Business Services Industry
The secret's out: the one marketing rule you absolutely must know for the new millenium
Entrepreneur, May, 1998 by Jerry Fisher
We've all seen and admired examples of marketing genius over the past few decades - like that of Walter E. Diemer, who died recently at age 93 and who sold us on a gooey pink substance called "Double Bubble" chewing gum. And let's not forget whoever talked us into potbellied pigs for pets. But in 2000 and beyond, the golden statuettes for marketing genius will be handed out to entrepreneurs of another sort: those who realize the smartest marketing move is to develop unbreakable relationships with their current customers.
Yes, start-up companies will always need to beat the bushes for new customers. But once you're up and running, selling more goods to fewer people is not only more efficient, it's also far more profitable. Plus, for many companies, old customers are often the best source of new customers. But more on that topic later.
More Articles of Interest
- Language lessons: how to turn your employees from whiners to winners
- Opening a restaurant often takes more time and problem-solving than owners...
- Cooking up success: starting your own restaurant takes a lot of hard work,...
- Grounds for success
- Piece of cake? The reality of opening a restaurant might not be what you expect
THE HIGH COST OF PROSPECTING
You've heard it before. It costs at least five times as much to get a new customer as it does to keep one you already have - or to reactivate an old one. Yet the majority of companies still spend a fortune chasing after new customers and concentrating on that first sale.
Add it up. You offer deep discounts to get new customers into your bakery. You create loss leaders to increase traffic in your minimart. You offer a duplicate item for just a penny or a dollar more. Or you start giving stuff away: free ice tongs to the adults and face painting for the kids. All this costs money, not to mention the expense of promoting it through advertising. And it's all done without an ounce of assurance that even one new customer is going to pledge allegiance to your business.
On the other hand, staying in touch with your satisfied customers and making them devotees costs you relatively little. The idea to keep in mind is that a happy customer is like a perennial in your garden: With proper care and feeding, you can usually count on it to bloom year after year. When a customer buys from you the first time, he or she is saying "I like you; you have my trust." This is an invitation not just for a sale, but for a relationship.
NEW PROFITS RIGHT UNDER YOUR NOSE
The revelation that it is often costlier to obtain new customers has caused many small-business owners to take a step back and look at their most priceless yet overlooked business builder - their current customer base. And from this enlightenment has sprung a whole new branch of marketing called relationship marketing. It's a field of vast profit opportunity for even the newest entrepreneur, and it's ultra-easy to implement. Best of all, there are a number of experts on the subject whose knowledge can help you maximize your use of relationship marketing.
Martha Rogers, Ph.D., co-author with Don Peppers of The One to One Future: Building Relationships One Customer at a Time (Currency/Doubleday), is one of those experts. Rogers, a founding partner of management consulting firm Marketing1to1/Peppers and Rogers Group in Stamford, Connecticut, believes your goal, rather than to increase your customer base, should be to ensure that each customer who buys your product or service buys more of your product or service, buys only your product or service, and is happy always choosing your company over others. In a word, loyalty. In four words, a customer for life.
In the future, says Rogers, more businesses will focus on the "lifetime value" of each customer rather than the short-term profits they can get from new customers. She says creating one-to-one relationships is key and will be helped by evolving interactive technologies that small businesses can take advantage of. Today's fax machines, cell phones and e-mail technology are just the tip of the interactive iceberg that you and your customers can use to stay chummy. And interactive television is just around the bend.
REMEMBER WHEN . . .
The key word to etch in your mind, insists Rogers, is "remember." Remember the dress that needs special handling for your regular dry cleaning customer without her having to remind you. (You can note this on your computer or on a 3-by-5 card you make for each customer.) Remember the occasion that prompted your flower shop customer to buy a bouquet so next year you can send a reminder that you'd be happy to send one again. Remember the rattle in the wheel well that your gas station customer was complaining about last time he or she was in, and ask about it the next time that customer comes in for a tune-up. Remember to ask your plumbing customer if that upstairs sink is still leaking and if he or she would like you to take a look at it.
Just as a doctor writes down details of a patient's health on his or her chart, so should you record information about your clients. Then the next time you connect with a client in person or by e-mail (you are routinely asking for their e-mail addresses, aren't you?), ask how the customer's daughter is doing in her first year of college, inquire about that nagging lower lumbar problem he or she previously mentioned, ask if he or she has been happy with that new sport utility vehicle . . . Well, you get the idea. In this increasingly impersonal world, every me-to-you query adds strength to a customer relationship that no amount of discounting from your competitor can weaken.
Most Recent Business Articles
- How do I determine my retainer fee?
- Why fly solo when an executive assistant can accelerate your CLNC® business?
- The CLNC® mentors held the key to my first case and to my CLNC® success
- Atlanta CLNC® 6-day certification seminar photo galleryplus sign up today for spring 2009 to save $100.00
- Speak to a full-time practicing CLNC® consultant
Most Recent Business Publications
Most Popular Business Articles
- Using object-oriented analysis and design over traditional structured analysis and design
- Big Fish Games Migrates Upstream to Fisher Plaza; High Growth Online Gaming Firm Vaults Fisher Plaza Occupancy Rate Above 90%
- Top of the line: some of the world's most well-respected doctors practice in South Florida. A guide to choosing the best physician specialists - Top Doctors in South Florida
- Sand filter basics: high-rate sand filters can be confusing for those new to the business. Understanding valve modes is the key
- BEHR Paints Introduces a Colorful New Way to Paint and Prime All in One with BEHR Premium Plus Ultra™ Interior
Most Popular Business Publications
Content provided in partnership with http://findarticles.com/source//

