Tuesday 21 August 2012

Questions :

1. What are the laws of customer attraction?

2. What are the customer retention strategies?

3. Explain customer development process.

Attracting through Advertizing

1. ZooZoos by Vodafone :



2. The Hindu :

Customer Retention Strategies


Customer Retention Strategies

The easiest way to grow your customers is not to lose them
The average business loses around 20 percent of its customers annually simply by failing to attend to customer relationships. In some industries this leakage is as high as 80 percent. The cost, in either case, is staggering, but few businesses truly understand the implications.
Imagine two businesses, one that retains 90 percent of its customers, the other retaining 80 percent. If both add new customers at the rate of 20 percent per year, the first will have a 10 percent net growth in customers per year, while the other will have none. Over seven years, the first firm will virtually double, while the second will have no real growth. Everything else being equal, that 10-percent advantage in customer retention will result in a doubling of customers every seven years without doing anything else.
The consequences of customer retention also compound over time, and in sometimes unexpected ways. Even a tiny change in customer retention can cascade through a business system and multiply over time. The resulting effect on long-term profit and growth shouldn’t be underestimated.
Marketing Wizdom can introduce you to a number of simple customer retention strstegies that will cost you little or nothing to implement. Behind each technique listed here there is an in-depth step-by-step process that will increase your customer retention significantly once implemented, and will have a massive impact on your business.
1. Reducing Attrition
Virtually every business loses some customers, but few ever measure or recognise how many of their customers become inactive. Most businesses, ironically, invest an enormous amount of time, effort and expense building that initial customer relationship. Then they let that relationship go unattended, in some cases even losing interest as soon as the sale been made, or even worse, they abandon the customer as soon as an easily remedied problem occurs, only to have to spend another small fortune to replace that customer. The easiest way to grow your business is not to lose your customers. Once you stop the leakage, it’s often possible to double or triple your growth rate because you’re no longer forced to make up lost ground just to stand still.
2. Sell and then sell again
So many people do an excellent job of making the initial sale, then drop the ball and get complacent, ignoring the customer, while they chase more business. Your selling has actually only just begun when someone makes that initial purchase decision because virtually everyone is susceptible to buyer’s remorse. To lock in that sale, and all of the referrals and repeat business that will flow from it, you need to strike while the iron is hot to allay your customers’ fears and demonstrate by your actions that you really care. You should thank them and remind them again why they’ve made the right decision to deal with you … and put a system in place to sell to them again, and again, constantly proving that they made the right decision.
3. Bring back the “lost sheep”
There’s little point in dedicating massive resources to generating new customers when 25-60% of your dormant customers will be receptive to your attempts to regenerate their business if you approach them the right way, with the right offer. Reactivating customers who already know you and your product is one of the easiest, quickest ways to increase your revenues. Re-contacting and reminding them of your existence, finding out why they’re no longer buying, overcoming their objections and demonstrating that you still value and respect them will usually result in a tremendous bounty of sales and drastically increased revenues in a matter of days … and will lead to some of your best and most loyal customers.
4. Frequent Communications Calendar
Avoid losing your customers by building relationships and keeping in touch using a rolling calendar of communications. This is a programmed sequence of letters, events, phone calls, “thank you’s”, special offers, follow-ups, magic moments, and cards or notes with a personal touch etc. that occur constantly and automatically at defined points in the pre-sales, sales and post-sales process. People not only respond to this positively, they really appreciate it because they feel valued and important. It acknowledges them, keeps them informed, offsets post-purchase doubts, reinforces the reason they’re doing business with you and makes them feel part of your business so that they want to come back again and again.
5. Extraordinary Customer Service
The never-ending pursuit of excellence to keep customers so satisfied that they tell others how well they were treated when doing business with you. Moving the product or service you deliver into the realm of the extraordinary by delivering higher than expected levels of service to each and every customer. Key facets include: dedication to customer satisfaction by every employee; providing immediate response; no buck passing; going above and beyond the call of duty; consistent on-time delivery; delivering what you promise before AND after the sale; a zero-defects and error-free-delivery process and recruiting outstanding people to deliver your customer service. Extraordinary service builds fortunes in repeat customers, whereas poor service will drive your customers to your competition.
6. Courtesy system
A powerful system that improves the interpersonal skills of your team and changes the spirit of your organisation. It involves speaking to colleagues politely and pleasantly, without sarcasm or parody, and treating them at least as well as you would want them to treat your customers. This will help your team to feel worthwhile and important, which makes for pleasant social contacts at work. It also motivates them to provide extraordinary service, encourages them to be consistently pleasant in all of their dealings and to relate to customers in a warm, human and natural manner. This results in better, warmer, stronger, more trusting relationships and longer term bonds with your customers.
7. Product or service integrity
Long-term success and customer retention belongs to those who do not take ethical shortcuts. There must always be total consistency between what you say and do and what your customers experience. The design, build quality, reliability and serviceability of your product or service must be of the standard your customers want, need and expect. Service integrity is also demonstrated by the way you handle the small things, as well as the large. Customers will be attracted to you if you are open and honest with them, care for them, take a genuine interest in them, don’t let them down and practice what you preach … and they will avoid you if you don’t.
8. Measure lifetime value
There’s a vast difference between the one-off profit you might make on an average sale, which ignores the bigger picture, and the total aggregate profit your average customer represents over the lifetime of their business relationship with you. Once you recognise how much combined profit a customer represents to your business when they purchase from you again and again, over the months, years or decades, you’ll realise the critical importance of taking good care of your customers. And because you’ll understand just how much time, effort and expense you can afford to invest in retaining that customer, you’ll be in control of your marketing expenditure.
9. A complaint is a gift
96 percent of dissatisfied customers don’t complain. They just walk away, and you’ll never know why. That’s because they often don’t know how to complain, or can’t be bothered, or are too frightened, or don’t believe it’ll make any difference. Whilst they may not tell you what’s wrong, they will certainly tell plenty of others. A system for unearthing complaints can therefore be the lifeblood of your business, because customers who complain are giving you a gift, they’re still talking to you, they’re giving you another opportunity to return them to a state of satisfaction and delight them and the manner in which you respond gives you another chance to show what you’re made of and create even greater customer loyalty.
Other customer retention strategies include:
  1. Blogs
  2. Loyalty Programs
  3. Personal Touches
  4. Premiums and Gifts
  5. Questionnaires and Surveys
  6. Regular Reviews
  7. Social Media

