If there is one hard lesson in business today, it is that knowing the customer doesn't guarantee you will win the customer. Today, we are fortunate enough to have access to the most advanced technological resources for identifying the purchasing patterns and lifestyles of our consumers. Yet for many marketers, customer intimacy continues to be an elusive goal, according to Bryan Pearson, president and CEO of LoyaltyOne and author of the forthcoming book 'The Loyalty Leap'.
Part of the reason for this may be the common misconception that "repeat business equals customer intimacy". In reality, repeat business may be the result of a variety of functions: location, price, service or product. Intimacy, however, is when a customer chooses to stay with your brand even when an equal or potentially better alternative is available.
The solution lies in your management, strategies, employees and vision. But the tool that puts these elements to work is data. But the advanced data processes that provide such rich customer insights also contribute to privacy concerns, as well as competition from other companies that also are looking for new ways to use customer information to stand apart.
No doubt, achieving customer intimacy is a big subject but, by highlighting some of the key principles, it is possible to get a good overview of what's actually needed:
For example, a shopper may say she is loyal to one supermarket because she stops there every week. But in reality, she may only shop there because it is on her way home from work. What if a new superstore opened nearby? Chances are she would try it, and if she preferred the prices, selection and services, she would switch brands. So long, loyalty.
But let's say that shopper has established a relationship with her supermarket's pharmacist, who greets her by name. And she is impressed by the supermarket's mailers, which recognise her shopping habits and create added value through relevant product offers. When the bigger store opens nearby, she chooses to stay with her market. This is emotional loyalty, and to retain customer intimacy, you need to nurture this elevated level of brand commitment.
This takes knowing where the consumer is at a point in time, since location and immediate needs affect how marketing messages resonate. But it also means understanding life stages and the customer's personal interests and culture. You wouldn't send the same message to a vegetarian theatre buff as you would to a retired executive who just booked an African safari.
It takes the skilful collection, analysis and segmentation of customer data, always in the context of the consumers' lifestyles, and then incorporating these insights throughout the organisation. With such comprehensive understanding of the consumer, we can develop not only the best services or products, but also the most effective ways to communicate and present them.
Achieving customer intimacy is really just a matter of shifting one's perspective from building your business from the products out to building your business from the customer. After all, if you foster customer intimacy and emotional loyalty, your best customers will help to build your empires for you.
Pearson's book on customer intimacy, entitled 'The Loyalty Leap: Turning customer information into customer intimacy', will be published on 10th May 2012 (Penguin Portfolio, US$26.00), and can be pre-ordered online at . The book draws on Pearson's 20+ years of first-hand experience in building emotional loyalty in an information age, with insightful stories from the trenches of the data-gathering and marketing communications fields. Among the evolving trends and concepts covered:
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