In Difficult Times, Keep Your Customers Happy
Ironically, the cost of keeping a client is less costly than trying to find a new one..
Recent research stipulates that advertising expenses, web
development, television production and other media means are
simply too costly to the bottom line. Yet, rather than focus on
the core, organizations incessantly seek new clients for
business.
Recently, a client recommended a certain vendor to David. In
trying to secure a large print order David immediately called
the vendor, not once but five times. The call was never returned
and the vendor lost a significant six-figure order. The question
for you is, "Are you losing business before your eyes"?
Delivering an experience that is satisfying to customers and
differentiated from competitors drives both repeat visits and
improved profitability. However, poor experiences such as that
above enable clients such as David to test competitors and move
freely to others. Further, in today's competitive and quick
paced world, it is not difficult for someone like David to take
the remote control and switch quickly to the competition. And if
that does not work, they will switch again as loyalty in today's
market runs thin.
Family and Friends Plan
The cost of conducting business is very expensive. Everything
from gasoline to telecommunications is on the rise. Ironically,
maintaining clients costs less than one third the cost of new
client acquisition. Organizations today fail to adopt the
"Family and Friends Plan". One negative interaction between
client and vendor will be shared amongst family, friends and
neighbors. Recently a real estate professionally securing a
million dollar sales agreement was asked by the same client to
find a new home. Being distant with the client by focusing on
new client acquisition, she not only lost the million- dollar
sale but a 1.2 million dollar purchase by the same client!
Friends and neighbors discovered the issue and now the agent's
sales are down 37%.
It's the little things
I do an extensive amount of work with a print and shipping
operation not far from my home office. Many vendors have opted
for my services but I prefer to go to Frank and Carol. They have
a mutual passion for serving the client. My visits are not about
business but rather interested friends exchanging pleasantries
and getter better acquainted each time. The pair knows the names
of my children their respective birthdays and even my wife's!
That is not just interest, not about friendship- it is service
differentiation. Further, one Sunday evening I received a
telephone call at 9:30 from Frank indicating the completion of a
job. He apologized for a two-day delay and wanted me to know
that the job was not only ready but was on his tab. That is
service with a smile and service that continues to enable me to
return time and time again.
Consistency
Effective operations and service experiences yield to the bottom
line. Consistent execution leads to repeat business via customer
loyalty and lower cost of operation. Interestingly, and based on
doctoral research prior to this study happy clients, lead to
happy employees and happy employees lead to less attrition on
both sides of the operation.
Three businesses exemplify consistency;
1) Starbuck's always hires excited and passionate baristas.
Their energy and consistency help retain customer loyalty. It is
no wonder that consumers do not mind paying a premium for
coffee. Whether you are in Boise or Baton Rouge, you the
consumer will always be served in a similar fashion.
2) Southwest Airlines decreases the fair of flying by offering a
uniform fee with a passionate and energized staff. Infrequently
does one find a poor experience traveling on this air carrier,
that continues through the years to continually post a
significant profit.
3) McDonald's offers fast, reliable and efficient service in any
city. Employees are constantly willing and ready for your order.
And, while dietary issues have changed during recent times, this
fast food icon continually posts profitable results.
Albeit each maintains a different demographic and
product/service focus, the differentiation between each and its
competitors is consistency in operation and operational design.
Customers repeatedly experience consistency each and every time
enabling a low cost, high return customer loyalty program.
Standards for Excellence
A program or rather culture to achieve consistent experience is
difficult and arduous work. The first phase is to assess
critically where you are and where you want to be. It is
imperative to take pen to paper and ask both customers and
employees about their experience with the organization. Seek
trends and spikes in the data. Do not ask for the why, but what
and the how. There exist other helpful ideas:
1. Make unannounced site visits or simply watch operations. Use
a critical eye here to denote spikes in mission, vision and
values of your organization.
2. Do not look for the obvious. Seek the rationale for the
little items. Ensure calls are answered in two to three rings.
Return calls within an allotted time from, for example I return
all client calls within reason within 90 minutes of receipt. Use
thank you cards and remember client's names.
3. Teach and Coach. Your clients as well as your customers need
the correct operational tools. If you seek improvements they
must be taught, as years of habit do not immediately change.
4. Standards. Simply put, when change is needed set standards
and stick to them. These include appearance, dress code, hiring,
and client interaction. If the culture does not exemplify the
standards how might clients remain loyal?
Clearly, globalization, the proliferation of the Internet and
the ease of entrepreneurialism have created a highly competitive
environment. Differentiation, loyalty, consistency and execution
are paramount for the client experience. It is not conscious
effort but the unconscious subtleties that will help separate
your organization, make you different, maintain client loyalty
and keep your profits.
©2009 All Rights Reserved. Drew Stevens Ph.D.
About the Author
Drew Stevens Phd works with organizations to maximize sales in less time. Drew can assist your organization with sales or customer service. Find his book, Split Second Selling available on Amazon.com or at his website gettingtothefinishline.com.

