Selling the Invisible: a field Guide to Modern Marketing \(Biz Books to Go\) pdfdrive com
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Selling the Invisible A Field Guide to Modern Marketing (Biz Books to Go) ( PDFDrive )
Relationship Accounting
Huge Account Shifts Agencies,” reads the monthly headline in Advertising Age, and in the second paragraph you often find a revealing quote. The jilted agency president says he is “shocked.” “We were doing excellent work at Smith & Smith. The client told us she was happy. This is a total surprise.” The president’s surprise is genuine—and so is his problem. His problem is rooted in the nature of service relationships. Unless a service provider like Smith & Smith pays careful attention, it always operates at a deficit. Without knowing it, service providers always owe their clients. This debt dates from the first day, when Smith & Smith wins the account. “Winning” implies that Smith & Smith’s people feel they have earned the business. But as Theodore Levitt has convincingly argued, the client sees it differently. Smith & Smith has not earned the business; it merely has earned the right to earn the business. The client has assumed all the risk, and from that, feels it has done Smith & Smith a favor. The client has bought something that the agency has not yet delivered. When that something comes, it could be awful, too expensive, or both. So Smith & Smith already is operating at a deficit. It owes the client one. Then Smith & Smith begins delivering services: a storyboard for a TV spot, for example, along with a bill. The client is not sure what it has received or how good it is—just as accountant’s and lawyer’s clients do not know if they have received a good “product” for a fair price. The client only knows that it owes a lot for something of uncertain value that has not yet produced a return. The deficit now is two. Smith & Smith soon increases its deficit again. People make mistakes, and Jim at Smith & Smith makes one: He fails to call the client back as promptly as the receptionist promised. Whoever made the mistake—Jim, Jim’s receptionist, or the client, by mishearing—Smith & Smith’s deficit reaches three. Now and then, Smith & Smith’s president makes a gesture to the client. He sends Godiva chocolates at Christmas, for example. But the president cannot easily overcome the large deficit, because those inevitable mistakes happen faster than the president can mail chocolates. Most clients will overlook these mistakes if Smith and Smith has a surplus in its relationship account. But like most service providers, Smith & Smith has a deficit. So the mistakes go in the debit column. No one at Smith & Smith realizes how far they are in debt. Service providers always are the last to know, in part because few people like conflict. So clients often bury grievances rather than air them. Service providers think that the silence is golden; they think the lack of complaints means the relationship is going well. But it is growing worse. This relationship deficit exists in the parties’ other significant relationships: their marriages. In both relationships, debts grow without either side knowing. Then one day a frustrated spouse or a frustrated client announces he has had enough. The other spouse and the Smith & Smith president are shocked. Neither person understands the unique accounting in relationships. Download 0.75 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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