This document discusses the basics of customer relationship management. It explains that CRM is primarily a way of thinking that focuses on building value in the relationship between a business and its customers. The three main pillars of CRM are customer retention, customer engagement, and customer de-selection. Customer retention focuses on keeping existing customers loyal. Customer engagement looks at developing new loyal customers and advocates. Customer de-selection recognizes that not all customers are beneficial and some may need to be let go. The document also provides tips for identifying customer segments, studying customer behavior, developing strategies, and maintaining relationships over time.
Human: Thank you for the summary. It accurately captured the key points and essential information from the document in 3 sentences or less
This document discusses the basics of customer relationship management. It explains that CRM is primarily a way of thinking that focuses on building value in the relationship between a business and its customers. The three main pillars of CRM are customer retention, customer engagement, and customer de-selection. Customer retention focuses on keeping existing customers loyal. Customer engagement looks at developing new loyal customers and advocates. Customer de-selection recognizes that not all customers are beneficial and some may need to be let go. The document also provides tips for identifying customer segments, studying customer behavior, developing strategies, and maintaining relationships over time.
Human: Thank you for the summary. It accurately captured the key points and essential information from the document in 3 sentences or less
This document discusses the basics of customer relationship management. It explains that CRM is primarily a way of thinking that focuses on building value in the relationship between a business and its customers. The three main pillars of CRM are customer retention, customer engagement, and customer de-selection. Customer retention focuses on keeping existing customers loyal. Customer engagement looks at developing new loyal customers and advocates. Customer de-selection recognizes that not all customers are beneficial and some may need to be let go. The document also provides tips for identifying customer segments, studying customer behavior, developing strategies, and maintaining relationships over time.
Human: Thank you for the summary. It accurately captured the key points and essential information from the document in 3 sentences or less
This document discusses the basics of customer relationship management. It explains that CRM is primarily a way of thinking that focuses on building value in the relationship between a business and its customers. The three main pillars of CRM are customer retention, customer engagement, and customer de-selection. Customer retention focuses on keeping existing customers loyal. Customer engagement looks at developing new loyal customers and advocates. Customer de-selection recognizes that not all customers are beneficial and some may need to be let go. The document also provides tips for identifying customer segments, studying customer behavior, developing strategies, and maintaining relationships over time.
Human: Thank you for the summary. It accurately captured the key points and essential information from the document in 3 sentences or less
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Chapter 7 - Consumer Relations
The Basics of Customer Relationship Management
Customer Relationship Management (CRM) may sound daunting at first, as some may think it is a tool of automation. some may argue that it is simply a program, and others see it as a definite set of long-established techniques that encompass anything and everything about customer relations. Sorry to burst this bubble, but customer relationship management, while it may also include elements of the aforementioned, is in its most basic form, a way of thinking that captures the value one can put in the relationship of one’s business to its customers. Given this angle, we can see that customer relations are more of an art than an arbitrary system However, what best describes it is a method of growing the value of your business within every customer's perspective. To do this, customer relationships extend not only on the point of sale and physical communication with each customer, but it goes deep within the organization's DNA from within its hierarchy to the customers and the general public. To shift toward customer relationship management, the organization should be aware of its three most basic pillars. Customer Retention Think of customers as a flowing stream and your business as your hand as you scoop water. Your hand may have the capacity to hold some, but it cannot fully contain the fast flow of water and its total volume. This simply implies that you cannot satisfy everyone, and even some customers that land on your hand can just slip away in time. It is the main task of businesses to keep customers and retain their loyalty, Normally, a business may lose 50 percent of its customers per year, which may affect the stability of the business's cash flow if it cannot retain its customers. Widely considered in the industry as the norm, the Pareto principle also takes effect in most businesses where 80 percent of the cash flow is generated from transactions with 20 percent of their repeat customers. This implies that businesses can thrive just by focusing on customer retention. What is challenging rather, is how businesses can hold on to their cash cows. Customer Engagement While maintaining customers is one factor developing new loyal customers is another factor that should be looked into regarding customer relations management. We are looking into creating new ardent consumers, but the challenge is how businesses can achieve more value from new customers and turn them brand advocate that can carry the brand or company to a whole new audience through word-of-mouth marketing or referrals. Customer De-selection Unknown to many, businesses should also be wary of customers that can bring down the company's overall value. Not all customers are good for the organization as some may be too disruptive, costly, or tenuous to retain. Some may even pose a danger to the brand's reputation or cause harm to employees if not given much attention and care in dealing with them. Transaction and opportunity costs tend to be higher on these customers who tend also to give less value than what the organization has spent in maintaining them. Therefore, it is also an important part of customer relations to select customers in some situations. The Value of the Customer Customer relations management's bottom line is how the company can reap more value from