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Keeping customers online

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The measure of the future financial value of the customer's purchases with ... Reicheld, F. and P. Schefter (2000) E-Loyalty: Your secret weapon on the web. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Keeping customers online


1
Keeping customers online
  • Gary Akehurst

2
Keeping customers online
  • The concept of customer lifetime value
  • The measure of the future financial value of the
    customers purchases with the organisation. It is
    a measure of the future profit flows from the
    customer to the firm, adjusted for the customers
    future probability of purchasing from the firm,
    and appropriately discounted to the present. It
    takes account of
  • How much the customer spends on each purchase
    with the firm (and profit thus generated)
  • How often the customer purchases from the firm
  • How likely the customer is to remain a customer
    of the firm in the future
  • How much it costs to serve the customer
  • The firms discount rate (for calculating the net
    present value of future purchases)

3
Keeping customers online
  • Relationship Marketing
  • a set of marketing tactics (where any interaction
    between buyers and sellers, regardless of
    commitment, is described as a relationship)
  • and a fundamental marketing philosophy with a
    customer lifetime focus
  • often used as a tactical sales promotion tool

4
Keeping customers online
  • a strategic process to tie-in customers through
    mutually rewarding co-operation, mutual
    dependence and shared risk
  • a marketing philosophy, with customer
    relationship cycles more important than product
    life cycles
  • an integration of customer orientation,
    competitor orientation and inter-functional
    co-ordination

5
Keeping customers online
  • OMalley and Tynan (2001)
  • Consumers may see their interactions with an
    online company as merely a transaction with no
    long-term ties
  • The concept of partnership or relationship very
    suited to B2B marketing
  • Consumers do not consider this false intimacy an
    interpersonal relationship. It is not driven
    primarily by trust, commitment, communication and
    shared values, but by convenience and
    self-interest

6
Keeping customers online
  • Transactions Marketing
  • focus on a single sale
  • emphasis on product features
  • short-term orientation
  • little emphasis on customer service
  • limited customer commitment
  • low or moderate customer contact
  • quality is mainly a production concern
  • sales to anonymous buyers
  • the salesperson may be the main interface between
    buyer and seller

7
Keeping customers online
  • Relationship Marketing
  • focus on customer retention
  • long-term orientation
  • emphasis on product benefits
  • high customer service emphasis
  • high customer commitment
  • high customer contact
  • quality is the concern of all
  • tracking of identifiable buyers
  • multiple levels of relationships between buyer
    and seller

8
Keeping customers online
The car sector
BETTER PRODUCT DESIGN differentiation by product
features, e.g. styling, reliability, safety,
economy
BETTER SERVICE FEATURES differentiation by better
finance schemes, warranties and after-sales
service
Internet
BETTER RELATIONSHIPS differentiation by better
ongoing programmes to finance, maintain and
replace a car
Source After Palmer, A. (2001) Principles of
services marketing, London McGraw-Hill, p.119
9
Keeping customers online
  • Stages in Buyer and Seller Relationship
    Development
  • awareness
  • exploration
  • expansion
  • commitment
  • dissolution

Time
10
Keeping customers online
Advocate Supporter Client Customer Prospec
t
Emphasis on long-term loyalty (keeping
customers) emphasis on one-off transaction
s
Source Christopher, M. Payne, A. Ballantyne,
M. (1991). Relationship marketing. Oxford
Butterworth Heinemann
11
Keeping customers online
  • Purposes in Relationship Marketing
  • 1 customer retention
  • suggested strategies - core service strategy,
    customisation, augmentation, relationship
    pricing, internal marketing
  • 2 locking in customers
  • structural and social bonds
  • switching costs
  • loyalty schemes
  • 3 database marketing
  • tracking and understanding customers

12
Keeping customers online
  • Developing online loyalty
  • Quality customer support
  • On-time delivery
  • Compelling presentation via the website
  • Convenient and reasonably priced handling and
    shipping
  • Clear trustworthy privacy and security policies

Source after Reicheld and Schefter (2000)
13
Keeping customers online
  • Delight the customer with extra service and added
    value
  • Personalisation and mass customisation
    (particularly via website and opt-in email)
  • Creation of community around the brand
  • Lock-in the customer (retain customers onsite
    when they arrive and encourage revenue-generating
    activities)
  • Incentives (special offers, loyalty schemes,
    sales promotions persuade them to return to the
    site)

