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May 2008 Archives

May 30, 2008

Service Evolution

“If agents can’t solve customers’ problems it’s like throwing gas on a fire.”

That truism was told to me by Marchai Bruchey, CMO of Kana, last week when we were discussing trends in the service arena. Bruchey was talking about the challenge contact centers face with retention. “Companies need consistency in that channel, but call centers have the highest turnover.” One main reason, according to Bruchey, is that agents feel they don’t have the information they need to do their jobs. When agents can't resolve customers’ issues, both customers and agents become frustrated—often to the point of leaving.

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May 29, 2008

Why it’s important to understand SEO

In the July/August issue of 1to1 Magazine we’re working on a story about search engine optimization (SEO) and how mastering it is more than just knowing which keywords to buy and how to create the most inbound or outbound links. I came across two examples this week of companies that clearly don’t understand what SEO is all about, for two very different reasons. One is looking at a possible ban from Google for undermining the spirit of search engine practices, while the other has its head in the sand trying to pretend the digital age isn’t happening.

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May 28, 2008

Service: Strategy or Not?

One of our avid readers, Miro Slodki, is kind enough to always send me links to information he comes across that he’s thinks I’ll find interesting. He did this just the other day, and as usual, was right on about it being something I couldn’t resist reading. I’m mean, how could I with a title like, “Service Is Not a Strategy.”

The item in question is an entry by Richard Litvack on the Canadian Marketing Association’s blog. It’s a thought provoking read, with equally thought provoking responses from Miro, Don Peppers, and a gentleman listed only as Laurence whose comments I found fascinating—and in line with some ideas Dan Hill recently presented during his interview with 1to1, “The Business of Emotion.”

Litvack’s blog is definitely worth a visit. And if you’re like Miro, Don Peppers, and I, you’re certain to feel compelled to post a response.

CEOs, Listen Up!

Leadership necessitates listening. Today's CEOs expect communications to be a strategic asset and critical link between their corporate vision and the first connection to their customers—customer service.

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May 27, 2008

The "Delirious" Future Is Now

As companies like Nielsen continue trying various devices to measure viewership in nanoseconds, Internet marketers persistently experiment with different eye-tracking techniques, and the parameters of predictive analytics and focus groups keep evolving, it's intriguing to take another look at a film that effectively predicted many of these trends. (Or, for that matter, to take a look at any film besides Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of Diminishing Returns.)

I'm thinking of Le Couple Témoin (The Model Couple), part of The Delirious Fictions of William Klein DVD box set recently released by the Criterion Collection's Eclipse label. Made in 1977, the film not only predicts the likes of EdTV, The Truman Show, and the apparently never-ending tidal wave of reality television, but it does so in a savagely satirical fashion--the kind of satire that, seen again at a remove of thirty-plus years, finds your knowing laughter suddenly turning uneasy.

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May 23, 2008

On the CRM Technology Horizon

After months of assessing features and functionality, ISM Inc. recently released the winners of its Top 15 CRM Awards in both the enterprise and SMB categories. What is most interesting to me are the trends ISM noted while judging the applications.

Three in particular stood out to me.

Continue reading "On the CRM Technology Horizon" »

What’s on the Minds of Today’s CMOs?

Earlier this week I attended a sliver The CMO Club’s latest event. The focus of my time there was to learn about the results of the Club’s recent survey, “Marketing in a Recession.” Founder Pete Krainik took attendees through the findings; attendees weren’t shy about adding their opinions and commentary.

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May 22, 2008

Singapore, Inc.

Hey, I just returned from a week in Singapore, Australia, and New Zealand. In Singapore I heard that when a mobile phone company in that region removed the upper limit on what their call center reps were allowed to spend to satisfy a customer, it actually reduced the average amount each rep spent! You can hear about that, and some fascinating facts about Singapore, in my latest "Peppers Unplugged" video diary entry.

Connecting Race Fans

A few weeks ago I had the opportunity to attend a NASCAR race (something I've always wanted to do, but not the easiest feat growing up in Connecticut). I was there to see how ISC, owner of the Richmond International Raceway where the event was held, was developing a social network on RacingOne.com for fans where they could share their raceday experiences. You can read more about my experience (including pictures) in today's Marketing Xfactor.

Do you belong to any social networks besides Facebook or MySpace, like niche sites geared toward one interest? Do you think the information companies like ISC can gather from such a network is more valuable than the general profile information found on the larger sites?

May 21, 2008

The Purple Promise Pays Off

In 1to1 Magazine’s March/April issue, we featured FedEx and how its employees are united under one oath—the Purple Promise, which vows to make every customer experience which touches the organization outstanding.

