Thursday, March 25, 2010

Building Customer Loyalty... Part III

In building customer loyalty, you have to understand how
relationships work; and like great wine, great relationships get
better with time. Yet remember, credibility and Itrust are built
slowly. You can not rush it. And don't expect miracles. When
dealing with tough and difficult customers, don't expect overnight
results. Customers want you to prove to them that you know
what you are talking about and you understand their business
and problems -- and only then will they listen to you.

Customer loyalty is the practice of finding, attracting, and
retaining your customers who could purchase from you. See,
many think customer loyalty is also customer satisfaction; but
they are not the same thing. When you think of having good
business practices, customer satisfaction is the main requirement
and the entry point. Customer satisfaction is for "all" your
customers. Customer loyalty is for your most valued and
profitable customers.

"An ounce of loyalty is worth a pound of cleverness."
~ Elbert Hubbard

So, what do we do? Have a program. Understand that systems
makes us efficient and responsive to customer wants. Systems
allow us to do the job right the first time.

Now with this in mind, realize that the objective of a loyalty
program is to deepen the customer relationship by offering
relevant rewards and incentives to reinforce the brand, service
or company. A successful loyalty program must consider the
customer's usage behaviour and attitudes toward the product
or service and even the company.

A loyalty program can help differentiate your brand, and
provide customers reasons to stay loyal because there are
rewards they can count on.

Still the question is... does it really work? It's all in the execution.

Hence, before you start giving out those rewards and incentives,
consider the costs of developing your program; and these include
not only discounts but operational expenses as well. Bear in
mind that successful loyalty programs are business and brand
strategies to induce sales.

And just like networking, in loyalty programs, you got to develop
a connection. A deeper connection means greater loyalty and
more customers immune to competitors. And as in networking,
don't simply start and end your link with an "invite". Look out
for each other.

"Complexity and trust go together... the more firms downsize
and outsource, the more they need partnerships, alliances, and
joint ventures." - Peter Keen

Loyalty is about long-term, win-win relationships. It's now a
matter of identifying and developing your most profitable
customers.

Take note...
"Customer loyalty begins with customer satisfaction but
only develops with continuous delivery and care."

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