Raving Fans and Loyal Customers = More Sales (Pt.3)
Step 3) Dive deeper into the needs of the groups
You’ve identified your groups, now you’ve put them on a logical continuum or lifecycle to understand how they evolve – now what do they want?
When someone walks in a store, visits a website from one of these groups they are looking for 2 – 3 core items.
For Example:
1. Next day shipping is required as their #1 item and will pay for it
2. Prices do not need to inexpensive, only competitive
3. Reminders or wish lists are appreciated during Holidays
Step 4) Knowing the Group’s Needs, Can You Provide Service that differentiates and leads to Loyalty.
For Example:
Knowing they want next day delivery, would they want/desire immediate delivery or local pickup?
Step 5) Market Relentlessly to your customer’s needs. Marketing more effectively in this manner lowers cost per sales / acquisition costs substantially.
Marketing to your segments at the right time with the right message is crucial. For example, you may choose to not market to Holiday Expediters about your new product. However, your Big Spenders would want to know immediately about any new products.
Measuring Loyalty by Segments
Now you can see why segments are important. They provide a meaningful way for organizations to develop products, market and discuss strategy.
A key idea in measuring loyalty is determining what “Loyalty” is for your organization. In some markets, loyalty is a multi-year, multi-sale relationship. In others it is a 18 month cycle and the goal is to continue business with the customer for at least 18 months.
Be clear and honest about what loyalty means to your organization and be clear about the benefit of establishing and driving that loyalty.
For example: “Customers that remain with the organization for 18 months cover the margin goals for the quarter. For every 2 months beyond 18 a customer stays, we enjoy a 5% incremental monthly margin”
Ideally loyalty is beyond sales. It is about the emotional attachment to the brand, service or product. And that can be hard to measure.
Posted on Thursday, March 20th, 2008 at 1:20 pm and is filed under Branding, Business, Customer Service, Entrepreneurship, Marketing, Sales. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.








