ArticlesBase.com - Free Articles Directory
Free Online Articles Directory
11.10.2008 Sign In Register Hello Guest
Email:
Password:
Remember Me 
forgot your password?


The Savvy Customer

Author: Curtis Bingham Author Ranking Blue | Posted: 26-04-2008 | Comments: 0 | Views: 3 | Rating:  (52) Article Popularity - Blue (?) Got a Question? Ask.
Sign Up Now!

Copyright (c) 2008 Curtis Bingham

AFTER $14 MILLION dollars and four years, our customers don't want to buy what we have? What a depressing statement from a VP of Sales. How many times can you afford to have a new product fail in the marketplace? How many customers can you afford to lose because you don't meet their needs?

Shortest time to market no longer cuts it, nor does lowest cost. And excellent customer service is now expected. As the old rules for achieving competitive advantage fade away, what can you do to secure customers and vanquish competitors?

The only true, sustainable competitive advantage is an intimate understanding of customer needs. You can develop such "clear customer insight" in many ways and use it to win profits and the loyalty of "savvy" customers.

Learn About Your Customers

Often, we attempt to understand our customers by employing approximations of customer needs and wants, such as third-party market research, anecdotal evidence from sales or service organizations, competitive activities, website tracking, and, worse, our own opinions. We need to go directly to the source, gathering real, direct customer insight that's accurate, current, and meaningful, and upon which we can bet our businesses.

Not every customer has something to offer. The 80/20 rule applies here: select the most valuable 20 percent of your customers according to an accepted metric such as strategic fit, gross revenue, gross margin, cost to support, or frequency of purchase, and cultivate long-term, two-way relationships with them. Ask them to share with you their candid opinions. Go visit them and observe the use of your product or service in actual environments.

While customers are critical to learn from, prospects may be even more valuable. In many cases, customers keep doing what they've always done, and are poor predictors of new technologies or other marketplace shifts. But prospects are not already infatuated with you or your current products, and will communicate more realistic views of the changing marketplace. So listen to prospects as well as customers.

Information to Gather

What information needs to be gathered to obtain clear customer insight?

*Working environment* Ask, "What is the environment that our customers are working in?" "Who is using the product vs. who is the buyer?" Understanding the environment may provide clues as to how your products are used and how their use could be improved, there by increasing the value to customers. You need to know how customers are or would be using your product or service.

Ideally, you should go directly to your customer site and watch the product or service being used. In this way, you can gather information that may not be evident as someone describes their environment and can't be uncovered using surveys or other impersonal means.

*New opportunities* The greatest value in gathering firsthand customer insight may be the ability to uncover new opportunities, either for new applications of existing products or for new products. During direct customer interviews, you can uncover latent needs that customers may not even know they have. Frequently, your company will be uniquely capable of addressing these needs.

Acting on the Results

Without this step, nothing else even matters. Here are a few ideas:

1. Draw a poster-sized picture of your stereotypical customer and post it in the most prominent spot you can. Give this stereotypical customer a name. Record on the picture all of the details about the customer that you know, including the environment they are in, their worries and concerns, and their most painful needs.

2. Laminate smaller versions of the poster and hand them out at meetings. Before making decisions, ask yourselves if your customers (by name) will even care about the decision you are making. If they do, will your decision alleviate their pain?

3. Examine your current products and services for problems you are causing your customers. Are you destroying your relationships despite yourself? Make a list of everything that you can do to improve. Rank each improvement according to the value to the customer and the difficulty to implement. Select the most critical and the easiest to implement and fix it this week.

4. Explore new areas you can profitably address. What areas of significant pain (or latent needs) did you uncover? How can you provide added services or products to address these needs? Flesh these out and review them with customers and prospects.

5. Have customers rank your forthcoming new features or product and service offerings. Describe the changes to existing or new products and services you are considering based on your newfound insight. Have your customers and prospects rank your changes. You might have them spread $100 over each change to signify both order of importance and relative value, or rank them from 1 to 10 to signify order of importance. Determine how much they might pay by either asking for a figure or using comparative methods.

6. Create an implementation plan that balances real customer insight with business reality. Create a resource allocation plan that heavily weights the customer value and more lightly weighs the strategic fit of the change with the corporate direction, as well as the difficulty/cost of implementation.

7. Execute. Armed with real customer insight, you are prepared to keep your most valuable customers as your gre a test allies in thwarting competitors.

The only sustainable competitive advantage is clear customer insight. By leveraging your customer knowledge, you can make strategic and tactical business decisions that your customers and prospects will appreciate. Even better, they will pay for them, increasing your revenue, profits and overall success.

Rate this Article: Current: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/business-articles/the-savvy-customer-396932.html

Print this Article Print article   Email to a Friend Send to friend   Publish this Article on your Website Publish this Article   Send Author Feedback Author feedback  
About the Author:

Curtis N. Bingham, President of The Predictive Consulting Group, helps organizations dramatically increase customer acquisition, retention, & profitability. For more information about his new Customer Experience Audit, Customer Strategy, or Chief Customer Officers, visit his website at http://www.predictiveconsulting.com or his blog at http://www.curtisbingham.com .

Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means of generating quality backlinks and targeted traffic to your website. Join us today - It's Free!

