Five Strategies For Guaranteeing Customer Loyalty
>>by Bob Lucas
Customer retention has always been one of the most
cost effective ways to increase business revenue. According to the
international consulting firm Bain & Company, you can increase
profits by as much as ninety-five percent through increasing retention
by as little as five percent. If organizations fail to focus their
efforts on servicing current customers while spending excessive amounts
on acquiring new ones, they are wasting their efforts and much of their
revenue.
Most customers are look for good value for their money,
especially in hard economic times. They are also attuned to product and
service pricing. Even so, many customers are likely to pay a bit more
to organizations that demonstrate a true concern for customer needs and
a willingness to go out of the way to provide quality service levels.
Certainly, providing service that differentiates your organization from
others requires effort, training, and staffing, but the return on
investment (ROI) is well worth it long term. You cannot expect to
approach service with a "fix it and move on" mentality. Service a
process, not an event. It requires dedication of time, money and
resources and a commitment to provide whatever it takes to satisfy your
customers.
Here are five strategies that you can use to enhance your organization's customer retention:
1.
Create brand recognition. The most successful companies and those that
stay in business for decades or longer, are the ones that spend time
and effort planning and executing strategies to acquire and sustain
brand recognition. This means creating a market presence where
customers know who they are and what they provide. Think about
organizations such as, Sears, JC Penny's, Firestone, Ford, AAA, Maytag
and Macy's. When you hear those names, you know what they do and what
to expect from them.
To establish your brand recognition, you
must first identify what it is that you want to be known for, to whom
you will market it, how your will market it, and ways to offer quality
products and services at a competitive price. Once you establish these
criteria, you can set out to spread the word through advertising,
product and service sampling, strategic partnerships, customer
acquisition, and effective service.
2. Get regular feedback from
your customers. You cannot address customer needs if you do not know
what they want. A big mistake that many service providers make is that
they look at articles and other sources that say "customers want..."
and go on to list what all customers want. While such resources can be
a good indicator, unless you ask your customers what they expect and
want regularly, you are likely spending time and money providing the
wrong thing to your customers. For example, in good economic times
competitive pricing may not get people in your door or to your website.
However, when money gets tight cost may become more important to your
customers. Additionally, depending on the type of products or services
that you provide, customer needs may be different. For example, for
customers looking to buy construction equipment, safety might be an
important concern. For someone buying women's clothing that is not
likely a big issue. Take your customer's service pulse regularly in
order to keep up with their changing and specific needs.
3. Make
it easy for customers to provide feedback. Do not forget to ask for
feedback following a sale or service encounter. This is a big mistake.
If you do not ask, most customers will not tell you. Some studies show
that if customers are disappointed, they will not tell you. They will
simply go away and then tell others about their negative experience.
This can lead to the loss of that disgruntled employee while missing
the opportunity to serve those who heard their story. You need to hear
the good, the bad, and the ugly related to how well customers perceive
your service efforts.
Many organizations say that they welcome
customer feedback but they hide behind technology and make providing it
difficult. Make it easy for people to give you feedback or voice
concerns. On your website, have a link that says "Customer Feedback."
When some clicks the tab they should get a form to complete and see
your organization name, address, phone number and email address at the
bottom, in case they want that information. On your automated phone
system, offer an extension in your outgoing message that says, "To
leave feedback for us, punch extension #___." Ensure that someone
checks these sources daily and responds within less than twenty-four
hours. Contact the customer to let them know that you received their
feedback and to thank them.
Continually look for a variety of
ways to collect customer feedback. Use traditional (e.g. table/counter
questionnaires, mailed surveys, telephone follow-ups) as well as less
traditional means (e.g. feedback drawings/give-aways, website "contact
us" forms that provide complete addresses and phone contact
information, personalized letters from the President/CEO that are
mailed or emailed right after the service encounter). To accomplish
this feedback solicitation, create a dedicated system or staff
responsible for gathering, analyzing and responding to customers, when
necessary.
4. Listen to your customers. It does no good to gather
input from your customers if you ignore it. This will only lead to
frustrated customers and lost business. If nothing else, thank the
customer for taking the time to share their opinion with you.
Not
matter whether the feedback that you receive is positive or negative,
you should receive it enthusiastically and give it immediate attention.
Instead of looking at negative feedback or complaints as a bad thing,
recognize that the customer took the time to share it with you and ask
yourself the following questions:
Why would this customer feel this way?
What did we do/say that created this impression with the customer?
Is the customer's reaction reasonable? Why or why not?
Have we heard similar things from other customers?
If necessary, what can we do to prevent similar reactions by other customers?
Gather
all customer feedback and examine it periodically. Look to see if there
are trends or patterns that you need to address. For example, if a
number of customers have complained about long wait times on the
telephone or that they failed to receive a product or service when
promised.
5. Act on Feedback Immediately. Do not file customer
feedback away for discussion later, or to have a committee review it;
act on it right away. If you fail to examine the cause of customer
dissatisfaction or to acknowledge feedback received from them, they
will likely stop giving it. If they are complaining, they will also
likely escalate the issue higher in the organization or abandon take
their business elsewhere.
If someone is unhappy with your
organization because of a policy, procedure or the way he or she was
treated, you should deal with that issue immediately. Examine and
change the process that created the problem or counsel or discipline
any employee, as appropriate. Failure to act can lead to additional
complaints by other customers.
The key in guaranteeing customer
loyalty is to treat customers not as you would like to be treated, but
as THEY would like to be treated. Strive to provide exceptional service
in every service encounter and the name of your organization will
potentially become a household word.
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