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Tom Peters, the author of In Search of Excellence and numerous other business books, has developed a formula to figure the true value of a customer. Take the average purchase, and frequency, and calculate how much that customer could purchase in a year, if all purchases of this product were made with you. Then multiply it by 10, for the value of that customer.
This represents the customer's potential purchases over a decade, but doesn't even include referral business that a customer can pull in. A family might spend $150,000 for automobiles, for instance, using this formula. Isn't this customer worth spending time and money on to keep loyal? A grocery shopper may spend $50 per week, which adds up to $2,500 per year, or a 10-year value of $25,000.
Yet, few businesses devote much attention, time, or money to keeping customers. They spend tremendous amounts on advertising to attract new customers, but let the old ones slip away faster than the new ones come in. This seems like a foolish way to spend money unnecessarily. Carl Sewell wrote a best-selling business book titled Customers For Life. Here are his "Ten Commandments of Customer Service":
There should be at least as much effort, time, and money expended towards building a long-term relationship with past customers as is spent on attracting new ones. This is after-marketing, and can be done in many ways. Newsletters, special sales for old customers, birthday cards, the list is only as long as the limits of your imagination. Does it pay off? You bet it does, in referrals and repeat business. Customers will even forgive mistakes and heartily recommend you to others, if they believe you care.
Why customers quit:
You can't do anything about the first three percent, and little about the five. Almost all marketing effort by business is devoted to competing for that nine percent who are likely to switch in response to ads or better bargain prices. TQM and other quality measures are devoted to convincing just 14 percent to stay. Yet how many businesses work hard at the changes necessary to eliminate 68 percent of the reason for switching?
Your business can. All that is really necessary is a change in attitude, manifested in a long-term continuing contact program. If you can't manage a customer contact and retention program on your own, there are businesses springing up to do just that for you. A consultant can set up a program for you. The important thing is that you do it.
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