Article Comments

Comment on this article Comment on this article
Your Name
Your Email:
Comment Body
Enter Validation Code: Captcha


Related Articles

Are You Too Making a $100m Mistake?
By: Curtis Bingham | 05/05/2008 | Business
Business Articles, learn about busines - An organization created with the objective of making a profit from the sale of goods or services.

All Customer Feedback is not Created Equal: a Guide for Dealing With Disgruntled Customers
By: Curtis Bingham | 19/01/2008 | Business
Business Articles, learn about busines - An organization created with the objective of making a profit from the sale of goods or services.

Gaining Critical Insight to Grow Your Business
By: Curtis Bingham | 25/04/2008 | Business
Business Articles, learn about busines - An organization created with the objective of making a profit from the sale of goods or services.

Surviving Technology - 5 Tips to Keep Your Customers From Firing You..
By: Sandy Reed | 28/02/2008 | Business
Business Articles, learn about busines - An organization created with the objective of making a profit from the sale of goods or services.

Don't Sucker Punch your Customers in the Face: Profiting From Customer Satisfaction
By: Robert McCarver | 18/05/2007 | Customer Service

The Treasure Trove in Your Suggestion Box
By: Adele Sommers | 20/04/2008 | Business
Business Articles, learn about busines - An organization created with the objective of making a profit from the sale of goods or services.

All This Talk About Employee Engagement: What is It, Anyway?
By: Timothy Wright | 11/01/2008 | Management

Challenging Customers - Love Them or Leave Them?
By: Sandy Reed | 01/03/2008 | Business
Business Articles, learn about busines - An organization created with the objective of making a profit from the sale of goods or services.

Got a Question? Ask.

Ask the community a question about this article:

Q&A Powered by:
Powered by Yedda 

Latest Business Articles

Ordinary Business Life Insurance
By: Sarah Martin | 11/10/2008
Ordinary Business Life Insurance The ordinary business Metropolitan Life Insurance Company prospered anew soon after 1892. This new lease on life was due not only to the low cost of the contracts, but also, in large measure, to the wide variety of plans available and to the many liberal features Mr....

A Review of the WT Powers Income Opportunity
By: Brian Garvin | 11/10/2008
The WT Powers income opportunity is huge because you have access to so many tools and resources which ensure your success. You can have access to state-of-the-art websites, marketing tools, and business management tools. The websites that you can have access to include a professional website that can be personalized...

A Review of the World Wide Scam Network
By: Brian Garvin | 11/10/2008
If you are getting involved in the world of network marketing, one thing that you know you need is good information. Good information is surprisingly hard to come by on the internet and sometimes it seems that everyone's selling something and no one's talking about what really works. ...

A Review of the WorldVentures Income Opportunity
By: Brian Garvin | 11/10/2008
Traveling is something that people do everyday all the time. When making their travel arrangements it is now easier to make the arrangements online instead of traveling to a travel agency to make the arrangements. When you visit a travel agency, online or at a store, there are several different...

The One Self-sabotaging Thing You Do Every Day That Keeps You From Making 7-figures in Your Business
By: Fabienne Fredrickson | 11/10/2008
I've been hearing this one question a lot recently: "What did you actually DO to multiply your income so quickly? Can I do it too?" The answer is "Yes" and it's important to realize that it comes down to several things surrounding marketing. But, believe it or not, those are actually the easy part, because you can be shown exactly how to do this.

A Review of the World Lottery Syndicates Income Opportunity
By: Brian Garvin | 11/10/2008
Would you like to improve your chances of winning the lottery? Joining World Lottery Syndicates is the best way to do it and you will be glad you did. There is no better way to increase your chances of winning millions from the lottery then by joining World Lottery...

A Review of the Wholefood Farmacy Income Opportunity
By: Brian Garvin | 10/10/2008
In a world of uncertain meals, people are finding that they are less healthy due to fast consumption of foods and how the foods were processed and prepared. Because of the busy lifestyle the food chain has become less clean and healthy and more fast and simple. This type of...

A Review of the Wealthy Marketer Income Opportunity
By: Brian Garvin | 10/10/2008
Many of the people who get involved in network marketing are usually considered at least a little unorthodox by the people around them. They tend to be more prone to take risks and more interested in high payoffs, and this is exactly what Wealthy Marketer taps in to. ...

More from Curtis Bingham

Are You Too Making a $100m Mistake?
By: Curtis Bingham | 05/05/2008 | Business
Before you reject a possible new business area, make sure you take all the right actions in your decision process so you don't lose out. Be sure to spend more time up-front to find out who and how many customers will actually buy your new product or service and what specifically these prospective buyers are looking for.

Gaining Critical Insight to Grow Your Business
By: Curtis Bingham | 25/04/2008 | Business
Declining prices and margins. Decaying sales. Unprofitable customers. Lackluster market performance. Does your company suffer from these maladies? You will if you don't understand your customerswhat they need, want, and most especially, what they are willing to pay for. The only way to guarantee increased revenues and more profitable customer relationships is to center strategic decision-making on actionable customer insight.

All Customer Feedback is not Created Equal: a Guide for Dealing With Disgruntled Customers
By: Curtis Bingham | 19/01/2008 | Business
Customer feedback is criticalbut not all customers should be listened to! You have to pay the most attention to your best customers and you might just be better off ignoring your worst customers.

Article Categories






Give Feedback

Sign up for our email newsletter

Receive updates, enter your email below