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| Home > Customer loyalty case studies and industry-specific strategies | |
| Learning Guide: |
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Customer satisfaction and loyalty are unique challenges for each business, and businesses in each vertical industry must be creative in devising strategies to attract and retain satisfied customers. These case studies illustrate the customer loyalty issues companies must confront, and offer real-world solutions for keeping customers loyal and doing an analysis of loyalty programs' success. Find tips in these case studies on building successful customer satisfaction programs and determining customer loyalty.
The Bon-Ton Stores Inc., a York, Pa.-based department store chain, hopes to transition to a customer-centric organization, and it's the marketing department that's leading the charge. Bon-Ton deployed predictive analytics software from Chicago-based SPSS Inc. to analyze and segment its customers. Bon-Ton began its efforts measuring its media mix, determining where media spend is making the greatest difference -- be it radio, television or more direct efforts. Bon-Ton's journey toward becoming a customer-centric organization began with laying out a strategic agenda to the CEO on how and why the company needs to understand its customer base at a local level. Once management was on board, Bon-Ton hired a director of research and analytics. KarmaLoop, an online seller of urban street wear, has found a way to save on its marketing expenses by letting customers do the work. The company counts 750,000 unique visitors a year to its Web site and has just one paid marketer on staff. Yet it has established itself as a leader in urban clothing and the top online marketplace for young adults seeking unique apparel. The Boston-based company relies on its customers to market the site and the business. KarmaLoop was able to create an active and loyal customer base by railing against the large and trendy clothing stores found in malls. 60% of the traffic to KarmaLoop's corporate Web site is direct load -- people type "karmaloop.com" directly into the address bar on their browser. That's thanks to a highly successful -- and unusual -- rep program the company has established. KarmaLoop encourages its customers to become sales reps for the company. Dallas-based CompUSA Inc., with more than 240 retail stores, turned to outside help in getting its online customer review program up and running. CompUSA launched an application from Bazaarvoice, an Austin, Texas-based company. Bazaarvoice hosts the application, provides a team of readers to check the reviews to ensure they follow established guidelines, and offers actionable analysis on the content. CompUSA has seen some impressive early results. Customers who came to CompUSA after finding a review on AOL, Google, MSN and Yahoo! had a 50% higher conversion rate and spent an average of 20% more per order than the typical CompUSA visitor. Expert Michael Lowenstein advises a Harley-Davidson dealer trying to decide between a loyalty program and discounting. "The Harley-Davidson clothing, and the logo displayed on it, can and should be viewed as free local advertising and promotion for the dealership; so, it might be useful to reframe the discount as that kind of investment," Lowenstein told the reader. "This could perhaps be further leveraged through local H.O.G. events. In regards to loyalty programs and discounting, it's rarely an either-or situation. The only thing discounting does, like any price rollback, is help commoditize the value proposition. If the dealer "brand" connotes enough value in everything that's offered to a customer, it should not be necessary to reduce prices to make a sale."
EarthLink's support staff works magic by serving its 5 million customers consistently. To promote its customer strategy internally, the ISP recently created the "I am EarthLink" campaign to empower all employees to do whatever it takes to help the customer. All employees in the support organization, whether customer-facing or not, must listen to calls to understand the customer point of view. Offering a variety of support channels -- phone, email, Internet chat and Web self service -- is an important part of EarthLink's customer strategy. Another key to a smooth running support operation is backing from top management. For Sprint, the Reston, Va.-based telecommunications company, text chat has already proven its value, and the company is planning to expand chat on its Web store. Currently, Sprint uses both proactive and reactive chat. Visitors to the company Web site can hit the "click to chat" button when they need help, and predefined business rules can trigger a session. Chat is paying off for Sprint. Its Web store grew from 3% of total sales to 4% between 2004 and 2005, and the company attributes 15% of that growth to chat. According to RightNow Technologies CEO Greg Gianforte, the real uptake in chat has come over the past year because of a growing trend -- customers are increasingly taking control of relationships. Wachovia Corp. already scores at the top of the annual Customer Satisfaction Index compiled by the University of Michigan, but it is now embarking on a new initiative to define and promote customer equity. Back in 1999, Wachovia began placing an emphasis on customer satisfaction, and the focus on customer equity has evolved from that. In fact, customer loyalty is one of the company's top seven priorities over the next five years, according to a spokesperson. It's long been a priority at Wachovia, and CEO Ken Thompson continues to push for it.
Blue Cross of Northeastern Pennsylvania replaced a touch-tone response system with a speech-enabled interactive voice response (IVR) application from Aspect Software at the end of 2003. The speech-enabled IVR system handles about 20% of all calls into the insurer's contact center. That shift has delivered efficiency gains and greatly expanded the customer base's access to service. Customers are more satisfied because they can quickly find information via the speech-enabled IVR system, and because call center representatives have more time to address customers' complex questions and issues. Blue Cross of Northeastern Pennsylvania is also in the process of using its IVR application to enhance employee performance by implementing speech-enabled IVR post-call surveys.
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