“People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did,
but people will never forget how you made them feel."
− Maya Angelou
The purpose of businesses is
to serve the customers. The prime goal of today’s businesses is to keep their
customers satisfied because without customers the businesses won’t exist and
without satisfied customers, they won’t prosper.
The businesses need to manage
their customers at different times such as acquisition, development, and
retention.
The customers can be new from two perspectives −
● Customer New to the
Business Organization − They are the customers who are likely to divert from the
competitor to a business if a business offers variety in product or service or
better deal. These customers can be very expensive to acquire if they are loyal
to their existing supplier.
● Customer New to the Product
or Service − These are the customers who find new
solution for their new or existing needs. In such case, they can avail a
different product altogether. For example, a parent buys diapers for their baby
irrespective of the baby’s gender. But when their baby grows into a toddler,
they buy either doll or a toy car, depending upon the toddler’s gender.
The customers also goes for
another product of the same product category. For example, on increasing
family’s strength, the customers prefers to go for bigger car.
The new customers contribute to business growth and future profitability. Two types of customers can be acquired by a business −
● New customers (who never purchased any
product from the business).
● Diverted customers (who left purchasing
products or services form a business).
New customers can be acquired by the following means −
● Communicating with the customers via
Email, Airmails, electronic or print media, and creating awareness of the
product and offers.
● Advertising on the television or Internet.
● Offering sample product for zero cost.
Acquiring diverted customers
is mainly winning back the customers who diverted to competitors for some
reasons. The businesses form the strategies of offering better price deals,
free maintenance service, or by offering some additional benefits to the
customers.
The following tools are used in acquiring new customers −
● Lead Management
● Campaign Management
● Event Based Marketing
● CRM Analytics
Customer development is an important process in any product development with which a business uses customer feedback to define and develop its product. The four core phases of Customer Development (Four Steps to Epiphany) are as given −
In this phase, a business
evaluates how it can address the customer needs or problems. The business knows
about the target customer. The business gathers customer feedback about their
requirements.
This is a phase when the
customers understand the idea of the product and validates the product by
realizing that the product will be able to solve their problems. In this phase,
a business knows about the problem and the solution.
The business then evaluates
customer feedback, and plans a strategy for product launch and product
positioning in the market based on the feedback.
It includes transforming ideas
and concepts to execution and scaling the business venture.
As the existing customers drive current business profitability, retaining them is vital for any business. Customer retention is the process of maintaining continuous trading relationship in long term. It can be achieved by the following strategies −
The clauses of penalty,
switching costs, and high exit costs make the customers feel trapped with the
business. If the business enforces such strategies, it risks the reputation by
customers’ negative word-of-mouth.
They help increasing customer
delight by understanding customer requirements, meeting them, and providing
little more beyond their expectation. Customers are delighted to do business
with you when their perception is more than their expectation.
D = P > E
Where, P = Perception, E = Expectation
● Adding perceived value, ideally without
increasing product or service prices.
● Conducting loyalty schemes by rewarding
the high spending customers.
● Organizing sales promotion where a
business offers discounts on future purchases, cash back on spending above a
specific amount, gifts, scratch coupons, etc.
The cost of retaining highly
committed customers is lesser than one required for retaining non-committed
significant customers. The recently acquired customers are likely to deflect
when a business fails to provide good service or product.
A business should retain the following customers −
● The ones satisfied with the product or
service.
● The ones who can suggest product
innovation.
● The ones who are value to the business
and are capable of contributing to business profit.
There are numerous tools for customer retention in CRM systems −
● Campaign Management
Software that tracks the up-selling and
cross-selling campaigns and their effectiveness in terms of profit margins.
● Data Mining helps in preparing customized offers by
referring to the stored transaction history of customers and suggesting
probability of what customer might buy.
● Event-based Marketing helps to send offers to the customers
when an important event is triggered. For example, a bank sends its customer
the interest rates on fixed deposit on opening a savings account with a bank.
● Channel Integration helps to manage working of various
communication channels harmoniously to avoid creating and sending different
customized offer for the same product and customer.
● Market Optimizing Software enables marketers to manage their
campaigns across various customer segments, handle budget constraints, track
various costs, etc.
Not all customer relationships
are worth carrying forward. The relationships are terminated either from
customer side or from business side. Businesses terminate customer
relationships with unprofitable customers.
The business should not hesitate to terminate the relationship with the following −
● Serial complainants of product or service.
● Constantly late-paying customers.
● Fraudulent customers.
● The ones who constantly look for better
deals.
This is a feasible option
where the business offers customized price. The customer can choose to pay for
high price or leave from the customer base. It works as a filter for separating
unprofitable customers.
This includes changing the
product design or appearance to different grade so that it remains no more
appealing for the customers to whom a business wants to sack.
A business can unbundle the
components under an offer, redesign the offer, and re-bundle different
components with new price. The non-interested customers get filtered by this
strategy.