Momentum - Business to Business Online Magazine October 2018 | Page 10
Biz Tips
By Mike Hilderbrand, MBA, CBC, CSSC
ActionCOACH of Galveston
[email protected]
www.actioncoach/mikehilderbrand
T here is a lot of discussion on customer retention. This
month let's take the opposite approach - "five sure-fire
ways to lose your customers."
4. Respond slowly - a great way to lose customers. I
responded to an ad for a marketing company a
couple of weeks ago -- it took them a week to call
me back. How could a company that focuses on
marketing be that slow in responding? Obviously, I
will not be using them. Around the same time, I
made an inquiry on a local sign maker’s website
about making a sign for my business, and within
two minutes received a phone call from them. I
bought two signs, and they are hanging on my
office building at 21 st and Mechanic in Galveston.
1. Try to sell them something they already buy from
you (as if it were something new). It never fails, each
week we all get offers from companies trying to sell us
something that we already buy from them. Wasted
marketing $.
2. Be inconsistent in your delivery. Have you ever gone
to a restaurant that was great, only to be disappointed
when you went back with family and friends? We
brought our son and his girlfriend to our favorite
restaurant on Seawall a few weeks ago because of the
great food and fantastic view of the Gulf from the
outside eating area. It was a fine day, and there were
plenty of empty tables outside, but they wouldn’t seat
us because there were “not enough servers on duty”.
We haven’t been back, and in fact that day found a
great gourmet hamburger place on the West End with
outside seating that we now visit regularly.
Inconsistency breeds a lack of confidence in your
ability to deliver.
3. Raising prices may drive off some of your customer
base - especially those that are price shoppers. This
one has an upside and a downside. The upside is that
if your product or service is fantastic, raising prices will
allow you to increase your profit. The customers that
you will drive away are the price shoppers that make
up the lions' share of your headaches.
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MOMENTUM / October 2018
5. Perceived indifference is the most important of
the five. You have invested good money in
acquiring your customers. Treat your "A" clients as
gold by staying in front of them and reminding
them how much they mean to you. The key to
retaining clients is to make them feel special.
Once we have a solid understanding of our "A"
customers, we can develop the strategies to ensure
that the lion's share of our customers fall into that
category.
So, what will you do with your customers that have no
hopes of becoming "A's" or "B's?" The 80/20 Rule
applies. Right now, you are giving your C & D
customers attention that should be going to you're A
and B customers. Don’t force your best customers to
go looking for a better burger. Make the commitment
to your business today that you will start giving the
people who deserve it your undivided attention.