Saturday, September 24, 2011

Richest phone owners use BlackBerrys

Richest phone owners use BlackBerrys
Good information from Suzanne Choney. I wonder if this will still be true in a few years...I would expect that as iPhone becomes more available, that iPhone will be the leader in this demographic.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

vizualize.me - Cody 's profile

vizualize.me - Cody 's profile
This is pretty cool! This is a great way to create visual of your LinkedIn profile.  You need to use Chrome to view it, IE will not work.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Brand Loyalty and the Recession: It's All About Passionistas vs. Frugalistas (via brandchannel)

Brand Loyalty and the Recession: It's All About Passionistas vs. Frugalistas (via brandchannel)

Check out this article ranking firms by brand loyalty. Shockingly BP is at the bottom (sarcasm). I'm honestly a little surprised that Dr. Pepper is that low. It seems that people who like Dr. Pepper really stick with it over the alternatives. I guess Mr. Pibb is gaining ground. It's a great read and only takes a few minutes.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Turn the Sieve into a Bucket: 6 Practices for Loyalty Marketing

This week our company held an all hands meeting to celebrate the company's 10 year anniversary.  During that meeting our CEO said something that struck me as odd.  In a nutshell he said "in the past, the industry has been all about signing up a customer and hope you never hear from that custmer again.  That can no longer be the case."

Really? "Hope you never hear from that customer customer again?"  

Is your customer base a sieve?
Source: paulnoll.com
I believe him when he says that.  He's been in the industry a long time and knows that he's talking about.  I'm surprised that was the industry paradigm.  In some ways I understand.  You spend so much new customer acquisition in our industry that there is little leftover to spend on the customer experience.  The problem with that model is instead of creating a bucket to fit your customer base in, you create a sieve.  With a sieve, you have to keep the faucet turned on full blast in order to keep it full. 

Every company needs to invest in their current/recent customers in order to get them to stay.  Here are 6 principles customer marketers should consider when design customer loyalty campaigns.

Onboarding
Make it extremely easy for your customers to understand your product.  I bought an exercise program recently and the instructions were so easy to understand and follow, that it made me stick with it and now I'll consider buying their line extensions because I know that they'll make it easy for me.
Tools to Use:
  • Welcome kit or program
  • Strong online support or education
  • Online community (which helps with other areas as well)
  • Easy to get a hold of customer support team
Monitor External Touch Points
You can design the best customer touch point map and optimize to the hilt but you can't control what others say about you.  You have to monitor this closely, even if you work for a cable company and customers have no other choice if they want cable TV. They may not have a choice now but a disruptive technology could come along and your customers are just looking for an excuse to adopt it.  Don't make your reputation be the reason customers leave, it's lazy!  Also, mistakes happen but just don't do the things that cause negative PR.

I'm a believer in responding to negative press or comments.  You can control your response.  Don't get in an argument but your customers will look past the bad PR if they can see you are aware and you are addressing it.

Regular (but relevant) Communication
Keep in touch with your customers on a regular basis but make sure the information is relevant and timely.  You run the risk of customers tuning you out if you over communicate with junk information.  Asking customers what they want to hear about and how often is a good thing.  Don't be afraid to ask. 

A good customer marketing manager with strong analytical skills will survey their customers, monitor website and email activity in order to find patterns in what customers are looking for.

Listen to Your Customers
I touched upon this in the previous section but it is huge.  You have to listen to your customers through surveys, email responses, and customer care calls.  I've talked about this in a previous posts as well (surveying customers when they leave and Running a VOC meeting) but a good voice of the customer program can drive loyalty marketing campaigns, not to mention process improvement.

Advice: Be best friends with your customer care management.  They listen to calls all day long and can give you good feedback.

Create Added Value
Brand development means just as much to current customers as it does for new ones.  The obvious answers here are introducing new products or loyalty discounts but can you create non-tangible value? 
What about aspirational value or value through pride? 
Do your customers brag to their friends that they are a customer? 
Do they defend you to the death and think your competition is inferior and anyone who uses the competition is soft-in-the-head? 
Does your brand mean something more than what it is?

The best companies can add value in non-tangible ways (and they rarely have to offer discounts which is an added bonus). 

Read Malcolm Gladwell's "The Tipping Point" to learn about Airwalk's mistake of ignoring their core customers.

Get Your Customers Involved
The last leg of the customer lifecycle is "advocacy."  Active customers are advocates. Customers who refer friends are advocates.  As I mentioned earlier, developing a community of your customers where they can connect with one another is huge in getting your customers involved.  You can also leverage that community to get new customers but it seems consomer are relying more on word of mouth as a main vehicle for selecting products and services. 