3 Laws of Customer Attraction


According to the Law of Attraction, the phrase "I need more money" allows the subject to continue to "need more money". If the subject wants to change this, they would focus their thoughts on the goal (having more money) rather than the problem (needing more money). This might take the form of phrases such as "I have as much money as I need" or "I have a job that pays very well". The same is true for attracting new customers.  Instead of just saying I want more leads you need to have a switch in mindset. In order to attract more customers, you need to change from a outbound push strategy into an inbound attraction strategy.

Law #1: Get Found by Potential Customers

Getting found means your best prospects find you. It's all about the top of your sales pipeline and how you fill it with qualified traffic.  It means that you have identified who your ideal prospects are and where they spend their time online.  That way when your prospects do research on Google, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, or elsewhere in the blogosphere, they find you. Whether they are looking for information, advice, entertainment, thought leadership, analysis, predictions, tools, data or conversation, they find your content, your people, your brand, your products, and your company.
There are 3 steps to getting found:
  1. Create 
    First, you create remarkable content. That's the core of inbound marketing. This means blog articles, web pages, videos, photos, webinars, whitepapers, and tools that are useful, interesting, thought-provoking, controversial, and entertaining. This is no small feat, and it's the most critical step if you're serious about generating more traffic and leads. You need to determine your content creation strategy and schedule and then stick to it.
  2. Optimize
    Next, you optimize your content for search engines (SEO) and other audiences.  To ensure you give your valuable content the best chance possible of drawing traffic from the web, you need it to be optimized. In essence, this section is about maximizing your ROC - return on content. This includes On-page SEO, Off-Page SEO and optimizing for other channels.
  3. Promote
    Finally, you promote your remarkable content in the social media-sphere through email marketing, and other channels. You'll be promoting content on social media sites, on Google (through PPC), via email marketing to your marketing database (your contacts), and via offline events (like tradeshows).

