The answer depends on your business
goals. If you want fast-paced quantum growth, you should concentrate energy on
adding new customers. But if your goals are more incremental - if you envision
continual year over year growth in the 10 to 20 percent range - booking repeat
customer revenue is far easier than adding new customers.
(Of course, don't lose sight of new
customer acquisition; doing so entirely would doom the future of your
business.)
While it is not easy to double your
existing customers' spending year after year, it is easy enough to 1) keep them
happy and loyal, and 2) develop additional products and services for them,
which they will buy if they are happy and loyal.
How can you build loyalty and garner
repeat business? With two customer words: service and communication.
Enhance the customer's service
experience.
Customer service is all about fixing
customer problems. What kinds of problems?
- Fixing things which are broken, or that don't work as expected.
- Facilitating deliveries, exchanges and returns.
- Resolving billing and payment issues.
- Fulfilling the exceptional need or the odd request.
- Providing technical advice and user guidance.
This last is very important because
many products are so complicated they can't really work without solid service.
And that doesn't go just for
technical products. It applies to self-assembled furniture - the kind you can't
seem to put together based on cryptic instructions. Or home repair - consider
those valuable retired plumbers in orange aprons at Home Depot. Or what about
your weekend hotel stay, transformed by that special concierge into something
you remember the rest of your life.
In each case customer service is a
critical part of the product. And in every case, it's the part that makes
customers feel great about doing business with you.
Customer Service = Repeat Business
McDonalds believes that once you
successfully address a customer's complaint, that customer is several times
more likely to come back and buy more Big Macs. McDonalds store managers search
for problems; they long for problems; they pray for problems.
Train your people to listen closely
for problems and look for things that are out of whack. Establish customer
service protocols to insure those issues are dealt with quickly and completely.
Plus, your company gets a bonus for
good listening: creatively solved complaints are often the genesis of new
products and services. Build a system which rewards both customers and
employees for those new business ideas.
Too many companies see customer
service as an expense. In reality it is the most cost-effective customer
retention program you could possibly have. So hire reps who want to help people
and train them to spot opportunities. Use technology to make it easier to find
solutions. Lavish money on it. Gather knowledge and wisdom in databases and
make it available to everyone in the service chain.
Customer Communications
Continual communication is another
key to building the kind of customer loyalty that translates into repeat, and
increasing, business.
Here are seven ways to stay in touch
with your customers.
Find out how customers are really
using your products and services.
Call them casually or conduct formal surveys. Visit and observe them in action.
Track their online behavior. Look for ways to enhance the value they get from
you.
Put yourself in front of your
customers.
User groups, conventions,
conferences, road shows, tours, online forums, and even interactive webcasts,
are viable ways to create a two-way free flowing dialogue. Give customers a
deeper understanding of how you help them, and find out what's on their minds
so you can serve them even better. For high-end, big-spending customers,
schedule an annual review or strategy meeting to set the agenda and lock them
in.
Publish a valuable newsletter.
Most newsletters are filled with self-serving drivel about
the company. Who cares who got promoted, or that you just had a wonderful
company picnic? Fill your newsletter with stimulating ideas, case studies and practical
tips that add value to your customers and help them do better business.
Important to your newsletter's success is frequency and consistency, so publish
often - monthly or even twice a month, and keep it on schedule.
Ask your customers the magic question:
"What would you like to buy from us, if only we'd offer it to you?" Do this yourself or outsource it. Either way, these answers
are like customer retention gold.
Keep your product and service offer
fresh.
Keep upgrading and adding on, and
announce to your customers that you are doing so.
Make special offers to your special
customers.
And all your existing customers are
special. Give them special offers and loyalty discounts that plain old new
customers can't get. Make sure they know it is only for them.
Revive the art of the hand-written
note.
In this age of hyper-convenient
email and instant messaging, a hand-written note acknowledges the unique nature
of the recipient. There's just no way to duplicate the one to one feeling a
note will create. Do this and you could have the customer for life!
These customer service and
communications tips are just a few of the hundreds of ways to communicate with
customers to build loyalty and repeat business. Combine them with judicious
up-sells, re-sells, and cross-sells, and that 20 percent annual revenue growth
is yours forever.
“Sweat a little Be better”
Africa’s finest!
Brian Pade
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