Discussion2

 

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TWO topics are required for Week 2.  Choose Topic 1 OR 2 AND Topic 3 OR 4.  Include at least two (2) references from learning material or outside sources. Reply to least two (2) classmate posts. 

Topic 1: Customer satisfaction, loyalty & empowerment

Visit and choose ONE of these corporate websites to assess:

  • Coca-Cola (https://us.coca-cola.com/).
  • Red Bull (https://www.redbull.com/us-en/)
  • Starbucks (https://www.starbucks.com/)

Note: You will have to go beyond the main landing page to obtain the data you need for your response.

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Respond to the following questions for the company website you have chosen: 

  • What does this company do to build customer loyalty? To build community? 
  • Are customers are empowered to do anything here? Are there opportunities for customer feedback?  Anything else?
  • Does the company partner with other organizations to leverage the loyalty those other companies enjoy with their customers? If so, what organizations?  What partnering activities is the company doing with those organizations? 
  • Are you a loyal customer of this company or might be consider becoming one? Why or why not? 

 

TOPIC 4: CUSTOMER LIFETIME VALUE – Personal Application

The goal of any formal customer relationship management program is to attract and retain profitable customers with high customer lifetime value. 

Identify a company for which you might be considered a most valuable customer, where you are in Level 1 of their customers (See Figure 2.5, Levels of Customers Based on Profitability).

Visit

https://neilpatel.com/blog/how-to-calculate-lifetime-value/

. This site will give you an example of lifetime value using Starbucks as an example. Note all the variables that go into lifetime value calculations.

  • Record your lifetime value calculation and discuss how the company tries to retain and grow your business as a most valuable customer.
  •  How to calculate lifetime value [Infographic]. (n.d.). https://neilpatel.com/blog/how-to-calculate-lifetime-value/

    PLEASE ENSURE YOU REVIEW ALL ATTACHED RESOURCES BELOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Week 2 Overview

    Principles of Marketing

    MRKT 310

    Overview for Week 2.

    Customer Satisfaction, Loyalty,
    Empowerment, and Management
    Marketing is all about the customer!
    2.1 Customers and customer communities
    2.2 Loyalty management
    2.3 Customer satisfaction
    2.4 Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
    2.5 Ethics, laws, and customer empowerment

    The customer is so very important to marketing we are putting our discussion of customers right up front in the course. Since we are all customers, you should find this material very relevant to some of your own experiences with companies and their products.
    We slow down a little bit for Week 2 and we have only five sections to cover as outlined above.

    2.1 Customer and customer communities
    Are consumers and customers the same thing?
    Consumers are anyone who has resources to buy anything
    Customer is a person who has a need for the product or service offering, may not yet recognize the need (potential customers) or has recognized the need and actively pursuing the purchase decision process (current customers).

    We may tend to use these two terms interchangeably during this course. The above points highlight the differences between them. Clearly, consumers is a much larger group than customers; but customers aren’t just those who buy a product, also everyone who might have a need for a product. Marketers need to consider them as well when developing marketing strategy.

    Customer’s role in marketing
    Spread word of mouth messages (positive and negative)
    Influence other consumer’s buying decisions
    Provide feedback to company (positive and negative) suggesting product changes
    Tell companies what they need
    Complain

    Modern marketing thought acknowledges the role of the customer in the marketing process. You probably notice how influential you are in your friends or family’s purchase decisions. You have probably filled out more than one customer satisfaction survey. You have probably checked out customer reviews on social media or the company’s website before purchasing a product. These are all ways in which customers are a critical component in the marketing of a product or service.

    How to customers insert themselves in the marketing process?
    Talking
    Influencer panels
    Consumer communities
    Social media

    We can figure out how we insert ourselves via talking and social media as briefly mentioned in the previous slide, the influencer panels and consumer communities may not be as well known to us. Some of us may have had the experience of being asked to be part of an influencer panel where you periodically fill out a survey or perhaps even participate in a group discussion (focus group). Consumer communities are a by-product of social media, and are formal or informal sites for consumers to speak with one another about our experiences. Smart companies will be looking for consumer communities and participate in them to ensure the conversation provides accurate information about a product, or use the conversation as input for changing how the product is marketed.

    2.2 Loyalty Management
    Not all customer loyalty is created equal
    Attitudinal loyalty (good)
    Behavioral loyalty (best)
    Loyalty programs — rewards for frequent purchases and consumption
    A loyalty program may be part of a larger Customer Relationship Management (CRM) program

    It’s true, not all customers are created equal. We may like a product (good attitude), but the best customers are those who buy the product (behavior). Companies try hard to identify and communicate with those customers exhibiting behavior loyalty.
    One of the most common ways this is accomplished is by a customer loyalty program. It should extend into a much broader program of Customer Relationship Management in which all touch points in a customer interaction are identified and managed and all data about customers is captured and analyzed.

    Criteria for successful loyalty programs
    Good performance by company
    Responsiveness by a company
    Shared identity among participants
    Clear benefits
    Community development

    As you may have experienced, some customer loyalty programs don’t provide much in the way of benefits that you find meaningful. Here are the five criteria that comprise a good loyalty program from the customer’s point of view.

    2.3 Customer satisfaction
    A satisfied customer is one whose expectations are met
    A delighted customer is one whose expectations are exceeded
    Customer satisfaction strategies
    Establish and communicate the ‘right’ expectations
    Empower front line employees
    Offer reassuring warranties and guarantees
    Customer satisfaction surveys measure customer satisfaction
    Dealing with complaining customers

    While companies want satisfied customers, they covet delighted customers. At the heart of customer satisfaction is the relationship between what a customer expects and what the company delivers. If there is a difference, the result can be customer delight on the positive side; or customer dissatisfaction at the other end of the spectrum. You may have noticed a marked increase in the number of companies that have instituted customer satisfaction surveys, especially service businesses.
    Companies should cherish complaining customers as it is one way customers give useful feedback. This feedback is part of the data used to modify a product’s marketing mix.
    Sometimes the complaints are not really valid. Even this is important for the marketer because if the customer takes the time to complain, the company can take the opportunity to change the attitude to a more positive relationship with the company BEFORE the complaining customer can share his feelings with other customers.

    2.4 Customer Relationship Management
    Coordinated and integrated strategies for finding, retaining, and expanding profitable customers
    More than just CRM software, although that is critical for capture and reporting of management information
    Most valuable customers are the percent of customers who comprise the largest share of the companies profits

    As mentioned earlier, a fully coordinated and integrated Customer Relationship Management program helps find, retain and expand the customer base of like minded customers. Constantly finding and filling the needs of your Most Valuable Customers can be much more cost effective than constantly replacing current customers with new customers.

    2.5 Ethics, laws, and customer empowerment
    Not all information is good information — caveat emptor — let the consumer beware
    Sugging — selling under the guise of research
    Phishing — masquerading as a legitimate company to get personal information.
    Customer’s right to privacy of their data
    Warranties and promises
    expressed
    implied
    Copyrights to online material

    While we are talking about the customer’s role in marketing, we take a little time to cover the topics of ethics, laws and customer empowerment. Social media and internet sites has drastically increase the amount of information available to consumers, yet not all information is good and consumers need to filter the information appropriately.
    In addition, the growth of the internet has not allowed laws to keep up with it. Here we discuss some of the unethical practices that have arisen as a result. Data privacy will continue to be a constant battle for companies as hackers invent new and more creative ways to get our information. The implications of not protecting our data makes the news periodically with the Target breach one of the more serious in recent years.
    Companies can create warranties and promises and deliver on those, both expressed and implied. That is within their control unlike data privacy.
    Lastly, the internet has also created massive illegal use of information found online. For example, you will notice this course does not embed many of the learning activities mainly because those materials are copyrighted and we are limited to providing the URL.

