Title: Competitive Strategies: Attracting, Retaining, and Growing Customers
1 Chapter 18
- Competitive Strategies Attracting, Retaining,
and Growing Customers
2Discussion Connections
- More than three decades ago, Peter Drucker
observed that a companys first task is to
create customers. - How to the following companies create customers
- Intel,
- Delta Airlines,
- Your university or college,
- American Online
3What is Relationship Marketing?
Relationship Marketing is the Process of
Creating, Maintaining, and Enhancing Strong,
Value-Laden Relationships With Customers and
Other Stakeholders.
4Customer Relationship Marketing
- Why the new emphasis on retaining and growing
customers? - Changing demographics, more sophisticated
competitors, and overcapacity in many industries
means fewer customers. - Costs five times as much to attract a new
customer as to keep a current one satisfied. - Losing a customer means losing the entire stream
of purchases over a lifetime of patronage - the
customer lifetime value.
5The Service Profit Chain
Employee Satisfaction Loyalty
Internal Quality
External Quality
Customer Value Satisfaction
Growth Profitability
- Loyalty
- Repeat Purchase
- Relationship
- Positive WOM
Customer Retention
Adapted From Heskett, J. L, Sasser, W. E. and
Schlesinger, L. A. (1997). The Service Profit
Chain. The Free Press New York.
6Customer Delivered Value (Fig. 18.1)
7Customer Satisfaction
Expectations are Based on Customers Past Buying
Experiences, the Opinions of Friends, Marketer
and Competitor Information and Promises.
8Customer Satisfaction
- Todays most successful companies are raising
expectations and delivering performance to
match. - These companies embrace total customer
satisfaction. - Firm that seeks total customer satisfaction
doesnt have to attempt maximum customer
satisfaction. - Purpose of marketing is to generate customer
value profitably offer customer satisfaction
without sacrificing profits.
9Loyalty - Customer SatisfactionPercent of
Customers That Intend to ReturnBy rating on
customer satisfaction scale 1-55 very
satisfied , 4 satisfied
10Customer Loyalty and Retention
- Highly satisfied (delighted) customers produce
benefits - They are less price sensitive,
- They remain customers longer,
- They talk favorably about the company and
products to others. - Tremendous difference between the loyalty of
satisfied customers and completely satisfied
customers. - Delighted customers have emotional and rational
preferences for products, and this creates high
customer loyalty.
11Building Lasting Customer Relationships
Financial Benefits i.e. Frequency Marketing
Programs
Social Benefits i.e. Learning Individual
Customers Needs Wants
Marketing Tools to Build Stronger Bonds With
Consumers
Structural Ties i.e. Supply Customers With
Special Equipment
12Customer-Product Profitability Analysis (Fig.
18.3)
13Customer Value-Delivery Network
Customer
Retailer
Producer
Vendor
Order
Raw Material Supplier
Delivery
14Total Quality Marketing
- Japan was the first country to award a national
quality prize, the Deming prize. - Mid-1980s, the U.S. established the Malcolm
Baldridge National Quality Award. - Europe has developed the ISO 9000 which is an
exacting set of quality standards. - Total quality has become a truly global concern.
15Total Quality Marketing
- Quality is the totality of features and
characteristics of a product or service that bear
on its ability to satisfy stated or implied
needs. - Marketers play a major role in helping their
companies define deliver high quality products
and services to target customers - Must correctly identify the customers needs and
requirements and communicate this to product
designers, - Marketing must deliver each marketing activity to
high quality standards.
16Review of Concept Connections
- Discuss customer value and satisfaction and how
companies attract, retain, and grow profitable
customers. - Explain the roles of the company value chain,
value-delivery network, and total quality in
delivery of customer value and satisfaction. - Explain the relationship between value,
satisfaction, and loyalty.