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Category - Customer service

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1
How To Choose Marketing Strategies Suitable For Your Business
2
How to Win Customers’ Hearts and Minds!
3
The Customer Is Always Right?
4
You gotta love your customers!
5
Five Steps to Establish your Startup

How To Choose Marketing Strategies Suitable For Your Business

One of the questions I am always asked is “how do I choose the right marketing strategies for my business?”

You see, marketing has been historically steeped in mystique. It seems you have to go to a marketing “expert” and then they do some magic and the right marketing strategies for your business just pop up.

It doesn’t have to be like that. You need a process, for sure, but after that you just need to know your product, know your market, and know your business.

To start with, you need to think logically.

What makes people attracted to your business? What makes them want to buy your product?

Then, all you need to do is to match your strategies to their needs.

Watch this video to take you through the simple logic of it all.

 

 

See? It’s all quite logical if you follow a step by step process.

If you think your customers are attracted to you because you are a professional brand and they need a conservative approach, then find strategies that show off your knowledge, your experience and your dependability. In such a case, don’t sponsor a football team, go and speak at a business conference!

If they are into health and fitness then show them the results you produce and what fun people have when they train with you. Make sure your marketing activities are about health and fitness through fun and enjoyment, don’t wear a suit and give a boring speech!

If they seek coaching and are attracted to your leadership qualities, create marketing strategies that show off your personality and the effectiveness of your products.

And don’t forget to ask what part of the sales funnel are they in. If they are at the top and need to be made aware of your business and your products, tailor marketing strategies that broadcast your brand and your name; if they are in the part of the funnel that needs to pique their interest then your strategies need to define the difference between you and your competitors; and if they are ready to buy, your marketing strategies need to be about conversion.

Hey, if you want to know more about marketing strategies and actually go through a virtual workshop and create your own marketing plan, check out my online course and workshop called SMART Marketing. This course is specially designed to take you through a simple 7 step process to create your highly targeted killer marketing plan. Click here to learn more about this online marketing plan creation resource.

Now, finally, if you are reading this on one of my social media platforms, you really need to get over to my website teikoh.com to check out the loads of free tips, tools and resources to grow your business or click here to sign up and get free resources emailed to you every week.

 

How to Win Customers’ Hearts and Minds!

In marketing language, today’s customers are less “sticky”. In everyday tongues this means that today your customers are more choosy and hesitant!

They have access to a heck of a lot more information about your products and services, and those of your competitors. The modern economic situation means they may be more hesitant when they are buying more discretionary stuff – sure they still buy food, but they may have cut back on eating out.

The best businesses have beat this trend by having outstandingly loyal customers. The best businesses have won over their customers’ hearts and minds and have won the psychological trust war. How do you do this too?

Watch this video for the 5 psychological tactics to win your customers’ hearts and minds.

I’ll summarise them for you here:-

  1. Highlight long term value;
  2. Use groupthink;
  3. Focus on suitability not price;
  4. Create a sense of urgency; and
  5. Build the collective experience.

I’d love to hear how you build customer loyalty – click here to post a comment on the 3 top ways you build customer loyalty.

If you’re reading and watching this in one of my social media channels, guess what? You’re missing out on weekly new updates that can grow your business – why not sign up here to get these updates delivered directly to your inbox (and hey, I hate spam so I promise never to sell or give away your information).

I’ve also been getting comments from my social media channels that tell me there are a lot of followers who aren’t in business yet but are thinking of starting their own business – well I have good news for you. I’ve created a new online training course especially for you called “How To Start Your Own Business”. In 5 lessons, you will be taken through how to get yourself personally ready to start a business, how to prove your business concept, how to design every component of your business into a business model that fulfils your dream, how to create your business plan, and finally what to look out for in tax and business registrations, agreements, and how to choose good advisors.

Click here to purchase the course for only $97 AUD!

The Customer Is Always Right?

Are you old school?

If you are you were probably brought up on the old maxim “the customer is always right” meaning that whatever they said or complained about, you had to fix. If you were of a certain personality you’d spend your time being terrified about what the customer might say.

On the other hand you might be of the view that your own rights matter and if a customer was being unreasonable it is reasonable to tell them to go jump!

Well both views are probably wrong in today’s markets. After all, what’s being unreasonable is a subjective matter and if your subjective gate was set too low you might find just a few too many customers jumping!

As for the customer being always right – well there are limits aren’t there?

So what’s today’s middle way? There’s got to be some way to live up to your own values, not take too much stick, and also to turn the customer’s views around to your benefit. What I’d like to propose is that today’s maxim is “the customer should always feel to be right.”

Let’s try to be logical about this and put negative customer engagement into some typical categories.

The first is the reasonable complaint. This is a complaint about quality or standard that was not “as promised”. Don’t forget that “as promised” can also mean implied promise. You don’t have to specifically express a standard but if you said for example “our hotel rooms provide facilities for you to work in” and all you had was a coffee table I think it is implied that “facilities to work in” is not a coffee table and implies a desk of some sort.

The second is an objectively unreasonable complaint. Note I include the word “objectively” so it must pass some non-emotive test as to reasonableness. In the above example for instance I think it would be objectively unreasonable if the facilities provided were a small desk but the complaint was that the desk was not large enough to accommodate a full sized PC, printer, and room to write on.

