Is Customer Loyalty a Problem? Read this article on
customer marketing
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Can Three Words In Webster's Dictionary Be The Key To Customer Loyalty?
Are you concerned about customer loyalty? Are your customers so
loyal that they will stick with you through hell and high water?
And if not, you really need to question how you can create a customer
relationship that's so gluey, that you never go bluey
in the face. Funnily you don't have to go far. Reach for your
Webster's dictionary and you'll discover a hidden secret
to customer loyalty.
Do you find it amusing? Giggle if you must, but stick with me and
I will show you the simplicity and longevity of this sane advice
that will change your marketing strategies and tactics forever.
But First, Let's Look At Nasty Hurricane
Andrew
In August 1992, Hurricane Andrew went bananas. Like a drunk on one
too many Tequilas, he tore into South Florida with wind gusts of
175mph, redrawing the landscape as he stomped onwards. Approximately
600,000 homes and businesses bore the brunt of his menace.
By the time Andrew left, he had run up a tab of $26 billion dollars
and the curses of some very, very angry insurance companies. Andrew
had single handedly run up the highest insurance recorded payout
in history , if you don't count September 11.
Many an insurance company looked gloomily into their crystal balls
and decided the future was too dicey. So while they grudgingly forked
out the costs required to cover the claims, they refused to renew
customer policies.
State Farm Insurance Had a Different Opinion
The biggest reason Hurricane Andrew blew the roofs off the houses
was because contractors had not anchored them to the frames. State
Farm not only happily forked out the policy claims but also paid
its customers more to bring the houses up to code.
Amazingly, this insurance company was willing to overpay just to
make sure their customers have peace of mind should Andrew or one
of his family come visiting.
State Farm Wasn't Too Far From the Leo
Burnett Advertising Agency
Agencies are like turnstiles. Clients come, clients go and it's
the same mantra for employees. Not if you look at the Chicago-based
agency called Leo Burnett. At Leo Burnett, over a four-year period
from 1986 to 1989, 98 per cent of business came bounding back from
repeat clients. No other agency even came close.
Furthermore, this Houdini of advertising has had an almost zero
client defection rate for decades. In an almost boring, old fashioned
way, they adopt a loyalty based management that keeps clients superglued
to them. And it continues to amaze and fascinate the roller coaster
advertising industry that can only watch in awe and extreme fascination.
Which Brings Us Back to Webster's, Doesn't
It?
Now let's look at how Webster's Dictionary defines the
word Client. It says: A client is one who comes under your care,
guidance and protection.
See those words?
It doesn't say someone you need to get money or make profits
from. It asks, even beseeches you to care, protect and guide your
clients, like you would with your own child. Everything you do,
you do unselfishly for that child. You put your heart and soul into
creating a safe, educated environment. You become the guide and
the protector. You create a bubble as secure as you can to make
absolutely sure they get the very best.
Scary, isn't it? Especially when you look out there at so
many companies, whose single motive is to simply get the sale and
move on.
Hurricane Andrew Moved On, State Farm Moved Up
As soon as the brouhaha of Andrew's visit died down, up came
the vultures from other insurance companies. They tried to woo State
Farm policy holders with discounts and other incentives. Most of
them found doors slammed in their face. Their customers were staying
loyal no matter what bait was being dangled in front of them. When
the chips were down, State Farm pitched in to help like family.
There was no way the customers were going to let down their own family.
Adhering strictly to Webster's, State Farm had cared, guided
and protected its clients. And the clients were repaying that with
rock solid loyalty.
Leo Burnett Did The Same With This Hidden Clause?
The same principles apply to Leo Burnett. Like mother hens, they
fuss over their clients, doing acts of guiding and protecting that
other agencies would never even consider. Its first client, Green
Giant, is still a customer some sixty years later. Even back then,
founder, Leo Burnett, put in an additional clause that enlarged
the standard vendor agreement of buying space, producing ads and
maintaining confidentiality.
It read: Counselling with you in regard to your advertising and
sales efforts, seeking new ways to improve your advertising, make
it more productive, and in every way within our power, working with
you to advance your business.
Founder Leo has been dead for over 30 years, but the tradition of
caring, protecting and guiding doggedly lives on. Their policy is
simple. If a customer runs into a bad year and has to cut back on
its advertising - let's say by 50 percent - Burnett doesn't
automatically cut back on its services by 50 percent and pull half
of its management off the account. The company is willing to lose
money on an account over the short term.
The inevitable result, Of its 33 clients, 12 have been with the
company for over twenty years, and 10 for over thirty years.
Paying Attention to Webster's Is Not Enough
It needs more. And that more is called sacrifice. Just like with
children, you can't deal with fifty all at once. Each child
needs its own time, space and guidance. This requires huge resources,
and if you chase every possible client, you're soon going
to run yourself pretty ragged.
The Leo Burnett Agency chooses carefully. It selects its potential
clients, as you no doubt will. In 1994, 54 companies invited the
agency to talk about a business relationship. Burnett pursued only
five.
If your selection of customers isn't deliberate and systematic,
you will run yourself ragged trying to service customers that share
neither your dreams nor standards. Invariably, you will find discord
and the desire to care, protect and guide will evaporate like moisture
on a hot summer's day.
Care, Protect and Guide - Even If You
Have To Send Clients To Your Competition!
If you're scared, back out now, because I'm going to
ask you to do something no seemingly rational business does. That
is, you care about your client so much, that you take pains to send
them to your competition if you cannot help them.
Hang on. This isn't as bizarre as it sounds. If you really
do care for your clients, you should want them to get the best advice
possible. However, no one said you shouldn't make money off
this.
If you sell high end BMWs and you know your client needs a more
economical Toyota, you should logically send them over to your competition.
However, if you set up a deal with the Toyota dealer, you can not
only generate a commission, but also give your potential client
a bonus or discount if they go specifically through you.
Hey, those customers are going to walk anyway, once they find their
exact needs aren't being met. And if they get stuck with something
they don't really need, they're going to be mighty mad
once they find out. You aren't doing yourself or them a favour
by making them stick to what you have to offer. Sending them to
a competitor that you know will treat them well, endears you to
the customer and ensures a tidy profit as well.
Welcome To The Land Of Endless Loyalty
Loyalty at its very roots is exceedingly simple. It's exactly
like a parent-child relationship. While no doubt you will come to
depend on technology as your client base grows, the enduring thread
that binds it all is the underlying psychology.
Inevitably, you won't always have a trouble-free course,
and both Leo Burnett and State Farm have had stormy days. The only
way out of the driving rain is to heartily embrace the care, guidance
and protection concept. Let it be your guiding light, far superior
to any mumbo jumbo mission statement, leading to exponential profits
and devoted clients.
All you have to do to succeed is play Mother Hen.
And say a silent thank you to a certain Mr.Webster.
* Source: The Loyalty Factor by Frederick Reichheld.
**Secondary Source: Me. I worked at Leo Burnett in the 90's.
Footnote:
This Care, Protect and Guidance, is the same system that PsychoTactics
uses for its subscribers, members and clients. Should you come under
our wing, we would do everything in our possible power to get you
the best knowledge and guidance. This is the whole ethos, the guiding
principle of why we exist and why your business should exist. If
you adopt this concept in your every day business, you'll have nothing
but unending success.
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"I'm sorry for not writing to you sooner, but I
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Wisconsin, USA
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