    Participation in Week 2 Discussion Forum
    Submitting Writing Assignment 2
    Completing Week 2 Quiz
    All due Tuesday at 11:59 pm
    Week 2
    Assessments

    The assessments for Week 2, as well as Weeks 3-8, will always be the same so that you can fall into a cadence with the course materials and adequately plan your time for completing the assessments.

    Questions or concerns?
    Be sure to take advantage of the General Discussion topic in the Week 2 Discussion Forum to ask any questions, get clarifications, or otherwise seek the advice and assistance of your faculty member.

    As always, your faculty stand ready to help you with your study of marketing. Be sure to take advantage of their expertise by posting your questions or concerns in the Discussion Forum.

    Week2, “

  • Customer Satisfaction, Loyalty, Empowerment, and Management
  • ” was derived from Principles of

    Marketing, which was adapted by the Saylor Foundation under a Creative Commons Attribution-

    NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license without attribution as requested by the work’s original
    creator or licensee. © 2015, The Saylor Foundation.

    1

  • Week 2
  • Customer Satisfaction, Loyalty,

    Empowerment, and Management

    The marketing concept, described in Week 1, “What Is Marketing?” reminds us that the customer

    should be at the center of a firm’s activities and that the company that thrives is the one that

    serves customers’ needs better than the competition. Yet, often it is the customer who is most

    adept at serving the customer’s needs. Consumers being able to take control of the marketing

    activities aimed at them is what customer empowerment is about.

    Today, technology is making it more possible for the customer to do exactly that. In a survey, the

    chief marketing officers of 250 top companies were asked about the key factors that influence the

    performance of their companies. The officers’ response? A company’s ability to interact and

    respond to its customers as well as empower them (Ramani & Kumar, 2008).

    Research shows that customer empowerment is a function of three things: creating feedback

    channels that are easy and widely available, asking for and encouraging feedback about products,

    and enabling customers to participate in the design of products.

    You might think that a company as large as JCPenney would be unable to give customers the

    ability to create their own types of shopping experiences—that standardizing the products and

    services they receive would be necessary. But JCPenney is an excellent example of how a firm can

    use the Internet and other technology to engage its customers and provide them with more

    control over the products and marketing communications they receive.

    This week, we focus on those ubiquitous feedback channels, as well as strategies to solicit and

    encourage feedback. In Week 4, “Market Segmenting, Targeting, and Positioning,” we will discuss

    how customers can participate in the design of products, or offerings. This week, we will also

    tackle customer relationship management (CRM), as well as some of the ethical and legal issues

    affecting

    customers.

    http://www.saylor.org/site/textbooks/Principles%20of%20Marketing

    http://www.saylor.org/site/textbooks/Principles%20of%20Marketing

    http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/

    http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/

    2

    2.1 Customers and Customer Communities

    L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S

    1. Define customer.
    2. Understand strategies involving online and personal forms of influencer marketing.
    3. Relate influencer marketing to other forms of social communities and marketing strategies.

    The American Marketing Association defines customers as “the actual or prospective purchaser of

    products or services” (AMA, 2015). This definition implies that a customer does not necessarily

    have to have conducted an exchange with the company, but could be a person in a potential pool

    of customers who may have a need or an interest in the product but have not yet acknowledged

    that need and taken steps to fill it. This is a little more specific that the term consumer, which is

    anyone who has the resources to buy anything. The terms are not interchangeable even though

    they appear similar.

    When do you go from consumer to customer? As soon as you acknowledge you have a need and

    you want to fill that need, and you have the resources to fill the need. You may need a vacation,

    but it doesn’t turn into a want until you decide to take a vacation and actively pursue steps to

    make it happen. This begins the buying process, which we will discuss in greater detail in Week 3.

    Part of that process is seeking information about the product or service you are considering.

    If you decide you want a curved high definition television, where do you go to learn about which is

    best? Like many buyers, you probably turn to the Internet and visit sites such as Epinions.com or

    ConsumerSearch.com. You may visit the manufacturer’s website. Do you want to learn about the

    products of a specific retailer? Do you check out the stores or remember that you had a good

    experience with that store the last time you bought a television? Do you ask family and friends for

    their opinions and share their experiences?

    The point is that consumers talk. They talk to each other face to face, and they post their thoughts

    and opinions online. Word of mouth, or the passing of information and opinions verbally, has a

    powerful influence on purchasing decisions. You rely on word of mouth prior to registering for

    classes. You want to know from other students which professors are best and how hard their

    classes are. If you have no one to ask, you can look at online sites such as ratemyprofessors.com.

    Buzz refers to the amount of word of mouth going on in a market. However, in addition to

    traditional word of mouth, buzz includes blogs, articles, and other information about an offering.

    3

    Companies try to create buzz about their products by sending press releases, holding events,

    offering free samples, writing blogs, or releasing podcasts. Some marketing managers spend time

    “trolling” the web looking for postings about their products. If a negative posting appears to be a

    legitimate complaint, then the marketing manager can take action to fix the customer’s problem,

    and future complaints can be avoided. The company can also assign someone to respond to

    negative posts so that the opinions online become more balanced. Some companies,

    unfortunately, practice the unethical strategy of planting their own favorable reviews of their

    products to look like the opinions of real customers.

    The point is that companies can adopt strategies to ethically participate in the customer

    conversations to truly understand their customers, how their value proposition is being received,

    what they can change, or what else they can offer to their customers. Some of these strategies are

    discussed next.

    Influencer Panels
    A marketing strategy being used increasingly often is influencer marketing, or targeting

    people known to influence others so that they will use their influence in the marketer’s favor.

    These influencers are the lead users we will discuss in Week 5 on designing offerings. If you spend

    some time on Procter & Gamble’s (P&G) Crest toothpaste website, you might be given a chance to

    complete a survey. (Someone who is very interested in dental care is more likely to take the

    survey.)

    The survey asks if you talk about dental care products, if you research such products, and if you

    influence others. These questions and questions like them are used to identify influencers. P&G

    then provides influencers with product samples and opportunities to participate in market

    research. The idea is that new offerings should be cocreated with influencers because they are

    more likely to be both lead users, early adopters of new offerings, and influence other people’s

    decisions to buy them.

    That was the idea behind JCPenney’s Ambrielle lingerie community. JCPenney executive Laura

    Carros and other JCPenney employees on the Ambrielle marketing team devised a strategy of

    identifying women who would be willing to join a special community. A community, in the

    marketing sense, is a social group that centers its attention on a particular brand or product

    category. Another term for a community is a social network. The social network for Ambrielle

    lingerie is illustrated in Figure 2.1, “A Social Network.”

    4

    Figure 2.1 A Social Network

    Each circle represents a person in the social network, and the arrows represent the ties between

    them. You can see that some are JCPenney customers as represented by the arrows between the

    company (the star) and the individuals. Others are not, but are in contact with JCPenney

    customers.

    Some communities are organized by companies. For example, the Harley Owners Group (HOG), a

    club for Harley motorcycle owners, was organized by Harley-Davidson. But many communities

    spring up naturally, without any help from a marketer. A local arts community is an example. In

    the case of Ambrielle, JCPenney created and manages the group; in the case of HOG, Harley-

    Davidson manages the group in conjunction with its members.

