Loyal Customer
And loyalty is the
child of Trust
All the
activities, planning, deliberations and what not , all are directly or
indirectly focused on keeping the customer satisfied with the product or
services of the company so that he will not easily exit the company. One can
understand the significance of the efforts put in by the companies to retain
the customer. Simply put, a loyal customer is largely a dependable source of
revenue for the company. The more loyal customers the company has, the firmer
is the ground the company stands on. Despite all these stints of efforts, the
companies also are quite aware of the fact that there will be some customer
exits and all these efforts are in a way to compensate the loss the exits might
fetch to the company. These are all
common experiences for any business organization. All the same, let us see what the common
steps are generally a company is expected to take so as to stop the customer
from switching to another company.
It is the fact
that the man, the employee who meets the customer in person to effect a sale is
very significant in the sense that the reduction in the customer defection is
to a large extent depends on him. He must be knowledgeable enough to answer all
the queries of the customers and he must be courteous to them and friendly. His
interactions with the customer on the spot must be crisp, communicative and
meaningful. He should not lose patience if the customer is persistent with
questions. He must not be cold and indifferent to the customers even if the
customer happens to be rather unreasonable and tiring. All these point to one
fact: the employees must be trained and they must be at least for a while
monitored efficiently.
Of course,
business analysts talk of customer value to the company. That is, which
customer spends more on the products of the company; his frequent purchases
bring some real profit, benefit to the company. On the other hand, there may be
customers who do not make repeat purchases; it means they contribute much less
to the revenue of the company.
While trying to
find measures to adopt to retain the customers, inevitably it involves money.
If the frequent purchasers are many and casual customers are less, the training
can be programmed accordingly. In other words, attention by the company towards
retention of the customer must be in proportion to the benefits accrued; then,
the money spent in training the employees becomes investment; if there is no
proportion between attention and retention, there is possibility money spent
does not become investment but money spent. No business could afford to keep
spending but at the same time cannot escape from investment also.
This only
underscores the point that money can be invested and not spent, as much as
possible. Training the employee is a very big subject and let us not step into
that here.
We will see what more the companies are
expected to undertake to achieve reduction in defection. In our next session.