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Who is Minding the Back Door of Your Business?

Most companies I know spend a large portion of their budgets on driving new business through the front door.  Far fewer spend even a fraction as much in a directed effort to avoid having those precious customers walk out the back door.  The prevailing assumption is that by providing pretty good service and having largely satisfied customers, the back door is covered as well as it can be, and everything else is controlled by external market forces.

 

In fact, retaining and developing profitable customers is the result of having a solid and aligned organizational culture focused on building relationships that generate loyalty.  According to Fred Reichheld, researcher, consultant, and author of The Ultimate Question, a loyal customer always returns, brags about your organization and provides (free!) word of mouth advertising.  They are willing to pay more to work with you and, when there is a mistake, they are more forgiving.  The ability to cultivate loyal customers is a profitable and powerful competitive advantage.

 

Satisfaction vs. Loyalty

There are 2 measurements that can help you understand and manage your customer relationships: customer satisfaction and customer loyalty. Many organizations assume that high levels of satisfaction translate into customer loyalty when, in fact, customer satisfaction ratings are more closely linked to your customers’ perception of product and service attributes rather than to the value they gain by doing business with you.

 

Satisfaction is a measurement of, “I expected it and I got it; therefore, I’m satisfied.”  If this were translated into a grading system, satisfaction translates into a grade of “C” on a traditional report card. This is precisely why your “satisfied” customers routinely shop around when it comes time to buy again. The desired score is obviously an “A,” an “A” always equates to loyal customers. An “A” implies that customers got more than they expected and their expectations were exceeded in some way.

 

High perceived value, as defined by your customers, creates loyal customer relationships, and research has demonstrated that customer loyalty is the best predictor of your future strength and growth potential. Perceived value occurs at the intersection of what customers want and what they get from you versus what they could get from your competition.

 

In order to create and sustain loyal customers, it is necessary to consider every contact with each customer as an opportunity for you to provide value—every time. Every service point is critical and every service point has a level of expectation from the customer that must be understood and managed. We call these contact points, Points of Connection (POC).

 

Points of Connection

Employee impact starts from the way they treat and relate to each customer at a given POC and their treatment of customers stems from the employees’ attitude. Attitude drives behavior, and behavior determines outcomes.  If the employees’ attitudes are positive, their behavior will be positive and supportive of the customer, which will generate results consistent with the expectations of the customer.

 

To effectively manage POCs they must first be identified. Once identified, you must clearly understand what value your customers’ desire from each POC. If there is a disconnect between what your customers expect and what currently exists then it imperative to ensure that proper employee development and process improvements are put into place to correct it.

 

Case Study

My friend, Jennifer Cassels, owner of Park Avenue Title Agency in Green Brook, NJ, exemplifies the cultivation of customer loyalty.  In the mortgage industry, the ability to overcome obstacles and close loans within tight timeframes can literally mean the difference between success and failure.  Jennifer works very closely with her clients – many of whom are real estate attorneys and mortgage lenders – to help them however she can to facilitate timely closings.  I’ve heard stories from her clients regarding her willingness to go “above and beyond” the call of duty to get transactions done – all the while providing accurate title services with a smile.  Additionally, she manages the POCs very well.  For example, you’ll always get a live person on the phone during business hours and she has a widely acclaimed closing cost estimate calculator on her website.  By managing POCs effectively and by going out of her way to solve her clients’ most pressing challenges (i.e. “how am I ever going to get this loan closed by Friday?”), Jennifer has created a loyal and growing client base.

 

Conclusion

Making the strategic decision to create a loyal customer base is one of the most important commitments you can make to the success of your business.  As Janelle Barlow and Paul Stewart say in their book, Branded Customer Service: The New Competitive Edge, “The customer service experience must be aligned with organizational promises.”  When your customer’s experience is not reflective of what has been advertised, promised, or expected, their trust in your business is undermined, which results in more traffic out the back door and lost revenue opportunities.

 

Operationally, you can measure and track customer loyalty using Fred Reichheld’s Net Promoter Score (NPS) metric.  This system is easy to implement and track: it reduces the loyalty equation to one simple (but powerful) question and one number.  Several of my clients are active NPS users and all of them appreciate the simplicity and power of the process to drive continual improvement of loyalty-building behaviors.

 

To build loyalty, your team must learn how to create strong relationships through frequent points of connection and deliver unique service experiences as expected and promised by your marketing and sales activities.  The immediate impact of delivering an exceptional experience based on what you’ve promised is a winning combination and a powerful weapon against the competition.  It will also help to ensure that the customers you work so hard to bring in the front door never even consider looking for the rear exit.

 

Mark Green is a business growth expert who works with companies to help them implement a proven, easy-to-use framework to run and grow the business faster and more profitably, while expending less effort and less time. To learn more about Mark or his firm, visit his website or contact him directly at (888) 720-7337 or Mark.Green@Performance-Dynamics.net.

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