    Another difference between the Ambrielle community and HOG is that the Ambrielle community

    is only composed of influencers. By contrast, anyone who owns a Harley can be a member of

    HOG. Ambrielle influencers provide feedback about products to JCPenney and take an active role

    5

    in designing the company’s offerings. In other words, the influencers participate regularly in

    marketing research activities. Another term for this type of community is an influencer panel.

    Organizing and Managing Influencer Panels

    Table 2.1, “Characteristics Used to Qualify the Members of Influencer Panels,” lists the

    characteristics used to qualify members of an influencer panel. Note that there are multiple types

    of influencers represented in the Ambrielle community. Because JCPenney has also gathered

    lifestyle, demographic, and psychographic information about them, the firm has a fairly complete

    picture of each member. This information is invaluable because JCPenney can use the knowledge

    to segment the group more precisely. Thus, when the company test-markets communications or

    offerings with the group, it can gain a better understanding of how well those efforts will work

    with different types of consumers.

    Table 2.1 Characteristics Used to Qualify the Members of Influencer Panels

    Characteristic Definition

    Active
    Influencer

    Willing to tell others, but more important, others listen and act on the
    influencer’s opinion.

    Interested Has a greater intrinsic interest in the product category than the average user.

    Heavy User
    Actually uses or consumes the offering regularly, preferably more than the
    average user.

    Loyal

    Sticks to one brand when it works. Note, however, that this category could
    include someone who isn’t loyal because the right offering meeting his or her
    needs hasn’t yet been created.

    Lead User

    Willing to try new products and offer feedback. In some instances, it’s possible
    to modify an offering to suit an individual consumer; when it is, you want lead
    users to suggest the modifications so you can see how and why they do so.

    An influencer panel does not necessarily become a community. If the communication that occurs

    is only between the marketer and the individual members of the panel, no community forms. The

    members must communicate with one another for a community to exist.

    As a marketing professional, how do you find influencers? They have to be actively recruited. As

    you learned earlier, P&G surveys people looking at its websites. If you answer the survey

    questions in a way that shows you meet the criteria listed in Table 2.1, “Characteristics Used to

    Qualify the Members of Influencer Panels,” you might be asked to join a P&G panel. Another

    method is to ask a customer whose complaint you have just resolved to take a survey. After all,

    someone who has taken the time to complain might also be motivated to participate on a panel.

    Still another recruiting method is to send random surveys to households to identify people who

    would be good panel participants.

    6

    Once you create an influencer panel, you have to activate it. After all, influencers do not want to

    be singled out only to be ignored. However, marketing professionals should be able to answer the

    following three questions before they activate a panel:

    1. What do we want from the influencer panel? Usually, companies want feedback on

    new offerings and new marketing communications, as well as active word-of-mouth

    promotions. Panelists need to know when you are merely testing a new offering vs.

    introducing it to the marketplace. You don’t want word of mouth about a new product that

    isn’t yet ready to be sold.

    2. How much are the panel members willing to do? Companies want to keep their

    panelists actively engaged, which requires asking how often they want to participate on the

    panel, as well as giving them the right to “opt out” of a particular activity if they must. In

    some instances, you may put out a general call for help, such as posting a notice on an

    online bulletin board that you need volunteers to test a product. Or, you might just simply

    send influencers product samples, ask them to try them, and respond to a questionnaire. In

    addition, the processes by which they engage have to be easy to complete. For example,

    asking a lot of information up front makes the sign-up process more difficult. If all you

    need is an e-mail address, just ask for the e-mail address. Any additional information can

    be gathered later.

    3. What’s in it for the panel members? What do they get out of participating? They of

    course get to try free, new products that might improve their lives—or will one day improve

    their lives if a company heeds their advice. For many influencers, the product category is

    one that was already important to them. The chance to try a product before anyone else

    does and provide feedback to a manufacturer who has singled them out for their opinion

    might be all these people want.

    Social Networking Sites and Other Social Media
    As we have indicated, communities spring up naturally. Online, social networking sites such

    as Facebook and MySpace are used to create communities. Everyone you are friends with on sites

    such as these are people that you already know. The sites are simply the communication medium.

    What is interesting is that Facebook and other social networking sites often can’t tell the

    difference between close friends and acquaintances. From a marketing perspective, since each tie

    or relationship is treated the same, social networking sites provide interesting ways to reach

    people. One, perhaps not so interesting way, is as a broadcast medium for advertising. A company

    targets consumers by placing ads on a person’s site based on what Facebook knows about the

    person—just as ads are placed on a radio or television station and matched to certain audiences.

    7

    The social network sites receive revenue from these ads, which allows them to provide the service

    free to users.

    The more interesting way is by consumers sending other consumers links and other information.

    For example, when a marketer creates a Facebook page for an offering such as a movie, a

    community can form around the movie. Then if you join the group that loves the movie, Facebook

    notifies all of your friends that you are promoting the movie. A community such as this might not

    be as enduring as the Ambrielle or HOG groups, but it serves its purpose—at least until the movie

    is old news and newer movies come out and get attention. When you become a “fan” of something

    like a movie, you are part of the buzz.

    Marketers are looking at many ways to use Facebook and other social networking sites to create

    buzz. Facebook has a “gift-giving” application that allows people to give “gifts” to each other. The

    gifts are really just icons (pictures) within Facebook. Enter GiveReal, an online service that allows

    people to give one another real gifts online. GiveReal developed a promotion with Bombay

    Sapphire, a leading premium gin, and Facebook. The promotion allows Facebook users to give

    their friends electronic coupons (downloadable to a credit card) for mixed drinks that use Bombay

    Sapphire. These coupons can then be redeemed at restaurants and bars that accept credit cards

    (Marketing Weekly News, 2009).

    One result of social networking is viral marketing, or the spread of the company’s message (like

    a computer virus) through the community. Some companies have enhanced the viral marketing of

    their offerings with interactive websites that might feature, say, a game built around an offering.

    Consumers then e-mail their friends with links to the game or website. Examples include the viral

    campaign by Nine Inch Nails for its concept album, Year Zero. An online alternate reality game

    was created involving characters and situations drawn from the music on the album. The album

    and game were so popular that HBO considered creating a series around the dark, futuristic tale

    told on the album.

    Blogs are one form of online communication that helps spread viral marketing messages. Some

    blogs are written by corporate marketing officers who “spin” the information. But blogs can be

    written by anyone. Blogs can serve as a “voice” for a community. For example, the chief executive

    of the National Thoroughbred Horseracing Association (the NASCAR of horseracing) writes a

    blog for the organization that is posted on its website. However, anyone can leave a comment on

    the blog. Blogs have become much more like dialogue in a town hall meeting than a one-way

    marketing message.

    8

    Figure 2.2

    Ashton Kutcher was the first person to

    have over a million followers on Twitter.

    Source: Photo by Andrew Mager. (2008). Wikimedia Commons. Used under
    the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic license.

    Twitter is another application that facilitates viral marketing by enabling people to “follow”

    someone. When an organization or a person posts something on Twitter, the post—called a

    “tweet”—is sent as a text message to all followers of that organization or person. Ashton Kutcher

    made headlines by being the first person to collect a million followers. However, the first

    company to generate a million dollars in revenue through Twitter is probably Dell. Dell uses

    Twitter to communicate special deals via its tweets—offers that are extremely limited. Followers

    can then contact the company to place their orders for the products. Dell estimated that in 2009,

    it would earn more than $3 million through Twitter (Abell, 2009).

