Customer Relationship Management.
This
is the cornerstone of modern business, and is especially critical
for hospitality and recreational marine businesses. Unfor-tunately,
it is often the most misunderstood and sorely neglected.
Most
owners do understand the benefits of a firm handshake, a pleasant
attitude, good customer service and old sayings like; "the
customer is always right." Additionally, many owners will train
their employees on how to greet and handle customers in a consistent
manner... but very few understand the depth and scope of true Customer
Relationship Management or what is now commonly referred to as "CRM".
CRM
has been made possible and affordable with the advent of modern
technologies and communications. It is really a relatively new vision
for management of your customers entire experience and relationship
with you throughout their lifetime - not just their most
recent visit or telephone call.
In
the highly mobile and fast paced lifestyle we have today, it is
very easy for us to change any of our shopping, dining or recreational
habits at the drop of a hat. Most people won't give a moment's pause
about driving 30 minutes to an hour for a nominal savings. Some
will drive much longer for the same deal. You would be surprised
to know that studies show while the "offer" is the stimulus
that gets people to react - it's the lack of a great relationship
that motivates the customer to make the drive or commitment to a
different product or experience.
Do
you really know how much money you spend to get each person into
your restaurant, hotel, marina, showroom or
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service
department? If you don't, you really should... because you only
want to spend that amount once...but you want that customer to keep
coming back for the rest of their life.
Once
you start to closely examine
all the things that you really have to do to bring a new customer
through your front door or even to get them to pick up the telephone
and call you, whether they purchase anything or not .... you begin
to understand how important it is to make a lifetime customer from
every available opportunity you are given.
It
is one thing to maximize the oppor-tunity of a single visit or sale,
but it is quite another to quantify and capture the lifetime value
of a customer and that's what a good CRM program is all about.
Automobile
companies are probably the best example of manufacturers that understand
the role of branding and "lifetime value." They know that
instilling their brand into children at an early age, following
them throughout their growth cycles with products, services and
ideas that align with their needs at every interval is going to
produce lifelong relationships and unmatchable value.
Grocery
stores, pharmacies and big box retailers have expounded on what
the auto companies started and have taken it to a new level. Every
time you swipe your little savings card...more information is added
to your personal profile. The more companies are able to understand
your "likes and dislikes and buying habits", the better
they can serve you (and them) through tailored products, ad campaigns,
coupons and seasonal inventories to name just a few of the most
obvious strategies.
The
last thing they want you to do, is to shop somewhere else. Over
just the next 20 years (not counting inflation) I will spend no
less than $156,000 at the grocery store. How much of that amount
any one store gets, depends on how well they treat me and meet my
specific needs.
What's
the lifetime value of a customer to your operation, and how will
you insure you get the largest piece of the pie?
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