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Is your customer going yakkity yak?
If he is not, you might have a bigger problem on your hand than you can imagine!
Read this customer
retention article. |
Never Trust a 'Silent' Customer
Do you have customers that leave suddenly? You were doing an outstanding
job for them, lavishing them with truckloads of service and yet
they disappeared without a word.
The key operating factor here is 'without a word.' That's the scary
part! The silent ones are always the most dangerous. If you would
like to learn how to keep your customers, you've first got to keep
them noisy. Read this marketing article to find out just how you
can make complaining clients one of your biggest assets.
Imagine you run a pizza parlour. You have all these neighbourhood
families that pop in at least once a week for some pizza, garlic
bread and Coke. On an average, one customer spends about $30 per
week. But let's assume they spend just $20. Imagine you did something
that bugged this customer, but he or she never told you about it.
What would you stand to lose if they left?
Its simple math: You lose $20 x 50 weeks. That's equivalent to
$1000 a year.
If you lost just 10 such customers per month, you'd lose about
100 clients a year.
That's $100,000 that could be in your back pocket if you were a little complaint-conscious.
That Doesn't Happen in Our Business: The Denial Syndrome
Overtly it won't. In a Bain & Company survey of major corporations,
they found that on average, U.S. Corporations lose half their customers
in five years. Notice, it wasn't 'one year' or 'suddenly'. Clients
have a tipping point. They get unhappy bit by bit and then its camel-back-breaking
time. So, if you think that all your customers are happy with you-they
aren't. It's a basic fact of life.
What's really weird is that you can't measure how much business
you're really losing. A study was done on a bank, they found they
had as many accounts as they had a year ago. What they failed to
measure was how most of the people had 'silently' transferred the
money out into other banks and the closure of the account was a
last measure, somewhere down the line.
The same thing applies to your customer. Like a patient Buddha, they will seemingly
appear to put up with everything, till suddenly you find they don't
use you anymore. This is a classic flight of business. You hear
nothing of it, till it's almost gone and it takes a mammoth effort
just to hold on to the business.
If you look at it from another perspective, you might even be
getting equal to or slightly less business from your customer.
Naturally this doesn't ring any alarm bells. However, if you've
been watching carefully, your customer has probably grown bigger
and richer in the past few months or years. If your business with
them has not grown exponentially, you are actually LOSING OUT.
No matter how successful your business, you will always have scope
for improvement. Best of all, you will always have complaining customers.
Don't deny the fact. Accept it and then do something about it.
The Real Reason Why You Lose Customers
Last month we went to KFC to pick up some chicken and chips for
dinner. On the way home we discovered that the chicken and the
chips were soggy and tasted terrible.
How would most customers react? It would depend on their history
with the product, but most people would grumble and simply not go
back. We complained. We picked up the phone and called the toll
free line at KFC. They asked us to place our order. We said we didn't
want to place an order, we just wanted to complain. They said, "We
don't take complaints on this line. You'll have to call the manager
at the branch where you bought it and talk to him."
Now Why Would I Bother To Go Through All That
Trouble?
It's easier to never go back. All that money that KFC spends trying
to get new customers is going down the drain and out the back door
because they don't have a complaint line.
Most companies act precisely in the same manner. For one, they
have no real complaint department. If clients are unhappy, they
feel embarrassed to complain and because no route has been cleared
to vent their feelings, they avoid it completely.
Then they leave.
Obviously, you can't wait for something to go wrong. Your job
is to find ways to get the client to complain. If they complain,
you are getting feedback that is extremely valuable and is probably
relevant for all your other clients as well. Best of all, empowered
with a complaint channel, a well-trained client will complain
at every juncture giving you the opportunity to fix the problem
and regain their trust.
How Companies React to Complaints
Virgin Airlines CEO, Richard Branson, sometimes makes an appearance at the
gates when a flight is late, apologising profusely to all passengers
as they check out. How mad would you continue to be if you ran into
a situation like this?
Yet most companies detest complaints. Living in their ivory towers,
they refuse to believe that any of their clients would leave.
So they never ask for feedback. On the rare occasion that clients
get mad enough to put it in words, it's too late. Even then, a
complaint is treated with nuisance value.
The first step a company takes when dealing with complaints is
that they fix it.
Yeah, Right!
Because of their crummy service, the plane took off without you,
you missed your meeting and lost more than just your temper. Do
you think, just replacing something is going to erase all that trouble?
It's going to take much, much more.A simple replacement is never
the answer. It has to be a heck lot more than just a numb 'sorry'
. You've got to woo the customer back like you would with the girl
that you had your eye on. Going down on your knees and begging for
forgiveness is a start. Then you've got to lay it on thick and the
thicker the better.
The Problem With Zero Defect
Lots of companies ran themselves into the ground trying to achieve
zero defect. In an unpredictable world like ours, that goal is
unreal. Even the best of intentions aren't much use if you run
into a flash flood. Clients recognise that. However, it's up to
you to have a disaster recovery plan in place.
When I say that, I don't mean a grandiose 'in case of a nuclear
attack' plan.
At Nordstrom stores across the U.S., salespeople are empowered
to do 'whatever it takes' to fix a problem, even if it means going
to the store across the street and buying the product at a higher
price. It's called the art of immediate recovery, and it assumes
that something will go wrong and you will have a Plan B to fix it.
The more you prepare yourself for this inevitable event, the less
chance the client has to complain.
More often than not, a complaining client is complaining about
everything but the product. Ever see people complaining about
the food at a restaurant? The principal purpose of the restaurant
is food, yet people leave because of loud music, bad service and
everything else. Your job is to assume you're a restaurant and
find out what your 'everything else' is.
Getting Complaints is Like Winning Lotto!
1) What you need to do to ensure a regular stream of complaints.
Dump the feedback form and go out and ask your customer's face
to face. Do it regularly and have them know whom they can complain
to, if anything goes wrong. There is no such thing as a silent
customer.
2) Complaining customers are always very precise. They eliminate
the vagueness of feedback forms. Listen to them, act on their complaints.
It's not that they want to leave. They want to be wooed back. Fix
the problem and then let them know how you fixed it.
3) They're giving you free feedback that would cost a fortune
at a research company, so reward them. They've been inconvenienced
on top of getting a bad product or service. That inconvenience
factor deserves payment in the form of a reward over and above
just fixing the problem. Customers who are bought back from the
brink are extremely loyal and extremely 'noisy.' Treat them like
the asset they are.
4) Remember, it costs eight times
as much to get a new customer, than it takes to keep an existing
one. Keep them at all costs. Atone for your sins.
5) Rule #1:The complaining customer is always right. Rule #2:When
in doubt, refer to Rule #1
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Medford, OR
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