    Social media is a catchall phrase for the online channels of communication that build

    communities. Social media includes social networking sites, blogs, podcasts, wikis, vlogs (video

    blogs), and other Internet-based applications that enable consumers to contribute content. Social

    media spending for marketing purposes doubled in 2008 and continued to rise in 2009 despite

    the poor economy. In fact, Forester, a respected research company, predicts spending to top over

    $16.2 billion in 2019. This represents a 10-fold increase from 2009 levels when social media

    spending was only $1.6 billion (Beal, 2009).

    9

    2 . 1 K E Y T A K E A W A Y

    Customer communities form around social networks, which marketers can use to both promote offerings
    and gather market information. Companies create influencer panels that provide insight into effective
    offerings and provide word of mouth. Customers can speak to one another and to companies through a
    variety of communication channels known as social networking sites.

    2.2 Loyalty Management

    L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S

    1. Understand the value of customer loyalty.
    2. Distinguish attitudinal loyalty from behavioral loyalty.
    3. Describe the components of a successful loyalty program.

    It’s 8 p.m. and you’re starving. You open the refrigerator and find a leftover chicken breast, half

    an onion, and some ketchup. But what can you do with these ingredients? You could search online

    for recipes that contain them, or post a question about what to do with them at a website such as

    Kraft.com.

    Companies like Kraft build websites in order to create the types of communities we discussed

    earlier. If you posted your question at Kraft.com, you might have an experience like one woman

    did—in 24 hours, 853 people viewed the question, and she had 22 answers to choose from.

    Another question had 3,341 viewers over 10 days. Why has Kraft’s web marketing team worked so

    hard to create an environment in which people can do this?

    One important reason is loyalty. Kraft wants loyal customers—customers who buy Kraft products

    instead of other brands, who recommend its products to their friends, and are willing to pay a

    little more to get Kraft quality. Early research on loyalty showed that loyal customers were less

    expensive to market to, more willing to pay a premium for a particular brand, more willing to try

    new products under the brand name, more likely to recommend the brand to their friends, and

    more willing to overlook a problem related to the brand (Reicheld & Teal, 2001). That said, more

    research shows that the benefits that come from loyal customers are not automatic, and that it

    takes careful management for those benefits to be sustained (Reinartz & Kumar, 2003).

    Loyalty has two dimensions. One dimension of loyalty is behavioral loyalty, meaning that the

    customer buys the product regularly and does not respond to competitors’ offerings. The second

    10

    dimension is attitudinal loyalty, which is the degree to which the customer prefers or likes the

    brand.

    Behavioral Loyalty
    Most marketers would be happy with behavioral loyalty because it does, after all, result in sales.

    Yet behavioral loyalty doesn’t mean that the customer is immune to your competitors’ offerings.

    Nor does it mean the customer is willing to pay more for your brand. For example, a

    businessperson might regularly book trips on American Airlines because it flies to the one or two

    destinations the traveler has to visit regularly. But a lower price on another airline or one

    scheduled at a more convenient time might persuade the flier to switch to another carrier.

    Habitual purchases are a form of behavioral loyalty. Comparison shopping takes time and effort,

    so buyers are often willing to forego looking for substitute products. Habitual purchases are

    commonly made for low-involvement offerings. You might regularly purchase a Coke at a drive-

    thru restaurant near your house rather than take the time, energy, and gasoline to look for a Coke

    that’s cheaper.

    Marketers engage in many activities to both encourage and discourage behavioral loyalty. Loyalty

    programs, such as an airline offering travelers frequent-flier miles, can encourage behavioral

    loyalty. But coupons and other special price promotions can break behavioral loyalty patterns.

    We’ll discuss loyalty programs in more detail later.

    Attitudinal Loyalty
    As we explained, attitudinal loyalty refers to how much someone likes a brand and is willing to act

    on that preference. Keep in mind, however, that a person’s willingness to act on a preference

    doesn’t necessarily mean he or she will purchase your product: If you sell Ferraris, and the

    potential customer is unemployed, he or she might be unable to afford one.

    Cause-related marketing, which we will discuss in Week 7, “Integrated Marketing

    Communications,” can foster attitudinal loyalty among a company’s community of customer.

    Companies that engage in cause-related marketing choose causes that are important to the

    customer communities in which they operate. American Airlines sponsors the Susan G. Komen

    Foundation, an organization that is working to cure breast cancer. KitchenAid sponsors Cook for

    the Cure, which also benefits the foundation. Both companies support breast cancer awareness

    because the cause is important to their female customers.

    11

    Figure 2.3

    American Airlines is a Lifetime Promise Partner, a program designed to support breast cancer

    awareness and the Susan G. Komen Foundation. The company has painted Komen’s signature

    pink ribbon on planes as a way to support the foundation. Companies support charities that are

    important to the communities in which they operate.

    Source: Photo by Maarten Visser. (2001). Wikimedia Commons. Used under
    the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic license.

    Note, however, that cause-related marketing should be sincere. You can probably quickly tell

    when a person or organization is insincere. So can your customers. Sincerity also breeds trust. For

    example, when Eunice Azzani volunteered for the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, she did so

    because the cause was important to her and Korn/Ferry International, the executive search firm

    for which she is a managing director. While working for the cause, Azzani met executives with

    Mervyn’s, Wells Fargo, and other major corporations who later engaged her company to conduct

    executive searches. They knew they could trust her to do high-quality work and that she was

    sincere about her place in the community (Van Yoder, 2008).

    Of course, there are many other methods of building attitudinal loyalty. As we mentioned,

    advertising can create feelings for a brand, as can sponsoring a sports team or cultural event. In

    the next section, we discuss loyalty programs, one way that companies try to manage both

    affective and behavioral dimensions of loyalty.

    12

    Loyalty Programs
    Loyalty programs are marketing efforts that reward a person or organization for frequent

    purchases and the consumption of offerings. For example, Lone Star Park’s Star Player Rewards

    program awards members points for each dollar they spend at the track. The more points they

    earn, the better the prize is for which they can redeem their points.

    The data a firm collects from a loyalty program can be very useful in terms of designing and

    improving the company’s offerings, especially when merged into a comprehensive customer

    relationship management program, which we will discuss later. When members initially sign up

    for a loyalty program, they provide a great deal of demographic information to the organization.

    Their behavior can then be tracked as well. For example, Lone Star Park can determine who sits

    in what section of the track by what tickets members purchase, as well as where they purchase

    their refreshments or place their bets. The track can also determine members’ preferences for

    food and drink products or services such as betting clerks and betting machines. When the track

    has nonracing events, such as a concert, the events can be promoted to members. Depending on

    how the members respond, additional offers can be made, or not made, to them.

    Lone Star Park could also team up to create an offering with American Airlines. For example, the

    track and the airline could compare customer lists and determine which Star Player members are

    also members of American’s AAdvantage frequent-flier program. These individuals could then be

    offered discounts on trips to Louisville, Kentucky, where the Kentucky Derby is held. Such an

    offer is called cross-promotion marketing. A cross-promotion can be used to introduce new

    marketing members to a community; in this case, Lone Star Park would be introducing American

    Airlines to the horse racing community. The cross-promotion creates credibility for the new

    member, just as you are more likely to accept a recommendation from a friend.

    The Positive Effects of Loyalty Programs

    When loyalty programs work, they result in one or more of the four effects of loyalty: the blocker

    effect, the spreader effect, the accelerator effect, and the longevity effect. We’ll start by describing

    the longevity effect.

