Marketing Strategy and Competitive Positioning pdf ebook
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hooley graham et al marketing strategy and competitive posit
CHAPTER 13 COMPETING THROUGH SUPERIOR SERVICE AND CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS
Best Service Is No Service (2008), that most customers do not want a relationship with a company, they just want things to work. For example, a recent multinational survey concludes that many consumers find the rising volume of marketing messages on the Internet and in the mobile-enabled world to be simply overwhelming. It seems that rather than attracting customers and building loy- alty and effective relationships, marketers are pushing them away with relentless and ill- conceived efforts to engage with them. It seems that what customers want most is ‘decision simplicity’ – ease in gathering trustworthy information about a product so they can con- fidently and efficiently weigh their purchase options and choose. It seems what customers want from marketers is actually simplicity, not more complexity and confusion (Spenner and Freeman, 2012). Similarly, it has been argued that companies should stop trying to ‘delight’ their custom- ers and just focus on solving their problems. While the rewards for over-the-top service are small (if they exist at all), the loss of customers because you do not solve their problems is likely to be large. Customers punish bad service but may not reward exceptionally good service. The link between service and loyalty is not straightforward. So, telling staff to exceed customers’ expectations is liable to produce confusion, wasted time and effort, and expensive give-aways (Dixon et al., 2010). Indeed, while customer loyalty has long been a central tenet of marketing, it is increas- ingly being called into question. The modern customer may increasingly be a ‘serial adul- terer’ rather than conventionally loyal (Hill, 2014). Perhaps customer loyalty does not really matter anymore? Loyal customers may not actually be cheaper to serve as convention- ally suggested. For example, one study that goes against the conventional marketing grain divides customers into: true friends (long term and highly profitable), butterflies (transient but profitable), strangers (with the lowest potential for profit) and barnacles (who create ‘additional drag’ and need to be removed or converted into better customers). Conventional loyalty programmes may just attract butterflies – less than a third of Tesco shoppers are ‘highly loyal’ (that is, spend 50 per cent of their grocery budget there), while for Sainsbury’s the figure is only 9 per cent, and for M&S Food less than 3 per cent. Grocery customers appear to be overwhelmingly disloyal, in spite of all attempts to gain their affections. Far from customers providing a devoted, monogamous relationship, Simonson and Rosen (2014) suggest the customer relationship has become an ‘open marriage’, where cus- tomers evaluate each new model of the camera, car or computer on merit rather than on marketing messages or prior preference. This opens the way for upstarts to challenge with better products – as Asus laptops did successfully when it took on Dell and Hewlett-Packard. Traditional measures of customer loyalty become meaningless, as do attempts to measure customer lifetime value, if consumers spend their lifetime flitting between brands. The key issues become not loyalty, but quality, service and consistency (Simonson and Rosen, 2014). It is important that executives should rigorously evaluate the controversies surrounding issues such as customer loyalty, satisfaction and service/relationship investments with a critical perspective. Many conventional assumptions may be misleading. Nonetheless, more conventionally, one of the most significant changes in contemporary marketing thinking and practice was the shift in focus from achieving single transactions to establishing longer-term relationships with customers (see, for example, Vargo and Lusch, 2004). While transactional marketing is concerned with making a single sale, relationship marketing is more concerned with establishing a rapport with the customer aimed at achiev- ing higher customer satisfaction, more repeat business, greater word-of-mouth referral, more opportunities for further business development and enhanced revenues and profit- ability for the supplier. Certainly, in the contemporary environment, many markets in developed countries can be regarded as mature, or at best growing only slowly, suggesting that there are fewer new customers for which to compete. Demographics emphasise this condition – an ageing population coupled with high youth unemployment in the West constrains market growth in many markets. Competition is increasingly intense, particularly in the new competi- tive landscapes that are the legacy of economic downturn, and the costs of attracting new 357 INTRODUCTION customers are high. It has been estimated that the costs of attracting new customers can be up to five times as much as the costs of adequately serving existing ones to ensure that they stay with you. Ideas such as lean, waste-free consumption and fair value for money resonate with the demands of the post-recession consumer. Appropriate service and relationship strategies are critical issues for executives to address in developing robust marketing strategies for the environment we all now face. Note that conventional logic suggests that customer retention is a key predictor of prof- itability. Support for this view dates back to Reichheld and Sasser (1990), who claimed to show the value to companies, operating in a variety of markets, of cutting customer defections (lost customers) by as little as 5 per cent: for an automobile service chain a 5 per cent cut in customer defections resulted in a 30 per cent increase in profits; for an industrial laundry a 47 per cent increase in profits; for an insurance brokerage a 51 per cent increase; and for a bank branch a staggering 84 per cent increase. Customers that have been with a company longer tended, on average, to spend more on each transaction, offer more opportunities for cross-selling (selling them other products and services) and give better recommendations to their friends and colleagues. In the bank, customer relationships of ten years or more accounted for 29 per cent of the account base but 71 per cent of the profits. Nonetheless, while the logic appears compelling, there are some suggestions that there are limits to its universal applicability. Some companies are placing more emphasis on making choices between customers based on profitability and future prospects rather than simply longevity of relationship. Maintaining some customer relationships may become expensive compared to the value of the customer in question to the company. Indeed, in all this, it is important that we distinguish between customer retention and customer loyalty, together with the relationship each of these has with customer satisfaction. There is a danger, in practice, that these concepts become confused. Customer retention is essentially a measure of repeat purchase behaviour, and there are many reasons why custom- ers may come back, even if we have failed to provide them with a high level of satisfaction – they may have no choice or they may not know any better. Fraser (2007), for example, warns of ‘conflicted consumers’ who buy your product and appear highly satisfied, but in fact are a stealth segment ready to defect as soon as a viable alternative appears. Customer loyalty, at least as most managers and customers would understand the term, goes beyond simple repeat behaviour and habit, and is more to do with how customers feel about us: do they trust us? Do they actively want to do business with us? Will they recommend us to others? To confuse retention and loyalty can be dangerous. Retention may be achieved through a ‘bribe’ – discounts for repeat purchase, additional exclusive value-added services and so on. Achieving high customer loyalty is likely to be far more difficult (perhaps in some cases impossible) and requires greater long-term investment. The practical difference is great. That said, marketers should always think carefully about whether they really need loy- alty, or whether repeat purchase is their goal. Certainly, many commentators and authors assume loyalty leads to more predictable and consistent repeat business, but this relation- ship is by no means proven in practice. For example, ‘customer loyalty’ card schemes offered by many retailers are more about customer retention than loyalty and satisfaction, and it is likely that their effects will last only until there is a better offer available. On the other hand, the John Lewis Partnership achieves high customer loyalty through satisfaction building above and beyond such ‘loyalty cards’. This is expressed in their Partnership Business Model: ‘We work to build brand trust and loyalty and provide customers with increasingly personalised, unique and exclusive products and services that are authentic and inspiring. And because we’re Partners, we’re invested to build that trust and loyalty.’ (www.johnlewispartnership.co.uk/annualreport Page 12). John Lewis has been rated as the most admired British company for honesty and trust, and wins many awards for customer satisfaction. Indeed, as airlines have discovered, for example, if all competitors offer the same thing, then customer ‘loyalty’ programmes such as frequent flyer awards become a cost of being in business rather than a differentiator. Many frequent fliers will have loyalty cards with several airlines or alliances. |
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