Renewing Customer Loyalty

By: Joe Love
Submitted: 2007-01-17 11:49:40
Print this article | Tell a friend | For publisher | Social Bookmarking
Rating:
 

Every business loses customers, but not many do much about getting them back. And that is a big mistake. Studies show that the average business looses 20 percent of its customer base each year.

Here’s what that means in practical terms: For example, let’s say your business has 700 customers that buy repeatedly from you during the year and each customer spends an average of $300 a year. If you loose 20 percent of them ( one hundred and forty), you’ll loose $42,000 a year. That’s a lot of money to make up with new customers.

The longer you keep a customer the more he or she is worth to you. In part, because it takes a lot more money to acquire a new customer than it does to keep an existing one. In fact, businesses that are able to consistently keep the majority of their customer base are usually the ones that have increased profits year after year. Loyal customers spend more, they refer new customers, and it costs less to do business with them.

Before you can effectively put a plan in place to provide the highest in quality service and market to your existing customers, you first have to know the lifetime value of your customers. When you know the lifetime value of your customers it helps you budget more effectively. You know better how and where to best use your marketing dollars. This is valuable information that every business needs to know if it is going to be successful. And the only way to get this information is by knowing the lifetime value of your customer.

Once you know how much each customer contributes to your bottom line, you will begin to understand the value of hanging on to them. To do a better job of keeping your customers, you need a system to gather information about them and how they feel about your product and services. One of the best ways to do this is through using questionnaires on a regular basis. Ask questions such as: Why do you buy from us? How well do we meet your needs? How can we improve what we’re doing? What are we not doing that you’d like us to do? What do you find valuable about us? What’s valuable about our competition?

You can ask these questions through a mailed questionnaire, e-mail, or by having one of your employees call them. Beside the obvious value in knowing the answers, you get a few bonuses as well. First, your customers will be happy the you bothered to find out what they want. Second, you’ll learn about specific problems that could cause you to loose them. You’ll get ideas for your products or services, and you’ll find out some valuable information about your competition.

When you know you’ve lost a customer, try to bring them back through an interview. If you don’t get them back, at least you can get valuable information that will help prevent you from losing additional customers. But, you first have to find out why they have stopped doing business with you. And the way you do this is by asking questions such as; Was it a question of price or quality? Was a better offer made by our competition? Was it inadequate responsiveness? Were promises not kept? Were complaints not resolved? Was it overall dissatisfaction?

Whether you are sending a questionnaire, using e-mail, or interviewing them by phone always use open ended questions that require an active response. Use questions that start with What? When? Where? Who? Which? How? You’ll find that open ended questions help narrow down and specify their reasons for leaving.

Businesses loose customers due to poor service more than for any other reason. When you make a service mistake and a customer complains, you have an opportunity to win back that customer and gain long-term loyalty. Here is a five step plan you could implement when a customer complains.

Apologize and acknowledge the error.

Take urgent action. Quick effort shows you have the customer’s interest at heart.

Show empathy. Customers want to know you care about their feelings.

Compensate them in some way. (It doesn’t have to be monetary)

Follow-up. Make sure you’ve satisfied the customer.

To transform your business into one that is committed to retaining as many customers as possible, you need support at every level. Provide customer service training for all your managers, frontline customer-service people, and everyone else in the organization. Teach your lower-level employees how important it is to keep customers, and show them how to be on the alert for unhappy customers. Give them a system for identifying unhappy customers, and reward them for using it.

Make it easy for customers to bring their problems to you so you can see where you need to improve. Make sure you have an 800 number that is designated solely for customers. Have a special section of your Web site designated for customer comments. You could even offer a modest gift of some kind for customers who alert you to a problem. And always offer some type of satisfaction guarantee on your product or service.

Most businesses can do a much better job keeping their customers. Write down your goals for keeping all your customers. Make sure everyone in your organization is aware of them and is working to achieve them. Identify the customers who have left you or are about to. Then, bring those customers back by working to solve their problems and satisfy their needs. And finally, use the feedback you get from both former and current customers to put customer-friendly policies and procedures in place.

Copyright(c)2004 by Joe Love and JLM & Associates, Inc. All rights reserved worldwide.

Joe Love draws on his 25 years of experience helping both individuals and companies build their businesses, increase profits, and achieve total success. A former ad agency executive and marketing consultant, Joe's work in personal development foucuses on helping his clients identify hidden marketable assets that create windfall opportunities and profits, as well as sound personal happiness and peace.

Reach Joe at: joe@jlmandassociates.com

Read more articles and newsletters at: http://www.jlmandassociates.com

Article source: Expert Articles

Most Recent Articles in Customer Service category

  • Hire the best Hawaiian pest and termite control agency - By: Dwayne Bravo
    The presence of pests and termites in homes, offices or warehouses often become a matter of concern. The amount of loss that these organisms make you suffer is unimaginable. A small amount of these pests and termites can be controlled easily through the use of various products that act as pest and termite control agents.
  • Value Delivered Through Customer Service - By: Stephen Milford
    What is customer service? No matter who the person or what the organisation, the answer to this question is always generic. They will say: "Customer service is about giving customers what they want" or perhaps "it's about satisfying customers" some times they will say that it is about "making customers happy."
  • Airline Miles Credit Cards: The Best Way to Use Them - By: Alice Shown
    The airline miles credit cards are indeed a great advantage for the frequent travelers.
  • Care About Your Customer's Needs - By: Lynne Saarte
    Your customers’ wants and needs? Do you know the issues they face everyday and the things they struggle with? Do you know what your company can do to make their life easier and increase the chances of them giving your store a chance? If you do not know that much about your customers than how exactly are you supposed to connect with them? The best kind of marketing is the kind that is specifically aimed at fulfilling a customer’s needs.
  • The "Oracle" And The Intoxilyzer: DWI/DUI Source Code Defense - By: Maury Beaulier
    In 2008, DWI/DUI challenges to the breath test, now, more than ever, have become viable and important. The latest challenges involve attacks on the source code, and the state's failure to provide that computer source code for testing. In each case, a source code motion should be considered.
  • Local Authorities Efforts in recyling - By: Michiel Van Kets
    Waste management is a serious matter that affects all communities; we are all contributors to the loads of garbage and litter that increase day by day.
  • You Need To Know Your Customer's Needs To Fulfill Them - By: Janice Jenkins
    You cannot give someone what he or she wants if you do not know what it is that they want, so the question then becomes, how do you figure out their needs?
  • Answer Their Questions Before They Can Ask - By: Kaye Marks
    The best way to get customers happy is by giving them as much convenience as you possibly can.
  • Customer Service: Reconnecting with Customers - By: Howard Lee
    No one likes to be put on hold or to endure high pressure sales tactics. Even Business owners, who, after all, are also consumers, probably hate the "hard sell" that is common at many firms.
  • Finding a reliable accountant - By: Michiel Van Kets
    If you are running your own company or if you are self-employed, hiring an accountant can be priceless. A few of the services they offer include completing tax returns, keeping company accounts, financial planning, auditing and book-keeping.