    13

    Figure 2.4 The Positive Effects of Loyalty Programs

    The Longevity Effect

    The longevity effect is lengthening the lifetime value of a customer. One result of a good loyalty

    program is that your buyers remain your customers for longer. Because a loyalty company has

    better information about its customers, it can create offerings that are more valuable to them and

    keep them coming back. Consider a loyalty program aimed at customers as they progress through

    their life stages. A grocery store might send diaper coupons to the mother of a new baby and then,

    five years later, send the mother coupons for items she can put in her child’s school lunches.

    Loyalty programs also affect the longevity of customers by increasing their switching

    costs. Switching costs are the costs associated with moving to a new supplier. For example, if

    you are a member of a frequent-flier program, you might put up with some inconveniences rather

    than switching to another airline. So, if you are a member of American’s AAdvantage program,

    14

    you might continue to fly American even though it canceled one of your flights, made you sit on a

    plane on the ground for two hours, and caused you to miss an important meeting. Rather than

    starting over with a different program, you might be inclined to continue to book your flights on

    American so you can take a free trip to Europe sooner.

    The Blocker Effect

    The blocker effect is related to switching costs. The blocker effect works this way: The personal

    value equation of a loyalty program member is enhanced because he or she doesn’t need to spend

    any time and effort shopping around. And because there is no shopping around, there is no need

    for the member to be perceptive to competitors’ marketing communications. In other words, the

    member of the program “blocks” them out. Furthermore, the member is less deal-prone, or

    willing to succumb to a special offer or lower price from a competitor.

    The blocker effect can be a function of switching costs—the costs of shopping around as well as

    the hassles of having to start a new program over. However, the effect can also be a function

    of relevance. Because the loyalty marketer has both information on whom the buyer is and data

    on what the buyer has already responded to, more relevant communications can be created and

    aimed at the buyer. In addition, because belonging to the program has value, any communication

    related to the program are already more relevant to the buyer.

    The Spreader Effect

    The spreader effect refers to the fact that members of a loyalty program are more likely to try

    related products offered by the marketer. For example, an American Airlines AAdvantage

    member who also joins the company’s Admiral’s Club airport lounge creates additional revenue

    for the airline, as a does the member’s purchase of a family vacation through American’s Vacation

    services.

    The spreader effect becomes even more pronounced when a cross-promotion is added to the mix.

    Earlier, we mentioned Lone Star Park might team with American to offer a trip package to the

    Kentucky Derby. Another example is Citibank offering you AAdvantage miles if you get a Citibank

    Visa card through American’s AAdvantage program. Cross-promotions such as these encourage

    loyalty program members to try even more products from more producers.

    The Accelerator Effect

    When rats running in a maze get closer to the cheese, they speed up. Like rats in a maze,

    consumers speed up, or accelerate, purchases when they are about to reach a higher award level

    15

    in a loyalty program, called the accelerator effect of a loyalty program. In American’s

    AAdvantage program, for example, a member gets “Platinum” status after flying 60 flights or

    50,000 miles. Platinum members get special awards, such as more frequent upgrades to first

    class, boarding ahead of everyone else, not having to pay for luggage and other fees, and double

    mileage toward free flights. Someone who has 50 flights and just needs 10 more to become

    Platinum will start to fly American more frequently until the Platinum level is reached. Then,

    American hopes that the other effects (blocker, spreader, etc.) will occur.

    Companies can capitalize on the accelerator effect by making it easy for members to track their

    progress and notifying them when they are close to reaching subsequent levels. American helps its

    Advantage fliers track their progress by sending them monthly updates on their levels. Couple

    such a notification with a special offer, and a company is likely to see even greater acceleration.

    The accelerator effect can also be used with promotions that create short-term, loyal behavior.

    Pepsi created a promotion with Amazon in which purchasers could accumulate points toward free

    music downloads. The promotion, launched with a Justin Timberlake Super Bowl ad, was a

    knock-off of Coca-Cola’s MyCokeRewards.com. Although they weren’t formal loyalty programs,

    both promotions led to an accelerator effect as customers got close to the award levels they

    needed to redeem prizes.

    Criteria for Successful Loyalty Programs

    Just having a loyalty program is no guarantee of success, though. Eight studies of more than a

    dozen grocery-store loyalty programs in the United States and Europe showed that five programs

    had no impact on the loyalty of customers, two increased sales but not profits, two had mixed

    results, and five had positive results (Tanner Jr. & Morris, 2009). There are, however, several

    characteristics of loyalty programs that can make them effective, each of which is discussed next.

    Good Performance by a Company

    The first characteristic of an effective loyalty program is performance. No loyalty program can

    overcome a company’s poor performance. Even the most loyal buyer can put up with subpar

    performance for only so long.

    Responsiveness by a Company

    Responsiveness is how well a company can take customer information (such as complaints) and

    alter what it does to satisfy the customer. Loyal customers are more willing to complete surveys

    and participate in market research, but they expect companies to use the information wisely. For

    example, when customers complain, they expect their problems to be fixed and the company to

    16

    use the information so that the same problems don’t reoccur. Likewise, the members of influencer

    panels expect to be listened to. If you ignore their input, you are likely to alienate them, causing

    them to switch to other brands.

    A company’s responsiveness—or lack thereof—also becomes evident to buyers when they spot a

    better offer. Precisely at that moment, they realize that the company that created the better offer

    was more responsive and worked harder to meet their needs.

    Shared Identity Among Participants

    Loyal customers are like sports fans—they wear their “team’s” colors. That’s why loyalty programs

    have names that sound prestigious, such as American’s “Executive Platinum” program. Loyal

    customers also want to be recognized for their loyalty. Hampton Inn, which is part of the Hilton

    family of hotels, is one company that could do a better of job of recognizing its customers—

    literally. One of the authors of this text stays regularly at the same Hampton Inn, only to be

    greeted every time on arrival with the question, “Is this your first stay with us?” The author is not

    only a regular guest at that hotel but a member of Hilton Honors, the hotel’s loyalty program. But

    apparently the Hampton Inn’s reservation system doesn’t provide that information to its front

    desk clerks. If you fail to recognize customers who are loyal, you are essentially telling them that

    their business isn’t that important to you.

    Clear Benefits

    What are the benefits of being loyal? A loyalty program should make those benefits clear. For

    example, many airlines have a special boarding lane for members. Travelers who are not

    members can easily see the special treatment members receive. If the elements of scarcity and

    status can be created by a loyalty program, the benefits of belonging to it will be obvious to

    customers.

    Community Development

    Finally, marketers who can put loyal customers together with other loyal customers are likely to

    build a community around the common experience of consumption. At Lone Star Park or

    American Airlines, common consumption is obvious—people are actually together. Building a

    community in which people don’t actually consume goods and services together can be a bit more

    difficult, but recall that Kraft has done so with its online presence. Members of Kraft.com still

    share their experiences, their recipes, their questions, and their answers, thereby creating a sense

    of “we’re in this together.” Some of the postings might be related directly to Kraft products,

    whereas others might only be indirectly related. Nonetheless, they all provide Kraft with insight

    17

    into what its customers are thinking. Meanwhile, its customers become more loyal as they

    participate on the website.

    Keep in mind that a loyalty program isn’t necessary to create loyalty. Lexus doesn’t have a formal

    loyalty program. Yet studies show that Lexus owners are the most loyal luxury car buyers. Over

    half of all Lexus owners buy another Lexus. (The brand’s slogan is “Once a Lexus buyer, always a

    Lexus buyer.”) By contrast, Mercedes-Benz has a loyalty program, but only 40 percent of its

    buyers purchase another Mercedes (Ireson, 2008).

