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Focusing
on Consistency (Part 2)
by Adele Sommers, Ph.D.
Consistently pleasant customer
experiences produce raving fans who spread positive
buzz about our products and services. In contrast, even
a single unhappy experience can sour a customer, who may then take
her business elsewhere. This customer often doesnt inform
us of the reason but does tend to rant unhappily
to an even wider circle of friends, according to the American Management
Association.
In Part
1 of this series, we saw how consumers are able to exercise
their choices to achieve the most enjoyable and efficient experiences
possible. This article, Part 2, explores four more techniques
that can help ensure top-to-bottom consistency in creating positive
customer experiences.
Reviewing
the First Two Ingredients in the Recipe
The recipe for customer satisfaction
contains several key ingredients that pertain to quality, business
systems, marketing/sales, customer service, and good common sense.
Two of the basic ingredients we covered in Part 1 were:
- Its far more cost effective to keep existing customers
than to find new ones. Why? Customer retention research shows
that once companies have loyal customers, the cost of keeping
them is just one-fifth the cost of attracting new
ones. Therefore, it makes sense to continuously and consistently
delight them.
- Its critical not to over-promise and under-deliver.
Either we can under-promise and over-deliver
or, over-promise and over-deliver
but, at all costs, we should strive not to under-deliver. Our
credibility and trustworthiness evaporate whenever we make promises
we cant keep.
Next, lets look at four
additional success criteria.
Ingredient
#3: Prevent Variation in Service and Product Quality
For
services, preventing variation means being unfailingly helpful
and pleasant in all customer interactions. It means that personnel
must be able to satisfy all of the company's advertised claims.
And theyll also need an understanding of the creative latitude
theyll have to meet customers special needs, to offer
the greatest possible quality
in perception. In these ways, personnel will have the
means by which to wow customers over-delivering
by giving even more than customers expect.
For products, preventing
variation means ensuring that every article produced conforms as
tightly as possible to the ideal as close to perfection as
you can make it. Unlike what you may have learned about quality
decades ago, this requires going beyond merely staying
within tolerances, which was the old school of quality
thinking. The reason is that weaknesses can arise from being barely
within specs possibly enough to cause system failure.
Its far more likely when several critical values together
are all barely within specs, because
the effects can accumulate.
Ingredient
#4: Ensure Your Customers Downstream Success
Ask yourself: Are you most heavily
focused on your own immediate gain your own business results
or do you express a vested interest in ensuring that your
customers will succeed? If your emphasis is truly on your customers'
success, then how about your customers customers
success, or even that of your customers customers
customers?
By consistently emphasizing
the downstream chain of successes that your customers and their
customers will enjoy, you'll create consistent, perpetual value
for all who use your offerings. (More
on this topic here.)
Ingredient
#5: Create Theme-Oriented Products and Services
You can design an imaginative
suite of coordinated components with theme names, slogans,
mascots, music, literature, accessories, and services. Such ensembles
will spark your customers imaginations and entice them to
buy one after another in the desire to complete a set. Many companies
have learned that customers will gladly pay a premium for a group
of collectibles while raving to their family and friends.
An
example of an enterprise that has experienced extraordinary results
using this technique is American
Girl. This company pairs authentic doll characters with
historically researched novels that tell the life stories and adventures
of the dolls. It also sells coordinated outfits, period furniture,
and accessories even hair styling services!
American Girl has quietly exploded
from a tiny mail-order business into a $344 million firm using mostly
word-of-mouth advertising. It creates wholesome, educational offerings
for which their ever-expanding clientele gladly pay top dollar.
Ingredient
#6: Design a Mesmerizing, Theme-Based Buying Experience
Taking theme ideas even further,
you can create a whimsical buying atmosphere for your customers,
either in a physical storefront, online store, or both. Your staff
might wear costumes or use custom scripts to keep in step with the
characters or theme. The novelty and entertainment value can spark
customers imaginations, attracting avid buyers in markets
such as toys, technology, hotels, clothing, accessories, and foods.
In the area of foods, Trader
Joe's, which has stores primarily on the east and west coasts
of the U.S., has enjoyed remarkable popularity over the last several
decades. Everything Trader Joes does revolves around a tropical,
nautical motif.
The
theme dictates what staff members wear, the decorations in the stores,
and the unique, exotic, low-cost, private-label foods it sells.
Walking into any store feels like arriving at an island vacation
spot. The clang of ships bells punctuates the sounds of Hawaiian
shirt-clad staff members chatting cheerfully with customers. The
quality, selection, value, and whimsical, theme-based atmosphere
attract a steadily growing base of raving fan shoppers.
In conclusion, these
powerful tips can help you create customer satisfaction, loyalty,
and endless word-of-mouth promotion. To reap the benefits of the
fun and creative ideas, however, dont overlook the foundational
aspects. This means being sure to over-deliver on what you promise
while maintaining consistency in your product and service quality.
~~~~~~~~~~~
About the Author
Adele Sommers, Ph.D. is author of Straight Talk
on Boosting Business Performance: 12 Ways to Profit from Hidden
Potential. To learn more about her book and sign up for more
free tips like these, visit her site at www.LearnShareProsper.com
This article may be distributed freely on your Web
site, as long as this entire article, including the links and full
About the Author section, are unchanged. Please send
a copy of, or link to, your reprint to Adele@LearnShareProsper.com.
Copyright 2006 Business Performance Inc., Adele Sommers, All Rights Reserved.
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