Conclusion
I believe comprehensive plans never work almost everytime.  Most plans are abandoned once you realize you didn't account for something you never would've known about in the first place.  Having a general strategy is the best approach.  Always watch your data, beware of confirmation bias, optimize performance, and constantly tinker.  I hope this practices help you when you are organizing your customer loyalty campaigns.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Link: How to Socially Reward Your Customers

Check out this article by Corina Mackay(@corinamackay) 6 Ways to Socially Reward Your Customers. I've been researching ways to leverage social rewards and this post nicely summarizes the ways to use social rewards to increase loyalty and revenue.

Monday, July 18, 2011

3 Small Steps to Cause a Customer Experience Epidemic

This post is inspired by Malcolm Gladwell's book The Tipping Point.

I recently re-read the The Tipping Point by Gladwell and it got me thinking of all kinds of ways to apply the concepts from the book into day-to-day work.  Instead of applying the concepts to customer directed activities I thought of ways the concepts can be applied to customer experience and getting an entire organization to be concerned about optimizing the customer experience.

1. Get your unique socializers involved

The Law of the Few
According to Gladwell there are three types of extraordinary people that start epidemics.
  • Connectors - These people have a knack for meeting people.  They have diverse social circles which makes them uniquely qualified to spread information among a wide variety of groups.
  • Mavens - The information collectors.  Mavens become experts on certain subjects and we rely on them to introduce us to new information.
  • Salesman - These are the pursuaders and promoters.  They can take a concept and translate into a message that creates a need.
Most of the time, customer experience managers do have a lot of formal power in organization but managers can use specific people to get their message across to a wide audience.  You do not need a large meeting to present your findings a lot people.  In fact, it might better to use the unique people in your organization to get your message out. 
It probably won't take you too long to figure out who these people are if you just sit down and try to think of people who fit these descriptions.  These people can help translate your message to others who may not understand customer experience into something others can use.

2. Fine tune your message to make it stick

Stickiness Factor
This is where it gets a little difficult but crafting the right message to get your point across is important.  In The Tipping Point, Gladwell gives examples of Seasame Street and Blues Clues and how they tested their episodes for stickiness.  What messages gets people in your organization attention?  Fear may not be the answer.  An example in the book give an example of getting students to get a flu vaccination.  The fear message did not motivate people to get flu shots.  Giving a map and hours of when the shots would be available made participation jump.  Your goal is to get people to act not just hear your message.
Having everyone listen to ugly call center interactions may not be the way to get people to act.  Think direct response advertising.  Do you have a call to action?  What do you want people to do?  Are you being clear enough?

3. Communicate in the right context

The Power of Context
The environment makes a big difference in whether a message or idea becomes an epidemic.  People do not act the same in all situations.  Gladwell gave the example of the crime epidemic in New York.  Does your organization have a problem with nothing ever being accomplished in meetings?  Maybe the meeting isn't the right context.  Maybe the meeting setting gives people permission to not follow through because "no one else does it."
Consider the right context for geting people to act. 

By considering these three small steps on how to influence your organization may get your message to spread like a virus.

I encourage anyone who hasn't read The Tipping Point to do so.  If you have read it, read it again.  It's a great book for marketing professionals

Monday, June 20, 2011

Are You Asking Your Customers Why They Left?

It’s tough to ask someone why they left.  You may get answers that you don’t really want to hear.  Are your prices too high?  Is your post-sales service come up short?  Is the product you are sell having major malfunctions?  Hopefully the answer isn’t yes to all of those questions.  Getting answers to why customers leave will help you ATTRACT and KEEP the right customers.  There isn’t a product in the world that is universally for everyone.  Your product is obviously no different.  You want to know what you need to do keep the right customers.  Here are a few things to consider when designing a VOC for customers who are no longer your customer.
·         Allow customers to rank the reasons for leaving. 
·         Make the customer drill down on the top issue.  If it’s price, what about the price?
·         Don’t be afraid to ask if they went with another product and what product they went with.  This gives you a better idea of where you competition is coming from.  We found we don’t have to worry about firms that are the same size as we are with similar sales channels.  It’s the smaller players we have to be wary of.
·         Let the customer vent about what you did wrong.  The candid feedback is important to hear.
·         Be sure that you know what the top reasons are for your KEY customers.  Since your product isn’t for everyone, make sure you know your customer profile so you know that you are keeping the right kind of customers.  Your overall top reason may be one thing but you may be losing customers who aren’t going to be successful because of price or service expectation and those customers may be diluting your results.  I look for what customers from key demographics are saying so that I know how I can fine tune our product offering.  On the flip side you could determine that product expansion is key to capture and keep the customers who weren’t the right customers before.