    A company can also offer its customers loyalty benefits that are not a part of a formal loyalty

    program. For example, Mercedes-Benz gives loyal buyers an opportunity to suggest new features

    via a contest, for which there is no prize other than the recognition the winner gets because his

    idea was selected. And like many other car manufacturers, Mercedes offers owners special trade-

    in deals. The challenge with loyalty promotions that lie outside loyalty programs is collecting the

    information marketers need to target customers.

    2 . 2 K E Y T A K E A W A Y

    Customer loyalty is both behavioral and attitudinal. Habitual purchases are a form of behavioral loyalty.
    Cause-related marketing can foster attitudinal loyalty among a company’s community of customers, as
    can loyalty programs. Loyalty programs can have four positive effects: they can increase the longevity, or
    lifetime value, of customers; block competitors’ marketing efforts; encourage customers to buy related
    offerings; and accelerate their purchases. Loyalty programs don’t automatically create loyalty among
    customers, though. Loyalty is created when a company performs well, responds to its customers,
    identifies its loyal customers, makes the benefits of its loyalty program transparent (obvious), and when
    the firm builds a community among its customers.

    2.3 Customer Satisfaction

    L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S

    1. Understand satisfaction and satisfaction strategies.
    2. Design a customer satisfaction measurement system.
    3. Describe complaint management strategies.

    Customer Satisfaction Defined
    What comes to mind when you hear someone say, “A satisfied customer”? Perhaps it is an image

    of someone smiling with the pride of knowing he or she got a good deal. Or perhaps it is the

    childlike look of happiness someone exhibits after purchasing a new pair of shoes that are just the

    18

    right color. Whatever your picture of a satisfied customer is, customer satisfaction is typically

    defined as the feeling that a person experiences when an offering meets his or her

    expectations.

    When an offering meets the customer’s expectations, the customer is satisfied. When an offer

    exceeds customer’s expectations, the customer is delighted.

    Improving customer satisfaction is a goal sought by many businesses. In fact, some companies

    evaluate their salespeople based on how well they satisfy their customers; in other words, not only

    must the salespeople hit their sales targets, they have to do so in ways that satisfy customers.

    Teradata is one company that pays its salespeople bonuses if they meet their customer

    satisfaction goals.

    Customer satisfaction scores have been relatively stable for the past few years as illustrated

    in Table 2.2, “Industry-Average Customer Satisfaction Scores, 2000–2008.” You might think that

    if increasing the satisfaction of customers were, indeed, the goal of businesses, the scores should

    show a steady increase. Why don’t they? Maybe it’s because just satisfying your customers is

    a minimal level of performance. Clearly customer satisfaction is important. However, it isn’t a

    good predictor of a customer’s future purchases or brand loyalty. For example, one study of

    customer satisfaction examined car buyers. Although the buyers rated their satisfaction levels

    with their purchases 90 percent or higher, only 40 percent of them purchased the same brand of

    car the next time around (Lambert-Pandraud, Laurent, & Lapersonne, 2005).

    Table 2.2 Industry-Average Customer Satisfaction Scores, 2000–2008

    2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008

    Appliances 85 82 82 81 82 80 81 82 80

    Computers 72 74 71 71 72 74 77 75 74

    Electronics 83 81 81 84 82 81 80 83 83

    Cars 80 80 80 80 79 80 81 82 82

    Keep in mind, though, that satisfaction scores are a function of what the customer expected as

    well as what the company delivered. So the flat scores in Table 2.2, “Industry-Average Customer

    Satisfaction Scores, 2000–2008,”reflect rising customer expectations as well as improved

    products. In other words, the better products get, the more it takes to satisfy consumers.

    There is also a downside to continuously spending more to satisfy your customers. Research

    shows that firms that do so can experience higher sales revenues. However, after the additional

    spending costs are factored in, the net profits that result are sometimes marginal or even

    negative. Nonetheless, satisfaction is not unimportant. A company’s performance on key factors is

    19

    critical both in terms of the loyalty and satisfaction it generates among its customers (Souki &

    Filho, 2008).

    Customer Satisfaction Strategies
    So what or how much should you do to improve the satisfaction of your customer? If customer

    satisfaction can be defined as the feeling a person experiences when an offering meets his or her

    expectations, then there are two critical ways to improve customer satisfaction. The first is to

    establish appropriate expectations in the minds of customers. The second is to deliver on those

    expectations.

    We know that dissatisfied customers are likely to tell many more friends about their negative

    experiences than satisfied customers are about good experiences. Why? Because there’s more

    drama in unmet expectations. A story about met expectations—telling a friend about a night out

    that was average, for example—is boring. Jan Carlson, a former Scandinavian Airlines executive,

    was famous for promoting the concept of “delighted” customers. Carlson’s idea was that

    delighting customers by overexceeding their expectations should result in both repeat business

    and positive word of mouth for a firm. The fact that stories about plain old satisfaction are boring

    is also why influencer communities, such as JCPenney’s Ambrielle community, are so important.

    Influencers have new offerings to talk about, which are interesting topics, and other buyers want

    to know their opinions.

    Establishing appropriate expectations in the minds of customers is a function of the prepurchase

    communications the seller has with them. If you set the expectations too low, people won’t buy

    your offering. But if you set the expectations too high, you run the risk that your buyers will be

    dissatisfied. A common saying in business is “under promise and over deliver.” In other words, set

    consumers’ expectations a bit low, and then exceed those expectations in order to create delighted

    customers who are enthusiastic about your product. A seller hopes that enthusiastic customers

    will tell their friends about the seller’s offering, spreading lots of positive word of mouth about it.

    One customer satisfaction strategy that grew out of Carlson’s idea of delighting customers is to

    empower customer-facing personnel. Customer-facing personnel are employees that meet and

    interact with customers. In a hotel, this might include desk clerks, housekeepers, the bellmen, and

    other staff. Empowering these employees to drop what they’re doing in order to do something

    special for a customer, for example, can certainly delight customers. In some organizations,

    employees are even given a budget for such activities.

    20

    Ritz-Carlton employees each have an annual budget that can be spent on customer service

    activities, such as paying for dry cleaning if a customer spills red wine on a dress in the hotel’s

    restaurant. Sewell Cadillac in Texas is famous for how its employees serve its customers. An

    employee will even pick up a customer up on a Sunday if a Sewell-purchased car breaks down.

    Other dealers might delegate such a service to another company, but at Sewell, the same

    salesperson who sold the car might be the person who handles such a task. To Sewell, customer

    service is too important to trust to another company—a company that perhaps won’t feel the same

    sense of urgency to keep car buyers as satisfied as Sewell does.

    Empowerment is more than simply a budget and a job description—frontline employees also need

    customer skills. Companies like Ritz-Carlton and Sewell spend time and effort to ensure that

    employees with customer contact responsibilities are trained and prepared to handle small and

    large challenges with equal aplomb.

    Another customer satisfaction strategy involves offering customers warranties and guarantees.

    Warranties serve as an agreement that the product will perform as promised or some form of

    restitution will be made to the customer. Customers who are risk-averse find warranties

    reassuring.

    One form of dissatisfaction is post-purchase dissonance, which we will describe in Week 3,

    “Consumer Behavior: How People Make Buying Decisions.” It is also called buyer’s remorse.