The third is an emotional complaint. This is the most difficult one to handle because it is not only objectively unreasonable but is usually based on the customer’s emotional response to the product or service, like “I just don’t like the waiter’s attitude!”

Let’s now put the mantra of “the customer should always feel to be right” to each of these complaint categories.

What you have to do with the first, reasonable complaint, is obvious.

Fix it.

You have made known a quality standard, whether expressly or by implication. You simply have to live by that standard or change the promise.

So that the customer always feels to be right, check your product or service, and your delivery of product and service, against whatever expressed or implicit promises that you, your brand. and your marketing messages have made. Make any changes necessary, either in the product, service, delivery or promise. The reasonable complaint should just not happen.

But what if it does? Something has slipped through the cracks and a complaint occurs. Let’s take the example of the hotel room that promises working facilities but provides a coffee table.

In this case we take a leaf from the old customer service manual and we upgrade the customer outside the context of his complaint. Either upgrade his room to a higher specification room with a desk (and free wifi!) or provide free access and facilities to the hotel’s business centre. The objective is to get the customer leaving with a good war story (“I gave them what for about their coffee table, and to do them credit they upgraded me to the business suite”).

In the second category of the objectively unreasonable complaint, the task is to make the customer think that they’re complaint has been handled appropriately.

One of the ways to do this is to ask the simple question (that incidentally does not admit to any truth of the unreasonableness of the complaint) “I’m sorry, what can we do to fix it for you?”

This moves the customer away from complaint mode and thinking of ways to justify the complaint, to one where they are thinking about what can be done. If nothing else this removes emotion and the need to win from the complaint. Research has shown that when asked this question, most people actually provide a reasonable answer, and it may well be one which you can comply with without admitting any truth about the unreasonable nature of the complaint. It becomes win-win.

If the answer is unreasonable (“I want a large bench brought into my room”), the suggestion can be debated (“I’m sorry but we don’t have a large enough bench”) in such a way that it then has the ability to be modified (“Why don’t we bring in a printer trolley to set up next to the desk?”). Again the war story we want to hear from the customer is one that is complimentary (“I huffed and I puffed and they were flexible enough to set up a work station for me within the hour”).

When people are unreasonable however you may not be able to save every situation, but remember the objective is to make the customer think the complaint has been handled appropriately – and there are many ways to skin that cat.

As I have already said, the third category of emotional complaint is the hardest to handle.

The objective in this category is to take the heat out of any conversation without sacrificing your business values. If the customer walks away dissatisfied but not unhappy, it’s a good result. The first step is the same question”what can we do to fix this?”

Again it allows the customer to move away from an emotional response to one that can be discussed.

Let’s take the hapless waiter. If we ask the customer how we can fix this and the answer is unreasonable (“I want the waiter to approach me on his knees and beg”) we can express reasonableness (“We’ll do what we can to fix this but to humiliate a human being may not be the best way to do it now, how else can we fix this for you?”). Hopefully this leads to debate from one position (“I want him to apologise in public in the middle of the restaurant”) to another more reasonable one (“Do we want to disturb that nice couple celebrating their engagement? I believe you said his attitude was poor when he was serving you wine, how about I get our award-winning sommelier to personally look after you all evening?”).

If necessary to avoid confrontation, perhaps the waiter has “gone on a break and is unavailable” and the Manager personally apologises for any “misunderstanding” and offers a free cocktail.

An emotional complaint is often a lose-lose situation. The best you can do is take the heat out of any discussion and hope for the best. If the customer leaves never to return, so be it – they felt they were right!

And so we end as it began, the old school mantra revised into making the customer feel as right as possible without sacrificing your own values!

Customer service is only one part of being in business. Being in business is about juggling many balls in the air at the same time, and if you feel the need to grab one ball at a time and work on it systematically, I have the tools, models, systems and templates for you, come and join me!

You might also be interested in all the other articles about customer service, marketing, planning and organisational development in my blog at teikoh.com – see you there.

You gotta love your customers!

You know, you really have to love your customers.

Customers are the heart and soul of a business because they inspire you to serve better, they make your business dream a reality because they wish to be served by you, and if you treat them right, they are going to be alongside you for ever.

But you know what, you have to serve all your customers, but what about your best customers who regularly buy from you, or spend the most with you, or are loyal and have been with you for years?

Have you ever considered how much time, energy, and money it costs you to find a new customer? Try to work it out and I think you will find that on average it takes you 3 to 5 times more to find a new customer than to keep an existing one.

So how do you keep them happy and coming back for more? Read More

Five Steps to Establish your Startup

Have you just commenced a startup business? That is, a brand new business rather than one you inherited or bought; a business you started from scratch using your craft or from a new idea, or a business based on a product you invented?

To a large extent, all startups of any kind of business in any kind of industry are the same. They have one, or at most, 2 key individuals with the idea and the drive, full of enthusiasm and energy, probably not many staff if at all, and most of them family and friends. Typically, you would have shuffled together some (but not enough!) working capital, leased new premises and bought new equipment. The sense of newness is exciting and the startup begins breaking through walls.

In time, it finds its market and settles down. The passion and excitement may still be there but there is no longer a sense of newness, things start to feel normal and the days are spent doing pretty regular things.

If you have survived this phase, typically over the first year, celebrate!

But don’t get settled because most startups close their doors within 2 years, mainly because after the gains at startup, they fail to establish a sustainable business.

So, if you are in that position, what do you need to do to establish your startup? Read More

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