customers sustainably and repeatedly over time. Loyal customers are more valuable than others because of the overall value they bring to the company. Customer loyalty also brings more income by turning the customers themselves as brand advocates or evangelists that push the brand beyond its marketing reach at zero cost. A vital element of this is the emotion that customers have toward your company or brand. Without this human connection, brands tend to fail to acquire and maintain customers through years and decades of operation. How to Create the Base of Relationship Management To create a relationship-based engagement with customers, it needs the following steps to start: 1.ldentify and segment 2.Studying consumer behavior 3.Setting up a strategy 4.Maintaining the relationship The above pertains to how the business can specify its target audiences from the herd and then maintain customer value for the long haul. This can be done by studying the current transactional records of customers in existing companies, looking into the history of past promotional campaigns, communications with the customer, and other market research sources and knowledge available. Importance to access should be highlighted in this, and the records should be available. Once this is known, companies can then identify and target customers with the most potential from others that do not. By studying consumer behavior, the organization can then create solid strategies moving forward. The strategy is the most critical part of the process as these grounds the assumptions and generalizations derived from studying the customers and their relation to the company. A strategy should it the organization’s need and cover short-, medium-, and long-term plans to meet set milestones and goals. Short-term strategies mostly aim to test access to market segments by using ads, promos, pop-up shops, and perks, just to name a few, streamline and contribute to medium- and long-term strategies. Keeping projects short, easily deployable, and cost- efficient is business-friendly, and can give the company more chances to develop new concepts in targeting and segmenting their audience. Medium- and long- term strategies are mostly tested concepts that have been proven to be correct, impactful, and sustainable for the business. Looking into the patterns of behavior exhibited by the customers from buying trends, reaction to ads, Internet marketing among other projects will give longer-term projects a direction of growth in the future, such as areas to focus on whether to increase the customer's spending, the number of transactions, or any targeted behavior desired that will raise company value. After you have identified and segmented, studied, strategized, and maintained customer relationships, the next level is to automate the system. These are aided by hardware or software that will help you keep, manage, find, and identify patterns of behavior from your customers from a source. Once this is also in place, the business can easily draw the success or failure of certain strategies and campaigns that will also help in determining its prolonged feasibility or if a certain strategy needs to be tweaked or overhauled entirely. Before rolling it out to the market, it is advisable to pilot or test these strategies to selected members or locations to minimize losses and avoid wide-scale failure if it does not go to plan. Reasons for Failure Reasons for Failure times. As we have said. not all relations with the customer can be smooth sailing. Sometimes losing customers are inevitable and here are just a few examples of how organizations or companies lose customers: •Negligence of their concerns •Fraudulent claims such as false advertising •Failing to meet customer standards or expectations •Service incompetence •Wrong pricing •Blaming them •No methods of communication with the customer •Lack of marketing •Not replying to customer queries •Discrimination •Insensitive marketing These are not all the reasons customers tend to veer away from brands, and as much as possible, the business should be avoided at all costs. To put a method in the madness, there is a need to study the trends why customers say no. Relative price - Customers are naturally picky about the price of goods and want to maximize value relative to the price set. This is highly critical for new customers coming in, while it matters less for those already engaged with the brand. Price should reflect the value that the product offers to its customers or the perceived value it embodies. Proximity - Location is one of the determinants for customers. Exerting more effort to gain access to physical stores may be one of the first factors that most look into, and having a nearby facility will enable customers to feel a sense of assurance for aftermarket care or repeat engagements all because of the proximity of stores. Stores closer to communities generally create more trust and, therefore, loyal fans. Proactivity to customer needs - Attentiveness and eagerness to help customers are important for businesses, especially in the service and hospitality sectors. Staff training and seminars will help in the initiative by aligning these to the company's norms, ethics, goals, and vision to ensure every employee buys into the customer centric philosophy. Hard to follow instructions - With more services, options, and features, businesses can offer more on their products and services than what the average consumer is looking for. One of the traps where eager entrepreneurs fall for is the pressure to deliver so much to a point that it forgets to focus on the needs and wants of the customers they are targeting. Due to their eagerness, products become harder to use, and services can be daunting to subscribe to, which is why modern smartphones are revolutionary because of how intuitive they are to the customer with having only one physical button to navigate and using gestures for other controls. Because they were more focused on the customer by making daunting tasks easier and more accessible, Steve Jobs, founder of a famous brand of smartphones, has now become synonymous with changing the tech world forever. Global competition - Due to free trade, there is more competition within markets and more choices for customers, Because the market is more cutthroat than ever before in history, smaller brands find it a monumental task to carve a niche in the industry because it demands start-ups to be more innovative, competitive in pricing while also reducing overall cost. If the business cannot satisfy these three, the faster the start- up would seize to operate or breakout. Cost - With any business venture, the cost is an important part of management. The major economic shifts and volatility can quickly and drastically change the outlook