    Post-purchase dissonance is more likely to occur when an expensive product is purchased, the

    buyer purchases it infrequently and has little experience with it, and there is a perception that it is

    a high-risk purchase. Many marketers address post-purchase dissonance by providing their

    customers with reassuring communications. For example, a boat dealer might send a buyer a

    letter that expresses the dealer’s commitment to service the boat and that also reminds the buyer

    of all the terrific reasons he or she purchased it. Alternatively, the dealer could have the

    salesperson who sold the boat telephone the buyer to answer any questions he or she might have

    after owning and operating the boat for a couple of weeks.

    Measuring Customer Satisfaction
    To measure customer satisfaction, you need to able to understanding what creates it. Just asking

    customers, “Are you satisfied?” won’t tell you much. Yet many companies often measure the

    satisfaction of their customers on the basis of only a few questions: “How satisfied were you

    today?” “Would you recommend us to your friends?” and “Do you intend to visit us again?”

    21

    Effective customer satisfaction measures have several components. The two general components

    are the customer’s expectations and whether the organization performed well enough to meet

    them. A third component is the degree of satisfaction, or to put it in terms we’ve used to describe

    exceptional performance, is the customer delighted?

    To figure out if a customer’s expectations were met and he or she is delighted, more detail is

    usually required. Companies might break the offering into major components and ask how

    satisfied customers were with each. For example, a restaurant might ask the following:

    • Were you greeted promptly by a host? By your server at your table?

    • Was your order taken promptly?

    • How long did you wait for your food?

    • Was the food served at the appropriate temperature?

    These questions assume that each aspect of the service is equally important to the customer.

    However, some surveys ask customers to rate how important they are. Other surveys simply

    “weight,” or score, questions so that aspects that are known to be more important to customers

    have a greater impact on the overall satisfaction score. For example, a restaurant might find that

    prompt service, good taste, and large portions are the only three factors that usually determine

    customers’ overall satisfaction. In that case, the survey can be shortened considerably. At the

    same time, however, space should be left on the survey so customers can add any additional

    information that could yield important insight. This information can be used to find out if there

    are customer service problems that a firm wasn’t aware of or if the preferences of consumers in

    general are changing.

    You will still find customer satisfaction survey cards that just ask, “How satisfied were you

    today?” “Would you recommend us to your friends?” and “Do you intend to visit us again?” The

    information obtained from these surveys can still be useful if it’s paired with a more

    comprehensive measurement program. For instance, a sample of customers could be given the

    opportunity to provide more detailed information via another survey, and the two surveys could

    be compared. Such a comparison can help the company pinpoint aspects that need improvement.

    In addition, the company has given every customer an opportunity to provide input, which is an

    important part of any empowerment strategy.

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    Complaint Management Strategies
    When buyers want to complain about products or companies, they have many ways to do so. They

    can complain to the companies they’re upset with, tell their friends, or broadcast their concerns

    on the Internet. People who use every Internet site possible to bash a company are called verbal

    terrorists. The term was coined by Paul Greenberg, a marketing analyst who authored the wildly

    popular book CRM at the Speed of Light.

    Should companies worry about verbal terrorists? Perhaps. A study indicates that customer

    satisfaction scores could be less important to a firm’s success or failure than the number of

    complaints it gets (Lou & Homberg, 2008). To measure the tradeoff between the two, customer

    satisfaction guru Fred Reicheld devised something called the net promoter score. The net

    promoter score is the number of recommenders an offering has minus the number of complainers

    (Reicheld, 2006). The more positive the score, the better the company’s performance. According

    to another study, a company with fewer complaints is also more likely to have better financial

    performance.

    Studies also show that if a company can resolve a customer’s complaint well, then the customer’s

    attitude toward the company is improved, possibly even beyond the level of his or her original

    satisfaction. Some experts have argued, perhaps jokingly, that if this is the case, a good strategy

    might be to make customers mad and then do a good job of resolving their problems. Practically

    speaking, though, the best practice is to perform at or beyond customer expectations so fewer

    complaints will be received in the first place.

    Customers will complain, though, no matter how hard firms try to meet or exceed their

    expectations. Sometimes, the complaint is in the form of a suggestion and simply reflects an

    opportunity to improve the experience. In other instances, the complaint represents a service or

    product failure.

    When a complaint is made, the process for responding to it is as important as the outcome. And

    consumers judge companies as much for whether their response processes seem fair as whether

    they got what they wanted. For that reason, some companies create customer service departments

    with specially trained personnel who can react to complaints. Other companies invest heavily in

    preparing all customer-facing personnel to respond to complaints. Still other companies

    outsource their customer service. When the service is technical, marketers sometimes outsource

    the resolution of complaints to companies that specialize in providing technical service. Computer

    help lines are an example. Technical-support companies often service the computer help lines of

    multiple manufacturers. A company that outsources its service nonetheless has to make sure that

    23

    customer complaints are handled as diligently as possible. Otherwise, customers will be left with a

    poor impression.

    Handling the Complaint Process
    A good customer complaint-handling process involves the steps listed below. Note that one step is

    to acknowledge the customer’s feelings. A customer who is angry or upset due to a failure does not

    want to be patronized or have his or her problems taken lightly. The situation is important to the

    customer and should be important to the person listening and responding to the complaint.

    • Listen carefully to the complaint

    • Acknowledge the customer’s feelings

    • Determine the root cause of the problem

    • Offer a solution

    • Gain agreement on the solution and communicate the process of resolution

    • Follow up, if appropriate

    • Record the complaint and resolution

    Note that the complaint-resolution process involves communicating that process and gaining

    agreement on a solution, even if the customer sometimes might not like the outcome. He or she

    still needs to know what to expect.

    Finally, the complaint process includes recording the complaint. We stated earlier that a firm’s

    best strategy is to perform at or beyond the customer’s expectations so as to minimize the number

    of complaints it receives in the first place. Analyzing your company’s complaints can help you

    identify weak points in a service process or design flaws in a product, as well as potential

    miscommunications that are raising customers’ expectations unreasonably. To conduct this

    analysis, however, you need a complete record of the complaints made.

    A complaint record should reflect the main reason an offering failed. Typically, the failure can be

    attributed to one (or more) of the following four gaps (Levy & Weitz, 2009):

    1. The communication gap. Overstating the offering’s performance level, thereby creating

    unrealistic expectations on the part of customers.

    2. The knowledge gap. Not understanding the customer’s expectations or needs, which then

    leads a company to create a product that disappoints the customer.

    24

    3. The standards gap. Setting performance standards that are too low despite what is known

    about the customers’ requirements.

    4. The delivery gap. Failing to meet the performance standards established for an offering.

    You can attribute the complaints your company receives to one of the four gaps and then use the

    information to figure out what must be done to fix the problem, assuming you have one. If the

    problem is overstating the performance, then perhaps your firm’s marketing promotions

    materials should be reviewed. If it appears that the offering is simply not meeting the needs of

    your customers, then more work should be done to identify exactly what they are. If your firm is

    aware of the needs of its customers but there is a gap between their requirements and the

    standards set for your firm’s performance, then standards should be reviewed. Finally, your

    company’s processes should be examined to ensure that standards are being met.

    When the Smokey Bones chain of barbecue restaurants (owned by Darden Restaurants) noticed

    falling profits, managers cut costs by eliminating some menu items. Unfortunately, these were the

    items that made the chain unique; once they were gone, there was nothing distinctive about the

    chain’s offerings. When customers complained, servers replied, “Yes, a lot of people have

    complained that those products are no longer available.” But apparently, there was no process or

    way to get those complaints to register with the company’s management. As a result, the company

    didn’t realize why it was losing customers, and its profits continued to spiral downward. Many

    locations were closed and the company filed for bankruptcy.

