Being
perceived as one of the top three in a market, regardless of industry, industry
sector or market size, is critically important.
These market leaders are or can be referred to as The Big Three.
Big Three U.S.
broadcast television networks:
NBC,
ABC, CBS
Big Three denim
jeans makers: Levi Strauss, Lee,
Wrangler
GE Lighting
Big Three U.S. breakfast cereal makers: Post,
Kellogg’s, General Mills
Big Three global retailers: Walmart, Asda, Carrefour
Costco
Big Three food retailers in Canada :
Loblaws, Metro,
Sobeys
Tus
Big Three U.S. food
services companies:
Compass
Group, Aramark, Sodexo
Cadbury’s
Edy’s/Dreyer’s,
Blue Bell
Big Three U.S. fast
food hamburger restaurants:
McDonald’s,
Wendy’s, Burger King
Big Three U.S. office products retailers: Staples, Office
Depot, Office Max
Barnes & Noble
Big Three U.S. wireless carriers: Verizon, AT&T,
Sprint Nextel
Big Three management consulting firms: BCG,
Bain & Company, McKinsey
Moody's, Fitch
Big Three U.S. colleges: Harvard, Yale, Princeton
Name
#4 in any category above. Some are hard
to imagine. A business manager or owner
knows his or her business must be perceived as one of the three biggest or best
or cheapest. The categories depend on
market segmentation, and market segmentation depends on different perceptions
of the company, organization, product or service. “History shows that the first brand into the
brain, on the average, gets twice the long-term market share of the No. 2 brand
and twice again as much as the No. 3 brand.
And the relationships are not easily changed. The leader brand in category after category
outsells the number two brand by a wide margin….Many marketing experts overlook
the enormous advantages of being first.”
The Big Three category in the list above that has my attention is the Big Three e-book sellers. Does Barnes & Noble drop off? Who replaces it?
from Threes,
Chapter 8, “Threes in Business and Technology”
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