By Josh
Linkner Josh Linkner is a five-time entrepreneur, venture capitalist,
and professor, and the New York Times best-selling author of Disciplined
Dreaming: A Proven System to Drive Breakthrough Creativity . You can
read more at JoshLinkner.com . @ JoshLinkner Entrepreneur, author, VC,
jazz guitarist @ JoshLinkner
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"Good morning McDonald's. We come in peace. We'd like to
propose a one-off collaboration between Burger King and McDonald's to
create something special--something that gets the world talking about
Peace Day. The McWhopper."
The savvy folks at Burger King took out full page ads in The New York Times and Chicago Tribune,
running an "open letter to McDonald's." The letter went on to propose
the two fast food giants blend "the best bits of the Whopper and Big
Mac" to form the ultimate burger for peace. Burger King proposed setting
up a temporary store in Atlanta (halfway between McDonald's Chicago
headquarters and Burger King's HQ in Miami) on September 21, also known
as Peace Day. All proceeds would be donated to support the cause.
The ad was clever and fun, challenging McDonald's to "end
the beef" between the two companies. "We know this is a lot to swallow,"
the ad continued, so please visit McWhopper.com for more info. Check out the site. Pure brilliance.
Let's unpack this strategy. BK leads the effort and gains
extraordinary free exposure as dozens of major media outlets pick up the
story. Burger King appears as the clever one, generating million of
dollars of buzz. If McDonald's agrees, they are the follower and the
ongoing attention would all be in BK's favor. If McDonald's declines,
they look backward and grumpy. All in the name of "peace".
In the game of chess, this strategy is called a Knight Fork.
The knight can attack multiple squares at once, so if an opponent
positions her knight to attack two of your pieces simultaneously, any
move you make is a bad one. It is a lose-lose. Here, BK was able to
deliver a "gotcha" because any way McDonalds responded would make them
look foolish.
Steve Easterbrook, McD's CEO, wrote back and declined the challenge while appearing out of touch and stodgy. Checkmate.
BK kept the move alive, opening up the challenge to Denny's
and four other competitors, who all played along. Now, the media is
covering these fun mash-up burgers while BK is enjoying tremendous brand
lift. McDonald's sits alone in the corner, licking its wounds.
As you craft your own competitive strategy, look for
opportunities to trap adversaries in a Knight Fork. While it takes some
creativity to get there, a fork can advance your cause while setting the
enemy back.
Too often, we run our businesses and careers in reactionary
mode, simply responding to the daily challenges. Grandmaster chess
players think several moves down the board, and often lure their
opponents into traps. Take the time to look beyond the daily fires and
craft a strategy that your competition won't even see coming.
Try out the Knight Fork and savor the delicious taste of victory. Extra sauce, hold the pickles.
The opinions expressed here by Inc.com columnists are their own, not those of Inc.com.
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