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| Home > Building a customer loyalty strategy | |
| Learning Guide: |
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Businesses can use many methods to build loyalty among their customers. It's usually a combination of carefully selected marketing initiatives and excellent customer service that will keep a customer loyal -- but an individual business must find the combination that works best for them. Employee loyalty and satisfaction also play a role in building and sustaining customer intimacy.
When using newsletter marketing campaigns in loyalty building, there is no standard schedule for any communication with customers, according to expert Michael Lowenstein. The content and method, as well as the frequency, of messaging to customers is what determines value. In research conducted by Lowenstein on this topic several years ago, "customers reported an interest in receiving communication from suppliers as long as they could see personal value in each message. This should be tested and reviewed on a continuous basis." Banks are trying new ways to keep customers coming back. The latest marketing campaigns from TD Waterhouse and WashingtonMutual have everything to do with something they are not doing: charging ATM withdrawal fees. Giving up on fees of any kind is not easy for the banking industry. Fee income has more than doubled as a share of commercial bank operating income since the early 1980s. But banks are starting to understand the effect fees have on customers. They are starting to adjust their fees based on customer value. They're even getting rid of some fees in the interest of customer retention. Quality monitoring software tools are helping to shift the vision of the contact center as a place to derive business value rather than just a cost center. Traditionally used as a compliance tool and to review and train agents, quality monitoring technology is evolving. Some of the major vendors are developing analysis tools to get business intelligence (BI) from recorded customer interactions. Organizations are realizing there is a wealth of information stored in these interactions. Tools like speech analytics can map words or phrases to help find what causes customer service problems. Word spotting or phrase identification can provide information about the call record, and emotion detection tools can recognize customer emotions through changes in energy, volume and voice pitch to identify problem customers. This excerpt from Donna Fluss's The Real-Time Contact Center gives an overview of the way call centers can use real-time analytics to create and sustain customer loyalty. "Practically speaking, all contact centers that handle live inquiries from customers, partners, investors or prospects are real-time organizations and always have been. However, a real-time contact center is designed to take advantage of every customer-initiated transaction in real time or near-real time, either when the customer is on the line or immediately thereafter, within time frames established by the customer, to ensure a great experience and complete satisfaction. It's a service and sales environment where, after the initial customer inquiry or sales request has been addressed, the agent or self-service system uses the information provided by the customer, in real time, to extend the relationship. This means that the contact center must hire and train agents who are as comfortable with selling as they are at servicing. It must have real-time systems that are able to spot and assess a customer opportunity while the customer is still on the line and supply the agent with one or more new revenue, retention or loyalty-enhancing opportunities to present to the customer."
Technology may make marketers' jobs more difficult even as it offers more ways to reach consumers. Despite technological advances intended to improve and simplify life for marketers, a recent study finds that marketers are losing touch with customers. Providing metrics and visibility into the customer acquisition and retention pipeline, global competition and new technology are increasing pressure on marketers to the point where they're losing day-to-day contact with customers, according to a recent study from the CMO Council. Although marketers recognize the importance of reliable customer data, two-thirds of respondents to the recent study said they had no formal system for tracking marketing's role in customer acquisition, retention and value creation; more than a third don't have a model or profile of the best customer or opportunity; and just under a third had no reliable data on revenue value and profitability of key accounts. However, there are some marketing organizations that have achieved customer intimacy. Common traits across those companies include marketing control over segmentation and targeting, direct contact with customers and robust data systems that generate reliable customer information.
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