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May 20, 2008

Killing the "The" ... and Other Marketing Tales of the Weird

How much would you pay for a new tagline? If you're Citibank, you're willing to drop $30 million to wind up with the ever-so-catchy "Citi Never Sleeps" ... so much more pithy and cogent than the company's previous slogan, "The Citi Never Sleeps."

Not to get all Dr. Evil on you, but let's roll that sum around the palate again, shall we?

Thirty. Million. Dollars.

And they say there's a recession going on out there.

Continue reading "Killing the "The" ... and Other Marketing Tales of the Weird" »

May 19, 2008

What does it really cost to acquire or lose a customer?

Someone recently asked me, very seriously, whether I could tell them how much it really cost acquire a customer, relative to the cost of losing a customer. I didn’t have the heart to tell him that this is a nonsensical question. There’s no answer to it. That is, the answer is always going to be “it depends.”

Consider the cost of acquiring a customer -- well, what particular kind of customer are we talking about? Will that be an ice-cream cone buyer, an Amazon book buyer, a Toyota Camry buyer, a construction firm buying a new crane, a computer software consulting business buying janitorial service for twelve months, or a business class air traveler who’s never flown on your airline but frequently flies with your competitor? And who’s doing the acquiring? Are you a monopoly, or a duopoly, or in a highly competitive market, or an international one? Do you have the best product, the worst product, the second best, or something in between? Are we talking about acquiring a very loyal customer, or one who might jump to the competitor in response to the next offer?

I’m sure you see the problem here. Ditto with the cost of "keeping" a customer. Let’s see, will you want to be keeping that customer for another week? Month? Year? Forever? Is this a high-volume customer you want to keep or a low-volume one? Did this customer come in on someone else’s referral, or in response to an advertising promotion of some type, or what? And has the customer generally been satisfied with your service or not? Does anyone else offer a service just as good as yours? Do they price it competitively or not?

All this being said, in any particular business situation you can always calculate the cost of acquiring the last set of customers - simply divide the money you spent on the task by the number of customers you've acquired, and presto!

However, in calculating the cost of keeping a customer, the best way (really the only way) to do this is with control groups. You have a set of policies designed to make your customers more loyal, and these policies cost some fixed amount. You apply the policies to a population of customers, but you hold aside a control group of statistically identical customers who are not exposed to the policies. Then calculate the difference in customer retention rates between the two groups of customers, and that absolute difference - the extra customers who remain in the non-control group, over and above the number you would have expected based on the retention rate in the control - that's the number of extra customers you "kept" with the policies you applied. So again, divide the cost of the policies by that number of extra customers, and there's your answer. For now. For that situation and for those policies, at that time.

One more thing: There is a spurious “fact” that circulates widely alleging that "it costs five times as much to acquire a new customer as it does to retain an existing one," although sometimes people say it is seven times as much or ten times as much. This fact originated with a Harvard Business Review article a couple of decades ago, which was the result of a general study of retention policies compared to acquisition policies across a range of businesses in different (consumer) categories. I think it was Earl Sasser, et. al., and the "service quality initiative" or something like that. However, if the academics who did this study had taken a different sample, or applied their calculations to different categories of businesses, then the numbers would obviously be different. This number is valid for the particular set of firms they looked at, in that study, but you can't simply apply same number, as a general principle, across all marketing.

I’d actually be interested in hearing from anyone out there who has their own figures – how much does it cost YOU in YOUR business to acquire different kinds of customers? And do you know how much it costs to retain them, as a general proposition?

Dissecting a Champion's DNA

We at 1to1 Magazine interviewed all 15 1to1 Customer Champions for this year's cover feature. They had many different stories to tell, but many seemed to approach their corporate and customer challenges in a similar way.

Continue reading "Dissecting a Champion's DNA" »

May 16, 2008

Thoughts From the Toronto 1to1 Customer Champions Roundtable

Did you know that a person who regularly buys large dog collars has a higher risk of defaulting on a loan than a person who regularly buys bird seed?

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May 15, 2008

Television show or commercial in disguise?

If the television writers hadn’t just gone on strike last year, I’d say they definitely should following this announcement from NBC Universal. NBC’s new Digital Studio, which is creating shows to appear exclusively online on sites like Hulu, has teamed with an advertising company to create two new shows for this summer. Omnicom Group has already signed up companies like Intel, Cisco, and Microsoft to sponsor the show, but they’re not just airing short commercials in between scenes, running pre-roll ads, or even placing banners alongside the rolling video; the marketing is much more subversive than that.

Continue reading "Television show or commercial in disguise?" »

May 14, 2008

Correcting Mistakes Pays Off

Customers don’t typically seek service when they’re having a good day. They need service when their order is wrong, their shipment is late, or there’s a mistake on their bill.

