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Insights

Stop competing on price: How to stand out.

Visibility gets you seen, but distinctiveness gets you chosen. Here's how scaling businesses move beyond vanity metrics to build a premium brand that actively captures market share.
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Will - Brand Strategist
14th May 2026
Stop competing on price: How to stand out.

There’s a distinct point in a company’s growth where visibility stops being the main problem. When a business reaches a certain scale—often around that £5m revenue mark—people generally know you exist. The challenge now shifts from being seen to being the only choice.

 

Many businesses at this stage continue to rely on their original marketing habits that worked in the beginning. Chasing impressions, increasing social reach, focusing on broad awareness.

 

But when you’re trying to protect premium pricing and capture market share from established competitors, those metrics often become a distraction. Protecting your margins at this level is about intentional distinctiveness. It means making sure that when your ideal customer is ready to make a decision, your business is the clear, obvious choice.

 

Here are five practical ways for founders to build the kind of distinctiveness that actively drives commercial growth and brand equity.

 

 

 

01. Protect your premium positioning

When looking to increase market share, there’s a natural temptation to dilute your tone of voice or soften your pricing to appeal to a wider, more mainstream audience.

 

But expanding your reach shouldn’t mean compromising your value. True commercial equity reinforces your premium positioning at every single touchpoint. By remaining disciplined and consistently communicating your unique value, you make sure that when your target audience finds you, they understand exactly why you charge a premium.

 

 

 

02. Move away from ‘design by committee’

As a business grows, understandably, more and more people become involved in marketing decisions. However, trying to accommodate every internal opinion often leads to a ‘consensus paradox’, where creative and messaging is watered down until it feels safe to everyone in the room.

 

The irony is that ‘safe’ marketing is forgettable, and therefore a huge risk to your margins. It blends into the background, forcing you to compete on price over value. To escape this and build genuine distinctiveness, you need a clear, definitive stance. And if a creative decision feels slightly uncomfortable in the boardroom, it’s often a good indication that your brand is finally standing out in the market.

Do not dilute your brand just to win volume.

03. Stop buying traffic from bargain hunters

 

Chasing broad, high-volume search terms is an expensive vanity exercise. Although reaching a large audience might look great on a marketing report, a broad, generic search is exactly where the bargain hunters live. If you focus purely on volume, you end up competing with everyone, usually on price.

 

High-intent, localised search is where the premium buyers are. For instance, independent schools benefit far more from targeted local SEO in their specific catchment areas than from fighting to rank for general education terms. When you target the exact moment of consideration, you capture high-value market share without having to discount your services to win the click.

 

 

 

04. Reduce digital friction in the user journey

 

Your digital user experience directly impacts how much you can charge. Premium pricing demands a premium experience. If you charge top-tier fees but your website features a clunky, frustrating checkout or buries vital information in hidden menus, the user instantly questions your value. And that digital friction quickly undoes all the hard work of your brand positioning.

 

A seamless, frictionless user journey justifies a premium price tag, assuring the buyer of your quality before they even speak to your team.

 

 

 

05. Balance emotional connection with technical logic

 

Effective brand building requires two things working in tandem. First, the emotional connection. A clear visual identity and compelling storytelling that make people stop and pay attention to your value. Second, the technical execution. The data analysis, targeted SEO and smooth user experience that guides them to take action.

 

Focusing on one without the other usually leads to missed opportunities. But bringing both together in our Heart & Brain framework is how intentional distinctiveness translates into measurable commercial growth.

 

 

 

A brick wall billboard featuring an advertisement design by Foden's a legal firm in Shropshire

 

 

 

Refining your market impact

 

Protecting your margins is a continuous process of refining how you show up in your market. It’s less about being seen by everyone and more about making a distinct, undeniable impact on the buyers who value quality over cost.

 

Looking for a strategic partner to help refine your brand positioning? Our Shrewsbury-based digital marketing agency helps ambitious businesses build the distinctiveness needed to scale. No fluff, no overhauls, just a growth strategy tailored to what you need. Let’s talk.

FAQs

01. What is the difference between brand awareness and brand equity?

Brand awareness is a measure of recognition, so whether a consumer knows your name or logo. Brand equity is the commercial value and trust tied to that recognition. While awareness gets your business seen, brand equity is what allows you to maintain premium pricing, launch new products successfully and build long-term loyalty.

02. How do you measure brand awareness effectively?

To measure awareness effectively, it helps to move beyond basic metrics like social media impressions. Instead, track metrics that indicate genuine commercial intent, such as direct website traffic (people typing your URL), branded search volume (people Googling your exact name) and the conversion rates of your high-intent search campaigns.

03. Why is distinctiveness more important than awareness?

Being vaguely recognised by a broad audience does not reliably drive revenue. Distinctiveness means being known for something highly specific by the exact audience that buys your product or service. In crowded markets, a distinctive brand with a clear point of view will consistently outperform a generic brand that tries to appeal to everyone.

Man in a green jacket and glasses smiles, touching his ear against a plain background.
By Will - Brand Strategist
Drawing on 16 years of creative and business experience, Will aligns visual identities with long-term commercial goals. He leads our brand team to deliver the foundation for scalable business growth.
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