Source after Reicheld and Schefter (2000)
14
Keeping customers online
Three levels of value
Unanticipated value which exceeds all expectations
Desired value
Expected value
Expected value expected product
benefits Desired value ideal level customer
would like to receive Unanticipated value
exceeding customer expectations, e.g unexpected
service
15
Keeping customers online
Perceived Value of Internet transactions the
sum of benefits less costs and sacrifice
Perceived benefits
Ownership Costs -
Sacrifice (including price and effort) -
High perceived value competitive advantage
16
Keeping customers online
  • costs incurred by a customer (when purchasing a
    product online or offline) are often more than
    the basic price paid
  • costs of searching and evaluating
  • the opportunity value (benefit less cost) of
    other purchases not undertaken as a result of a
    product purchase
  • total lifetime costs of ownership (especially
    capital equipment)
  • as the trading relationship develops over time it
    is important for the customer to feel there is an
    increase in perceived value received resulting
    from continuing the links with the online or
    offline supplier

17
Keeping customers online
Customer Acquisition
Customer Retention
Customer Extension
Added value Added value Added value
  • Forming relationships with new customers
  • Promotions
  • incentives
  • Services
  • Customer service
  • Profiles
  • Direct email
  • Actions to retain existing customers
  • Personalisation
  • Loyalty schemes
  • Promotions
  • Community
  • Extranets
  • Persuading customers to increase involvement
    particularly for revenue generating activities
  • Direct email
  • Learning
  • On-site promotions

Progressive segmentation and targeting
Source after Chaffey (2002 331)
18
Keeping customers online
The IDIC approach to relationship building
(identify, differentiate, interact and
customise)
Identify
Interact
Communicate
Differentiate
Source Peppers and Rogers 1998 and 1999 as cited
in Chaffey et al 2003240)
19
Keeping customers online
  • Customer identification (incentivise visitors to
    profile them and on repeat visits recognise them
    using cookies or customer logons constant
    updating of the profiles)
  • Customer differentiation (profile building to
    segment customers and then differentiate
    offerings, content and services for each
    customer identifying best customers, most
    profitable, repeat customers, large order
    customers)
  • Customer interaction (provided on site via for
    example FAQs, customised products, email, phone
    and post)
  • Customer customisation

20
Keeping customers online
  • Attract new customers to the website using site
    promotion
  • Banner advertising (inform, persuade, remind)
  • Pop-up adverts
  • Search engines and other portals
  • Online magazine sites
  • Mailshots
  • Incentivise visitors to action
  • Lead generation offers in return for customer
    details
  • Sales generation offers to encourage trial
    product use

21
Keeping customers online
  • Offers designed to encourage retention
  • Discounted products (enables collection of
    customer details)
  • Download free software (again collects customer
    details)
  • Free information (e-newsletter, reports, report
    summaries)
  • Free trials of private subscription services

22
Keeping customers online
  • Capturing customer information to maintain the
    relationship
  • Need to collect customer contact information
  • Develop customer profiling (specific interests
    and characteristics)
  • Maintain the relationship by online and offline
    communications
  • Send regular emails
  • Specific information on website (personalisation)
  • Delivery of news and product information
  • Personal reminders
  • Loyalty schemes (loyalty points)
  • Customer care and support
  • Online competitions
  • Regular mailshots
  • Podcasts

23
Keeping customers online
  • Product positioning by emphasising offering
    claims
  • the product or service features
  • the benefits that it offers
  • the relevance for specific usage occasions
  • the suitability for particular users or uses
  • positive associations with complementary products
  • the comparison with competing products
  • Source D. Adcock (2000) Marketing Strategies for
    Competitive Advantage, Chichester John Wiley, p
    129

24
Keeping customers online
  • differentiation derives usually from the
    augmented elements of the total product
  • by itself differentiation does not automatically
    lead to competitive advantage
  • competitive advantage is achieved only if the
    differentiation features are valued by customers
  • valued features are energizers (i.e. stimulates
    customers to purchase)
  • any other discriminators just separate one
    offering from competing offerings without
    presenting customers with any perceived valued
    benefits