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May 13, 2008

A PG-13 Ad Campaign

"Screw it" may not be everyone's first choice for an ad campaign's tagline, but that's what Harley-Davidson is doing these days with the apothegm "Screw It, Let's Ride."

The campaign caught my eye with a full-page ad on the back cover of a recent edition of Sports Illustrated. The full text of the ad?

"Over the last 105 years in the saddle, I’ve seen my share of conflict in the world, but every time this country has come out stronger than before. Because chrome and asphalt put distance between me and whatever the world can throw at me. Freedom and wind outlast hard times. And the rumble of my engine drowns out all the spin on the evening news. If 105 years have proved one thing, it’s that fear sucks and it doesn’t last long. So screw it, let’s ride."

The approach brings to mind any number of possibilities for other products.

Continue reading "A PG-13 Ad Campaign" »

C-Level Customer Centricity

“I’m passionate about customers. I always start with, how does that affect the customers?”

Those were the words of Sage Software President and CEO Sue Swenson yesterday during the opening keynote at Sage’s Insights partner conference. Swenson was emphasizing to partners how important customer relationships are to her, and to Sage.

I always love to hear that kind of customer focus, but it especially strikes a chord when someone at the C-level not only talks the talk but walks the walk. Because as we all know, an enterprisewide customer strategy can only succeed if company leaders believe in the power of customer centricity, communicate that to their employees, and deliver on it.

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Leadership: A Customer Strategy

Yesterday afternoon I had the pleasure of hearing John Maxwell deliver an engaging keynote on leadership at the Sage Software Insights partner conference. Maxwell is the author of several best-selling books on leadership, as well as the just-released Leadership Gold: Lessons I've Learned from a Lifetime of Leading.

I was especially drawn in because of two things Maxwell said that, to me, directly apply to customer strategy: 1) when your ability to lead grows, so does your business; and 2) leadership is all about engaging people—and without engaged employees customer centricity is not much more than big talk. “Your ability to lead will determine your effectiveness,” he said.

Maxwell discussed the five levels of leadership. Here’s an overview.

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May 12, 2008

If They Can Do It, You Can Do It

Many executives see other companies using Web 2.0 tools, customer co-creation, and advanced personalization techniques to build relationships with customers. They think "it's a good idea for them, but it wouldn't work it my business." We think that any business -- B2B or B2C -- can benefit from smart use of new technologies that are readily available to build relationships. Don't let it pass you by.

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May 8, 2008

The Real Reason We Love Self-Service

One element of our weekly staff meeting is to present story ideas, discuss trends and relevant news, and the like. During yesterday’s meeting Managing Editor Mila Antonio mentioned an article she read about Papa John’s surpassing $1 billion in online pizza sales, and noted that part of its appeal is pizza-tracking functionality that allows customers to follow their pie from order to creation to delivery (supposedly taking the stress out of knowing when your pizza will arrive—but that’s another whole conversation…).

I immediately chimed in with my personal tale of how much I love using Papa John’s website to order pizza. The response caught me off guard.

Continue reading "The Real Reason We Love Self-Service" »

May 7, 2008

4 Rules for Building Trust

Trust is essential when you decide to move into a motor home with your spouse and three children for the duration of 18 months to explore the U.S., Mexico, and Canada.

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May 6, 2008

You Gotta Have a Gimmick

What do the cast of "Gypsy" and Chrysler LLC chairman/CEO Bob Nardelli have in common? They can both currently be heard singing the familiar strains of the showtune "You Gotta Have a Gimmick."

The cast's doing it eight times a week in the latest Broadway revival of a show which doesn't get restaged quite as often as "Grease" but comes perilously close. Nardelli's doing it as he tries to reinvigorate his long-hurting brand by offering customers $2.99-a-gallon gasoline for three years. And if the novel plan helps grease Chrysler stock upwards, so much the better.

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May 5, 2008

Word-of-Mouth Is Marketing's Holy Grail

Who knew that Wal-Mart needed brand advocates? Cathy Halligan, CMO of Walmart.com, says that the company encourages customers to post reviews, and share thoughts on the company and products. If one of the largest companies on the planet works to build word-of-mouth advocates, then you should too.

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May 1, 2008

The Ultimate Personalized Marketing

We all get direct mail with personalized fields that are supposed to make us think the company marketing to us knows what makes us tick. The same with email, personal URL's, and other messaging that we know deep down is really just mass-produced by a computer. In today's saturated media market where people's attention spans are split in five thousand different directions, companies have to do something really special to capture a customer's attention and make them believe an advertisement was made just for them. And that's exactly what Wilkes University recently did.

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