Sunday, October 2, 2011

Are You Making Customer Retention A Top Priority?

Nearly two-thirds (64 percent) of consumers say they have "stomped out" of stores and 67 percent say they have hung up on hold because of poor customer service, according to a new Consumer Reports survey.

I was astounded at the lack of priority and vision those statistics reveal when it comes to businesses not only attracting new customers but also retaining the ones we already have. In today's marketplace, except for a few standout brands that have done an amazing job at being "indispensable," competiting for consumers' loyalty doesn't seem to be a major priority for businesses. Big mistake.

Check out the diagram below about the cycle of customer acquisition, retention and referrals from inside Flip the Funnel by Joseph Jaffe. Getting new customers, retaining them and then getting more customers from the ones you already have is the perfect business ecosystem — but it is only possible if retention is a priority.

Flip the Funnel Graph

This week I had another run-in with my now big, fat, out-of-touch cable provider. What shocked me was:

  • The package I had signed onto was not the package they had me on.
  • My service had to get interrupted so that I could call and ask what was up.
  • The service people I reached on the phone ranged from clueless and disinterested to flat-out rude and inconvenienced.

I also went to a very popular, usually consistent restaurant this week that was a service and quality disaster that night. They got hit with a big party of people that had their kitchen and servers scrambling. I don't care. Schedule more people that night to handle it. We waited 45 minutes for our main dish, and when it came, it was bad. I called over the manager, who was polite, accommodating and took the dish off the bill. They will see me another time for that.

I am a consumer who pays dearly for my credit card, media, phone and communications services. If a company is not treating me like gold, a diva, special, appreciated, respectfully, I am going to dump them immediately. Loyalty and longevity are built on the highest commitment to customer service and retention.

There are far too few companies I could list here that "get it" and are doing it, but here are the customer service elite according to a Bloomberg Business survey. What are they doing that got them on this list?

Indispensable, standout, unexpected service today is as essential and important as air, water and food are for the survival of human beings. Make this a priority, and you and your company have a chance for success and longevity. Ignore this and you and your company are headed for Jurassic Park!

If a company is not:

  • consistent
  • responsive
  • knowledgeable
  • relevant
  • pleasant

. . . they will be gone from my world pronto!

Whew, I feel better now. What's your take? Who is treating you right out there? What can you learn from them?

About the Author:- Deborah Shane is an author, speaker, media host, business and career specialist. Deborah hosts a weekly business radio show, Deborah Shanes Metropolis, and writes for several national business, career, branding and marketing blogs/sites. Her new book, "Career Transition: Make the Shift: Your 5 Steps to Successful Career Reinvention" is available through all major book sellers.

Thanks to Deborah Shane / Small Business Trends LLC.
http://smallbiztrends.com/2011/07/making-customer-retention-top-priority.html

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