25
Keeping customers online
  • Product positioning may be broken into
  • controllable variables (part of the operational
    marketing mix)
  • attributes (tangible and intangible)
  • supplier claims (interpreted by customers)
  • attributes experienced by customers (not
    controllable)
  • benefits (a key element in a customers
    perception of a position)
  • the position of an offering develops expectations
    that need to be satisfied when purchase occurs
  • after purchase, a customer experiencing
    ownership, can judge satisfaction

26
Keeping customers online
Positioning issues
Enhance value
Redefine position while remaining consistent to
earlier claims
Create image
Introduction Growth Maturity TIME
Source Adcock (2000 131)
27
Keeping customers online
  • regular website and product modifications should
    ensure continued relevance to changing needs of
    customers
  • but what about associated modifications necessary
    in the product position within the minds of
    customers?
  • major changes in product features lead inevitably
    to changes in the promises made about the product
  • any messages about current position must be the
    most appropriate in relation to the demands of
    the existing market
  • consistency is necessary to avoid confusion about
    product position
  • progressive claims over time must be consistent

28
Keeping customers online
  • customer expectations develop from offering
    promises
  • pre-purchase a customer judges competitive
    offerings on the basis of the different
    expectations and costs of each (the value
    equation)
  • if prior expectations fall below what is actually
    offered, then that supplier will be at a
    competitive disadvantage in subsequent customer
    decision making
  • if expectations are too high (compared to actual
    experience) there is a risk of customer
    dissatisfaction

29
Keeping customers online
  • satisfaction derived from the use of a product
    can increase the perceived value during the
    post-transaction period
  • opportunities to continue contact with the
    customer after the web sale are important in
    building relationships and trying to achieve
    repeat purchases
  • after sales contracts (guarantees, maintenance,
    etc)
  • installation service
  • communication asking whether everything working
    as expected
  • evaluation of after sales service is difficult
    but not impossible

30
Keeping customers online
  • Customer Satisfaction
  • related to customer expectations and perceptions
    of product and service quality
  • expectations based on word of mouth (perceived
    reputation), marketing communications (promises
    made), experience( with product category and
    specific brand)
  • expectations establish minimum expected quality

31
Keeping customers online
  • Managing customer expectations
  • be realistic
  • be reliable and ensure reliability
  • ensure promises are delivered
  • continue online and offline communications with
    customers to assure satisfaction or explain in
    advance any difficulties

32
Keeping customers online
  • Monitoring customer satisfaction
  • identify factors important to customers
  • measure expectations and importance of these
  • measure performance and service delivery
  • analyse gaps between expectations and performance

33
Keeping customers online
Performance LOW HIGH
Importance HIGH LOW
improve now
maintain
monitor
rationalise
possibly map against key competitors different
perceptions by different segments?
34
Keeping customers online
  • Satisfaction Thresholds
  • are dynamic
  • new information (e.g. health scares)
  • new technological breakthroughs
  • legislation (new standards)
  • competitors enhanced products or services
  • new market entrants (with superior products and
    services)
  • changing distribution systems (delivery speed?)
  • consumers rising affluence and expectations

35
Keeping customers online
Quality Gap Analysis
36
Keeping customers online
  • Adcock, A. (2000) Marketing strategies for
    competitive advantage. Chichester John Wiley
  • Chaffey, D., Mayer, R., Johnston, K.
    Ellis-Chadwick, F. (2006). Internet marketing.
    Strategy, implication and practice, (3rd ed).
    London Pearson Education. (2nd ed 2003) Chapter
    6 Relationship marketing using the internet
  • Chaffey, D. (2004) E-Business and e-commerce
    management. Harlow Financial Times Prentice Hall
  • Christopher, M., Payne A. and M. Ballantyne
    (1991) Relationship marketing. Oxford
    Butterworth Heinemann
  • OMalley, L. and C. Tynan (2001) Reframing
    relationship marketing for consumer markets.
    Interactive Marketing, 2(3), pp 240-246.
  • Palmer, A. (2001) Principles of services
    marketing. London McGraw-Hill
  • Reicheld, F. and P. Schefter (2000) E-Loyalty
    Your secret weapon on the web. Harvard Business
    Review, July-August, pp 105-13.
  • Rust, R.T., Lemon, K.N. and D. Narayandas (2005)
    Customer equity management, Upper Saddle River,
    NJ Pearson Prentice Hall
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