Standing out is a perennial challenge in every industry – but for IT companies, it has become especially difficult. Services tend to look alike, and they are described everywhere using the same familiar vocabulary: end-to-end solutions, comprehensive services, tailored offerings, scalable digital transformation.

The problem is not the words themselves, but the fact that they are safe – and interchangeable. So, what can you do if you want to stand out and still sound credible?

Finding your sweet spot

In a well-known article, Harvard Business School scholars David J. Collis and Michael G. Rukstad pointed out that most executives are unable to articulate their company’s objective, scope and competitive advantage in a simple and understandable way. If leaders struggle to do this, it is unlikely that anyone else can.

The model they developed highlights how important it is for a company to identify its own strategic “sweet spot”. This is the point where a company’s expertise, customer need and competitive differentiation overlap – something customers truly need, but competitors are unable to offer.

In our work with IT-sector leadership teams and experts, we have sweet spot discussions regularly, and the conversation is almost always productive and eye-opening. Indeed, finding the sweet spot is not necessarily easy, and what an organisation believes to be its sweet spot often turns out to be something else entirely.

Differentiation in the IT sector starts with perspective

In the IT sector, the challenge is often that the sweet spot is very narrow. Most products and services can ultimately be found on competitors’ offering lists as well. This makes perspective – and the ability to articulate it clearly – all the more valuable.

An IT company’s brand is not built on technology, but on perspective. It is not enough to explain what the technology does. You must also explain why it matters. When communication focuses solely on technical features, it remains thin. When it communicates meaning, it leaves a lasting impression.

This is easily forgotten in the excitement surrounding new technologies, and that is precisely where a powerful opportunity for differentiation emerges.

Artificial intelligence is a good example of this phenomenon. Companies rushed to differentiate themselves through new technology, only to realise how quickly the same tools became available to everyone else. This was also highlighted in Netprofile’s Insight Track 2025 report, which showed that while the adoption of AI has increased productivity in fields such as communications and marketing, it has not translated into a lasting competitive advantage.

When everyone is using the same tools, differentiation depends on people, perspective – and the courage to use technology differently.

Authenticity and expertise make technology interesting

It is worth acknowledging that technology itself is rarely the story that truly resonates. What people connect with are people – their thinking, their experience and their point of view.

In the IT sector, credibility is therefore built through authentic expertise. Through individuals who are able to explain complex matters clearly and thoughtfully, sometimes even with enthusiasm. One credible, courageous voice can differentiate a company more effectively than any list of features ever will.

Authenticity, curiosity and even humour have their place. Too often, technology communication ends up sounding like a boring old user manual. Yet it is precisely the human perspective, the willingness to share how one thinks and why one chooses a certain path, that makes technology accessible and meaningful.

Technology may convince through features. People connect through perspective.

Courage as a long-term differentiator

Even when an IT company’s sweet spot is narrow and its services resemble those of its competitors, it does not have to blend into the background. Differentiation is always a conscious choice. It shows in how a company talks about itself, how openly it challenges established thinking, and which principles it builds its credibility on.

Companies that truly stand out do not try to appeal to everyone. They take a position, define their tone of voice and stay consistent over time. Differentiation is rarely the result of individual campaigns. More often, it is the outcome of a long‑term decision to communicate with clarity, confidence and authenticity.

In the IT sector, the sweet spot is found where technology meets human understanding – and where courage gives that intersection a recognisable voice.

At Netprofile, we work with IT companies to help them articulate that voice clearly and credibly. If you are looking to sharpen your perspective and define what truly sets you apart, we are always happy to continue the conversation.

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