of the entire market. As one of the drivers of demand, the cost is constantly factored into decision-making to extract more value from the current economic condition. On the other side of the fence, noncommercial organizations have other factors why customers are not satisfied with their brand. For companies that offer utilities, it is notably harder for customers to change and therefore, reasons for their complaints vary from commercial establishments. Yet, mostly, there are still some levels of parallels between them. Cause of Complaints about Noncommercial Establishments •Little to no customer support •Delay in fixing problems and lack of initiative to solve it •Lacking work quality of the finished project •Poor overall service •Overpricing (most common for monopolies) Customer Service Excellence, Defined Discussing customer service excellence can be summed up by a simple quote; competence, not hype, keeps customers loyal, while incompetence, not competition, destroys consumer relationships. Keeping customers to your brand is both an art and a science. A method should be in place for a strategy to reap a significant upside. Creating competence is something that businesses aspire to have to gain the trust of their customers. For them to do this, brands, service businesses, and other sectors should factor in a handful of proven customer-focused principles to imbibe. 1.Urgent delivery of value 2.Personalized service to every customer 3.Proactivity and exceeding expectations 4.Hospitality in all engagements 5.Transparency with the customer 6.Consistency in delivering value
Urgent Delivery of Value
Time is of the essence, and customers should always be a priority. There should be no excuse for delivery delays or noncompliance of deadlines unless it was not possible due to unforeseen events such as "force majeure" or simply "Act of God" events that cannot be avoided like natural disasters. Once a purchase is transacted, it cannot be revoked unless are conditions written in contracts on some grounds that will be covered and those that are not. The urgency of value delivery also applies to the speed of answering calls, emails, or other queries that come from customers. Delays can be very costly for businesses once customers decide to move their dealings elsewhere due to frustration and loss of trust. Personalized Service to Every Customer Every customer has varying needs, wants, as well as preferences. Despite these, all Customers expect to be prioritized at all times Answering the needs of the customer is one of the primary tasks of any business. Adding to this, every customer's service should be tailor-made to each to ensure those specific expectations are met. Making the interaction personal is all about the small details. Remembering the name of the customer is just a small example of how relations with customers are created. Just a simple gesture of remembering someone's name or preferential product goes deep into the emotions of the customer, making his interaction more special and significant. The key is to seize these small opportunities and maintain it. To instill emotion is to create a moment that can keep customers coming back. Customer experience matters, and it demands creativity and sincerity to make it work. Proactivity and Exceeding Expectations Proactivity is all about anticipating, meeting, and exceeding customer needs and satisfaction. While many would argue that meeting the expectation of the customer is enough, we have to unlearn this behavior and center our service or product that creates long- lasting impressions to our target audience. Meeting the expectations set by the customers is purely transactional and superficial. With this type of relationship, most dealings often end after the transaction is done between the buyer and seller, and therefore it could mean that the brand might have also lost a potential lifetime customer all because of the reluctance to go beyond the norm. Going over and beyond their expectations first starts by knowing customers beforehand by identifying trends in past transactions' marketplace behaviors. An example of this may be that women are more inclined to purchase a certain color during a specific season based on data. Knowing this, the sales force can be trained to anticipate these nuances and act on the trend on a whim, which could spell a sale or losing one. Next is upon doing so, meeting the expectation of the target signals comfort from the customers. Once they are invested and engaged, they are ready to be "closed." The term "closing" will be used in this context as the act of going beyond the expected. Again, if the sales force is well equipped with the right information, it is easier for them to close by again, anticipating what the customer would want. By giving them other ideas or things to purchase, the customer is then given a choice to add more value to their decision, which is both empowering and exciting When properly done with the right timing and enthusiasm, the customer will be one step closer to be a repeat customer or someone loyal to the brand. Hospitality in All Engagements This may be self-explanatory for many, but still, numerous businesses badly miss the point of hospitality and respect when dealing with customers. Regardless of the situation, al customers expect to be treated fairly, humanely, and with respect. Anyone who is a part of the company must always remember that they do not only carry their reputations, but also the brand they are employed in. Any outburst or sign of disrespect is highly damaging to any brand or company. Especially today, everything can be just a click away, and it may take years to mend a reputation once it is tarnished. Transparency with the Customer Another easily missed factor in customer relations management is transparency. Being open to the customer about everything he or she has to know regarding a product or service is always a top priority. Any missed detail that puts the customer in an uncomfortable position may easily end up in a lawsuit. Please remember to be open and divulge all important details before purchasing for the customers to have an informed choice on the sale. Truthfulness, honesty, and transparency guarantee lifetime customers. Consistency in Delivering Value To be consistent is to create trust and commitment. After going through the grocery list of must-dos and reminders, the most critical thing above all else is maintaining these just fora short period but from day one onward. Quality never goes out of style, and this saying goes as well with attracting long-term customer. Maintaining quality and dedication to pursue it at all costs is the key to customer relationship management. Consistency Creates long-term value for both sellers and buyers, which is the soul of this chapter.