean?
Business is business, He or she that produces a value for a customer base will be profitable, those who wine and wonder about rules get left behind! As in real estate the 3 rules are location, location, location, translates into the only 3 rules of business Sell, Sell, Sell.
their are 330 million people is the USA and not enough honey is produced in this country, the value of locally produced honey is huge, raise your price and make some money with it.
 
#6 ·
I've been in sales as a profession for many years. Price is usually not the number one reason a customer purchases from you. Price is usually number 3 or 4 on the list. For a small percentage of customers it is all about price and have no brand loyalty. I sell products that are usually the most expensive. I find that being the most expensive is actually an advantage to me most of the time. I don't want the bottom feeders that only shop price. Value added is where the market is really at. 2 products that are basically the same, the product that the customer perceives is the best value will get the purchase. How is your product Nuc, package, or honey) a better value? Most of the time it's about the service before, during, and after the sale. Do you follow up after the sale? Never expect a customer to keep buying from you. When you do, you're dead. Know the competition, and their products. Compare 2 Nucs; Both are $125, 5 frames, cardboard Nuc box, new queen, and busting with bees and brood. If 1 has frames drawn out last year, and the other has brood frames that look like they're 10 years old, which would you purchase? I'm not saying you do this! I'm just giving an example. Position yourself such that the customer perceives that you are giving a product that has superior value. Get out there and work for those customers or your competition will. Write down what your strenghts and weaknesses are. What are the strenghts and weaknesses of your competition? Sell your strenghts.

Wisnewbee
 
#7 ·
Take a look at people who are successful. They never pass up an opportunity to plug their product of service. There is a guy on here that does that all the time. Keith Jarret does a terrific job of promoting his product, Nutra Bee. He has done such a good job, I wish I was big enough to buy it. Why, because he has done the work to promote the product as the best on the market. How much does it cost? Don't know, don't really care. The best costs, so I'm already expecting to pay a little more. That's value added.

Wisnewbee
 
#9 ·
It woudl be nice if you could just pick what you want and that woudl mean success. It is called competition and i suggest you do what will cause you to come out the winner. that means finding out what the customer wants and provide that. if it is better price. than produce lower cost nucs. if it is quality then produce better quality nuc. and if it is volume then produce volume. There is a saying. there is quality quantity and price. you can pick two. And that is very true.

You want a hobby. you can pick what you want to do. you want a business you better do what your customer wants.
 
#10 ·
If your sales are based solely or significantly on low price, you are in a "race to the bottom"....which means you will keep lowering your price, your competition will keep lowering their price...until you hit bottom. Unless your volume is increasing a lot (like, exponentially), this is not a long term profitable race to be in. I'd come up with some way to differentiate what you are doing vs the competition...and perhaps raise your prices.

But, unwritten rules? Keep confidential information confidential. Don't lie. I'm not sure what other "rules" are worth worrying about.

deknow
 
#11 ·
There is a long time beek just up the road from me. He sells way cheaper than I do but I still sell out every year. Granted I'm not keeping 200 hives like he does but I still managed to sell 500 lbs. this year at an average price of $9.00 /lb after packaging cost. So don't fret over the competition, try to make your packaging different from theirs and set your price at a level that is profitable for you. People will buy what they perceive to be of better quality and value. Better value doesn't necessarily mean cheaper price, it means the customer feels they are getting a better product for the price. When I sell out I send people to this fellow, yet when I extract and put my signs out or set up I still get return customers that I have sent to him.
 
#15 ·
my brother in law is in upper management in a large package delivery service. I will always remember one thing he said when I told him Walmart moved into a near by community, and which I commented on how Walmart would hurt the local busineses.

He said there is nothing better for business than competition. Keeps the businesses striving for market share and will attract more consumers into an area market. He was right.
 
#16 ·
I hate to say it, but when customers go somewhere else, it means they've found better value for their $$ typically. I would check out what the competition is selling that's making it more attractive then what you're selling. What other said too, communication is key, talk to your customers, follow up and see how satisfied they are and be willing to take some criticism and improve your products/services.
 
#18 ·
>Should I be upset they didn't notify me or is this just the way people are?

You should never be upset. It will only cause stress and harm you health and shorten your life. Not everyone sees things the same way.

A lot of good advice on quality vs price etc. and I agree. Better to have a quality product that is priced at what it is worth rather than the cheapest price. I've never seen the point of trying to compete on price. You only hurt yourself and your quality when you do.
 
#20 ·
I have heard of so many beekeepers that have lost hives this year. Some feel the cause was poor nutrition in 2012. I am certain anyone starting a nuc last year and didn't provide supplimental feed might have a dead hive this year. Some will blame the producer but I guess that's part of the learning process.
 
#21 ·
I see a guy lose almost his entire operation due to what I believe poor nutrition. Very hot and dry, and the bees brought in little nectar and no pollen. He lost hundreds of colonies one winter. Now that is a learning experience. It would be easy to blame the producer but producer has little to do with it less the colony crapped out in the first month. It's mostly the beekeeper. They need to pay attention and be prudent in keeping their bees. I guess thats what really divides the beekeepers from those who keep bees.
 
#22 ·
I see a guy lose almost his entire operation due to what I believe poor nutrition. It's mostly the beekeeper. They need to pay attention and be prudent in keeping their bees. I guess thats what really divides the beekeepers from those who keep bees.
BMAC, very well said, we call them bee haulers or box haulers. It's a sad seen out here in Cali almost every year, Febuary comes and there is a grave yard of empty boxes from one end of the valley to the other.
 
#24 ·
Keith will likely say something about Nutra-Bee, but I'll let him do that. Feeding bees is definitely a key to keeping hives strong especially in a drought year. We have been feeding out local bees for the past 2 years as it has been incredibly cool and wet during spring and our main flow. When summer rolls around the main flow is over and we are in a dearth. The only way to keep bees healthy and populous is to feed, feed and feed syrup and patties. It really is not that hard to see and figure out. The challenging part is to pay those bills. You'll need a good $ if you want to provide good bees.

Jean-Marc
 
#26 ·
I'm still learning but a very high percentage of beekeeping seems to be nutrition and mite control. If I figure that out I feel like I have a good shot at success.

There is a Dave M guy south of here that I saw down here putting hives in pepper....cheap feed!
Must be a different guy I think he's from New England or maybe California.
 
#29 ·
Sounds to me like, with mite treatments a beekeeper has to realize the impact on a queen and be proactive in replacing her after so many treatments. When I look at my situation, I don't feel nutrition was the issue. What I noticed were queens failing about the same time, the constants seem to be mating conditions and mite treatments
 
#31 ·
from a different thread he treated with MAQS one pad, once in Oct, once in Jan(temp 70 degrees). every time I decide I'm going to try MAQS someone I know has a problem with them. I'm guessing that the hives must have had brood in S.C. in Jan but if the MAQS took out the queens, there were no droans around for them?
 
#41 ·
Thanks, So far OA is my treatment of choice (Vaporizing). I have not used it long enough to notice any long term effects. I also use it only when monitoring indicates I need to.
 
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