The customers you need to grow your company may already be doing business with you
It’s a simple fact of business: Most companies are obsessed with getting
new customers. They advertise, plead, cajole, bribe, bend over backwards
and sometimes beg to get a new customer.
And after all that, once they get them, they ignore them.
“Most companies spend a lion’s share of resources to attract a new
customer,” said Theodore Kinni, co-owner of The Business Reader, a Williamsburg,
Va., business-to-business bookseller. “At the same time, more valuable,
already profitable existing customers are walking out the back door
unnoticed and uncared for.”
Kinni and partner Donna Greiner noticed this occurring in their own
business, and they felt it was affecting the firm’s bottom line. “We
weren’t spending enough time with our existing customers,” he said.
Kinni and Greiner decided to research how other firms were retaining
customers to help build retention levels in their own business. They
were so impressed with the stories they uncovered that they put the
information in a book, 1,001 Ways to Keep Customers Coming Back.{+}
“For years, we’ve been listening to business gurus tell us that the
customer is always right and that we need to keep customers for life,”
Kinni said. “Guess what? They’re right. Existing customers are the best
source of sales growth.”
The authors collected the ideas over the last half of the 1990s. What
emerged were the following 11 broad strategies for customer retention
outlined in 1,001 Ways to Keep Customers Coming Back.
- Build an unbeatable bundle of products and services. If you want
to keep your customers, make sure they can get what they want without
leaving your premises. Amazon.com, for example, may have started
selling books, but today, surfers stay in its online store for greeting
cards, music, videos and with the new zShops initiative, to shop
as many, small, independently owned stores as the company can cram
into cyberspace.At the Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, one of the chain’s best
ideas for bringing travelers back into one of their locations involves
audio books. Buy any one of the 200-plus audio books on display
in one Cracker Barrel, listen to it on the road, and when you’re
done, simply drop it off at any other Cracker Barrel and collect
a refund off the entire purchase price, minus a $3 rental fee.
- Give customers an incentive to come back. Be it a gift, a discount,
special financing or a chance to win what’s behind Curtain No. 1,
customers come back for incentives. McDonald’s cashed-in on the Beanie
Babie craze by offering a series of specially designed Teenie Beanies
with its Happy Meals for kids. The promotion generated so much business
in 1998 that the company ran it again in 1999.
- Tap into the power of communities of interest. Try thinking about
your customers as a community and your company as the common connection
they all share. To get a feel for how strong that bond can be, just
drop in on the annual Harley-Davidson rally each summer and suggest
that some other company builds a better bike. Purchase a new Harley-Davidson
and it comes with a free, one-year HOG (Harley Owner’s Group) membership.
The loyalty of Harley-Davidson owners is legendary—with some
riders even getting tattooed with the company logo.
- Stand behind your work and reap the rewards of trust. If your customers
don’t trust you, they won’t come back. Period. But, if they do, you
can survive the roughest seas. There is only one maker of refillable
lighters left in the United States, the Zippo Manufacturing Company.
What makes Zippo so special? The simple, unequivocal lifetime warranty:
“It works or we fix it free.”
- Support good works and your customers will support you. Doing well
by doing good is a powerful loyalty builder. Just ask children’s clothing
maker Hanna. Its “Hannadowns” program encourages customers to return
their purchases when their kids have stopped wearing them. The returned
clothes are cleaned and then donated to local charities. The customers
get a 20% discount on their next order, Hanna keeps the customer buying,
and the needy get 10,000 articles of returned clothing per month.
Everybody wins.
- Show your appreciation to every customer. Thoughtfulness counts.
Industrial cleaning products maker New Pig Corporation provides its
telephone reps with fast access to an assortment of greeting cards.
Mention that your favorite football team won on Sunday and a day or
two later, the postman delivers a congratulations card from the company.
- Know your trophy customers and treat them the best of all. If the
Pareto Principle runs true at your company, you will find that the
top 20% of your customers contribute 80% of sales. Japan’s Oura Oil
turns its trophy customers into service station royalty. Customers
who purchase more than 5,000 gallons of gas per year get a special
club card entitling them to plenty of extra services, such as free
windshield wiper fluid, whenever they gas up.Some firms create a celebration for their best clients.
New Jersey-based water and soil testing service Aqua-Protech Labs celebrates the
holidays and its best customers at the same time at its annual party.
A few years ago, customers and staff dined at the elegant Pegasus
Restaurant high atop the well-known Meadowlands Racetrack. The year’s
biggest client was called to center stage to receive a case of fine
wine as his company name went up in lights on the racetrack’s big
screen.
- Make it easier to buy from you than your competitor. “Keep it simple”
is especially important for today’s high-speed world. Customers appreciate
simplicity and convenience more than ever. UPS knows convenience is
king in a busy world, so it created an elegant overnight package for
customers, such as mortgage lenders, who send lots of documents that
require signatures and return shipping. The company made a reusable
envelope, so the recipient can simply sign the papers and ship them
back in the same package.
- Go to your customers. Bring your goods and service to the customer.
The Country Christmas Tree Farm in Sebastopol, Calif., knows that
it’s tough to earn the loyalty of customers who only come in once
per year, so it sends a thank you note with a twist. Buy your Christmas
tree from them and a thank you note arrives the following Thanksgiving—along
with directions back for this year’s tree.At the Little Nell Hotel in Aspen, Colo., the owners don’t wait
for guests to arrive to begin making them comfortable. The hotel
calls each visitor prior to arrival to answer questions about the
area and the hotel, make plans for dinners and hotel transfers and
to suggest and arrange recreational activities.
- Find out what your customers want and give it to them. Maybe it’s
time to listen. In Worcester, Mass., Fallon Clinic began listening
to its customers’ complaints and found out that many of them
centered on one department’s doctors. Some fast interpersonal skills
training for the staff, and patient complaint levels were reduced
by almost two-thirds.
- Become a customer service champion. Good customer service starts
with the boss. What do Nordstrom, Southwest Airlines and Ritz-Carlton
Hotels have in common? They are famous for building their businesses
by putting customers first. Consumers flock to them because of it.
These companies are led by CEOs who are customer service champs; they
recognize and reward employees that cater to customers; and, they
brag about their accomplishments.
Authored by: Ron Ameln. Republished by permission of the St. Louis Small Business Monthly,
The Source for Business Owners; September 2001.
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