Thursday, March 18, 2010

Building Customer Loyalty... Part II

"Trust... is the foundation for innovation and coordination of
the
supply chain, customer interaction, and market, product
and
service development." - Peter Keen

Trust precedes attachment. And so it goes with customer
loyalty.
Fulfilling the basic promise of your product is the entry
point to
"customer satisfaction".

Nevertheless, nowadays, customer satisfaction only gets you
to
play the game, like a buy-in to play in a poker game. This is
simple
yet an often overlooked requirement for customer
satisfaction. If a
product is to be delivered, it must arrive on
the customer's specified
or expected time in "perfect quality"
condition; and most importantly,
it must fulfill the benefits
promised by the product or service.


"You achieve customer satisfaction when you sell
merchandise that
doesn't come back to a customer who does."
~ Stanley Marcus


Now imagine your customers are delighted enough to tell their
friends about your product or service. That's what actually
happens
when we do a real good job for customers, they tell
their family
and friends about it. As we know, it's called
"word-of-mouth"
advertising, more effective than anything
seen on television. And
see, it all starts with "walk the talk".

Does it all end there? Not if you want to end your business.
Hence,
realize that it's not enough to satisfy customers -- you
need to find
them, attract them, and retain them. That's what
customer loyalty
is... "retain" them. Meaning, work for a long
term, win-win customer
relationships. Understand that winning
big deals for the day, week
or month will neither guarantee a
sustainable competitive advantage
nor ensure survival and
long-term growth. At the same time short
-term success, in
terms of sales or revenues, market growth rates,
market shares
and profitability, are no longer seen as highly
significant
marketing efforts.


Overall marketing initiatives are now directed toward
customer
retention and loyalty; so it's essential to build a
community of loyal
customers, some even unconsciously
behaving as product endorsers
for business to thrive and last.

"In business you get what you want by giving other people
what
they want." - Alice Foote MacDougall

How far does customer loyalty serve us?
Well, when a customer is loyal, he maybe dissatisfied at one
time
yet he will choose to stay on with the business. Loyal
customers
are more forgiving of service shortcomings that
they would still
choose to purchase your products and avail of
your services --
thus never let your guard down.

Keep working on your products and services while building
on those relationships.
Remember, cash registers would only
keep ringing if you give
that extra effort... continuously.

Take note...
"Customers can be satisfied but not necessarily loyal.
Satisfaction is just a moment; Loyalty is almost timeless."

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