Law #2: Convert More Visitors into Leads & Customers

Getting found is great. You're writing articles and producing videos (creating remarkable content), you have SEO optimize your content, and you're using all the social media sites and running email and PPC campaigns to promote your content. At the end of the day, however, we aren't in this for fun. We're also not in this for traffic. The goal is acquiring quality sales leads and customers, so let's focus now on converting as much of your traffic as possible to leads and customers.
Note that there is potentially huge value if you can increase your conversion rate and generate more leads from existing traffic. If you only get a few hundred visits per week, increasing your conversion rate by 1% can generate 10-15 more leads per month. If you get a few thousand visits a week, you stand to increase your lead flow by 100-150 leads per month.
In order to convert visitors into leads you need to follow the following steps:
  1. Convert visitors into leads
    1. Targeted Traffic  - Landing Pages
      Targeted traffic refers to a known audience that you draw to a specific page. For instance, if you email everyone you met at a trade show and offer them a free trial of your product, that is a "targeted" traffic source because all the visitors have something in common - they are all from your trade show. Converting a targeted stream of traffic requires two things:
      1. A well-crafted offer on a landing page that is designed specifically for the audience you will be driving to the page, and
      2. A stream of targeted traffic that you drive to the page.
    2. Organic Traffic - Website & Blog
      The inherent challenge here is that when someone hits a page on your site or your blog, you don't actually know where that visitor came from or what is on his/her mind. Hence it's hard to design an offer specifically for that person. Thus, you need to think about the following:
      1. What are the range of conversion paths on your site? Where might people land, and what paths through your content might they take?
      2. How do you put offers and calls to action along the most common paths so that you have the maximum chance of getting the "right" offer in front of a given visitor to maximize the chance of converting them into a leads.
  2. Convert leads to customers
    50 to 80 percent of all leads are potentially wasted if not managed properly.  Industry surveys indicate that only 10 to 25 percent of all leads are interested and ready to buy. A similar percentage of leads are not qualified at all. The problem is how you get those leads from a “blind date” to happily “married with children”? You need to have a defined lead nurture strategy.  (To learn more check out this free guide The 6 Steps to Lead Management: From Blind Date to Married with Children). Done right, proper lead nurturing creates more educated buyers, helps you better understand their needs, and ultimately translates into more revenue. According to Aberdeen research, companies that are Best-in-Class in the lead management see a 90% improvement in companywide annual revenue growth, and on average a 59% performance increase.

Law 3: Analyze

One of the most important parts of any successful attraction strategy is continually measuring the progress of your efforts and optimizing accordingly. Each day, you will want to monitor how much traffic your site is getting, as well as where that traffic is coming from. Hopefully, a solid chunk of traffic is clicking through to you after searching on a keyword relevant to your site. You'll want to check each keyword that people are using to find you. If there are specific keywords that are generating more leads than others, it would be a solid/good idea to create more content around them. You can do this through blog posts or even a Web Voter of content on the subject.
Continually monitor the conversion rates of your landing pages. If your conversion rates aren't as high as you'd like, make sure that you've implemented applicable best practices -- or build a new landing page to try something different! Most importantly, use the shifts you see in your analytics to drive the next steps of your inbound marketing strategy!
As your work ebbs and flows and your priorities shift, you may choose to do more or less inbound marketing every day. Basically, every day we want you to (1) analyze, (2) publish, and (3) be social. By following 3 laws of customer attraction, you can achieve growth in traffic and leads of 10-30% per month.  The techniques in this methodology work.  But it isn’t magic.  It only works if you make it work.
Want to learn more about how to build a lead generation engine that will attract your ideal prospects? Check out this free guide.