Would You Like FRIES with That? Giving Customers What They Love
It used to be hard to buy books from Foyles, the world-famous bookshop in London's Charing Cross Road..
The building was a warren; the layout was haphazard; staff were hard to find.
To buy a book, you had to queue twice -- once to pay and get
a receipt from some hapless cashier in a barred cage, and a
second time to collect your books. No fun at all.
Nowadays, it's a different store. There are friendly staff,
clear signs, lifts, air conditioning, author events, a jazz
café, a helpful website, the works. It's a pleasure to shop
there.
Somewhere along the line, Foyles realised it had to offer FRIES
to its customers. French fries? No -- ketchup and grease on the
books would be a bad idea. I'm talking about FRIES, the hugely
popular business acronym that I've just invented.
F is for Friendliness. The simple act of smiling and being
friendly towards customers makes an incredible difference. The
world's friendliest man works in MVC, a record shop near where I
live. You can't walk out not smiling. (By contrast, I always
used to walk out fuming from the local branch of Dixons
electrical store. Before it was shut down.) And it's not just
people - marketing materials, shop fronts and websites can be
friendly or hostile too.
R is for Reassurance. When you invest in a one-off product or
service, it really helps to have some sort of reassurance about
what you’re getting. For example, one of my favourite business
gurus is Robert Middleton, who helps independent professionals
to market their business. When you buy his services, you can
read testimonials, take advantage of his money-back guarantee,
and get access to ongoing support. These are all great forms of
reassurance.
I is for Information. OK, we're all drowning in too much data.
(My digital camera came with 13 leaflets!) But helpful and
relevant information is always welcome. Buy a book from Harper
Collins' Perennial imprint and you may well find a 16-page P.S.
section at the back. There might be an author interview, a
book-club guide, suggestions for further reading, and so on.
Like DVD extras, the quality is variable, but when it works it's
great.
E is for Extras. It's nice to get more than you expected. When
you sign up for an online bank account with Egg, you get an
online money manager, which can keep track of all your accounts
- even those with other banks and building societies. It also
gives you one point of access to all of them. It's a
fantastically useful service which really reinforces the benefit
of opening an Egg account in the first place.
S is for Simplicity. Some industries delight in making things
complicated for their customers. (Mobile phones come to mind.)
Go the other way – make it simple. When I needed a new PC at the
start of this year, I read a magazine review of a promising
machine made by Evesham. PCs are assembled from many components
(processor, RAM, graphics card, screen etc) and specifying one
takes time and research. Evesham’s website makes it easy. There
is a list of reviewed machines, which you can order as they are,
or which you can use as the basis for changing specific
components as you see fit. Simple and brilliant.
And what about your competitors? It's always worth buying from
them (if it's straightforward to do so -- buying a bridge from a
competing civil engineer might be going a bit far. Ditto
mortgages from another bank. But you could certainly get the
forms...). For one thing, you can get ideas from taking their
products or services to pieces. But also concentrate on the
buying experience. Did you get FRIES with it?
All of this is obvious, but businesses don't do it. Knowing that
something's important is not the same as acting on it -- the
mere knowledge is not enough.
So here's a challenge for you. Everybody loves FRIES. So what
could you do to make it easier and more pleasurable for your
customers, consumers or clients to buy from you?
© 2005 Charles Kingsmill.
About the Author
Article By Charles Kingsmill. Please visit Charles’s web site at http://www.StrategyXL5.com for additional information and resources on growing your business.