    Keep in mind that the complaint-handling process itself is subject to complaints. As we

    mentioned, customers want a process that’s fair, even if the outcome isn’t what they hoped for.

    Consequently, monitoring your firm’s customer satisfaction levels also means you must monitor

    how satisfied customers are with how their complaints were handled.

    2 . 3 K E Y T A K E A W A Y

    Measuring customer satisfaction is an important element of customer empowerment. But satisfaction
    alone is a minimal level of acceptable performance. It means that the customer’s expectations were met.
    Getting positive word of mouth requires exceeding those expectations. To minimize the number of
    complaints, a company needs an effective process of both handling complaints and understanding their
    causes so any problems can be corrected. Because the complaint process itself is subject to complaints,
    monitoring your firm’s customer satisfaction levels also means you must monitor how satisfied customers
    are with your company’s complaint-handling system.

    25

    2.4 Customer Relationship Management

    L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S

    1. Define customer relationship management.
    2. Identify and describe three levels of customers.
    3. Calculate customer lifetime value.
    4. Describe best practices for CRM implementation.
    5. Identify CRM metrics.

    Peter Drucker, management guru of the mid-twentieth century, said, “The purpose of a business

    is to create customers.” What he didn’t say is it is even more important to retain those customers.

    As most businesses experience, it is easier and cheaper to keep a customer than to continually

    have to replace an existing customer by finding a new one and convince him or her that the

    product meets his or her personal value equation. That means companies need to develop

    strategies for creating, maintaining, and expanding profitable customers.

    Customer relationship management (CRM) is not just customer service, although that is certainly

    a part of it. CRM includes the systemic collection and analysis of customer data and the strategies

    employed to use that data to understand, recruit, and retain satisfied (or delighted) customers.

    Sometimes the term is used to describe the software used in a CRM program, but a true CRM

    program is much more than software; it is a systematic effort to keep and retain customers. The

    software helps compile the data.

    The goal of CRM is to increase a customer’s lifetime value (LTV) to the company, or the

    aggregate total of all the exchanges between the company and the customer over the customer’s

    lifetime. To calculate LTV, take the revenue you earn from a customer, subtract the money spent

    on filling his or her needs, and adjust all of the payments for time value of money. Suppose you

    spend $100 every time you buy a pair of running shoes. You are an avid runner, so you purchase

    two pairs of shoes each year. You expect to run the rest of your life, but practically, let’s look at it

    for the next 10 years. Therefore, the revenue you will generate for the shoe company is $2,000.

    Now, suppose the shoe company spent $35 in customer acquisition costs to get your first

    purchase of its shoes. That means you have a LTV of $1,165 to the shoe company. This doesn’t

    even account for price increases or buying up to higher-priced shoe models. It does get more

    complicated in that the LTV is adjusted to account for the time value of money, but we’ll keep it

    simple.

    26

    Why is LTV important? Marketers use this information in a number of ways. First, it identifies

    their most valuable customers (MVCs), that group of regular and loyal purchasers who do

    not make up the majority of the company’s customers, but the customers who produce the most

    profit per customer. MVCs are the customers that should receive the company’s highest level of

    customer service and communication. MVCs are most often the ones that sign up and participate

    in loyalty programs discussed earlier. Most companies probably have at least two other categories

    of customers, and some of these customer groups may not be worth the marketing expenses.

    Let’s take our shoe example again. Suppose the cost of producing and distributing the running

    shoe was $50. Add in the $35 acquisition cost, and certain customers who only buy once are

    worth only worth $15 LTV. That is a big difference from the $1,165 noted above. Yet, the bulk of a

    company’s customers will most likely be the largest percentage of customers, so they can’t be

    ignored. Figure 2.5 illustrates the most typical profile of customer groups in consumer markets.

    Figure 2.5 Levels of Customers Based on Profitability

    Although initial and one-time

    transactions

    make up the bulk

    of a company’s customers, they represent the least profitable

    per customer, and they must be constantly replaced

    with new customers.

    In other words, not all customers are created equal. To treat all customers equally might be too

    expensive for a company, or at least much less profitable. Identifying customer groups in terms of

    their long-term profit potential is greatly aided by CRM software technology, which allows

    companies to capture relevant information about customers, track customer purchases, and all

    customer communications.

    Level 1
    MVCs

    Level 2
    Repeat customers

    Level 3
    Initial and one-time

    transactions

    27

    A second question that can be answered using LTV is how much should the company spend in

    customer support. With our running shoe example, if the company hears from a one-time

    purchaser of its running shoe either because he or she needs clarification, has a complaint, or

    wants to return the product, that cost needs to be subtracted from the already low LTV of $15.

    When computers first appeared in the marketplace, customer service was a major issue for

    technology companies because they were essentially creating primary or new demand for a new

    product category. There was a lot consumers didn’t know about computers. The cost of the

    computers was relatively high, so customer service costs were already factored in. But, as the cost

    of the computers decreased, competition increased, and brand loyalty to certain manufacturers

    eroded, the profit margin on a computer sale decreased. Something had to give. The computer

    companies changed their customer service model.

    For MVCs, it is likely that the computer company offered one-on-one training and made it easier

    to access phone support technicians and the like. For non-MVCs, help took the form of websites

    with endless clicking to find the information needed, and that assumes customers could frame

    their concerns in the form of a question. The company’s goal is to solve all issues with automated

    phone and web-assisted systems. And, if a person rarely buys a computer, customer service for an

    old model could disappear completely.

    A third benefit of CRM is the company’s ability to know how to best serve each customer group.

    Indeed, as relationships are built, so also is the company’s knowledge of customer needs and

    wants. This translates into the modification of offerings or development of new offerings to serve

    specific needs of specific customer groups, and likely a higher LTV calculation.

    A fourth benefit is cost savings from ensuring the right product reaches the right consumers at the

    right time. Additionally, relationships with customers allows the company to cross-sell other

    products, have a means to quickly offer sales promotions, seek consumer input, and reduce

    overall marketing communication costs. CRM reduces the need for costly advertising because you

    know your customers and how to reach them.

    Unfortunately, there is no one best model of a good CRM program. It is highly dependent on the

    company’s management philosophy, the industry, financial, and human resources, price

    structure, and the product or service itself. However, we can identify best practices in CRM that

    companies with productive customer relationships follow.

    Business Week provides a useful list of best practices to implement a CRM program (Thompson,

    2015).

    28

    First, involve top management in the design of a CRM program. As Bill Brendler of Brendler and

    Associates says, “If they don’t lead the charge, CRM won’t happen (Thompson, 2015). Second,

    restructure employee compensation to reinforce CRM priorities. If a company wants MVCs, it has

    to empower all employees with incentives to perform in a customer-centric manner. Cisco

    Systems, for example, rewards employees on whether the company hits its customer satisfaction

    targets (Thompson, 2015). Third, manage cultural change and people issues carefully. The

    company implementing CRM will face a whole new set of rules and responsibilities. Involve as

    many affected employees in the design and implementation process, Brendler says (Thompson,

    2015). Fourth, concentrate on customer lifetime value. This is how customer groups are identified

    and CRM strategies designed to serve each group. Fifth, bulldoze paths, don’t pave them. The

    CRM technology is very powerful, and may be too powerful for many companies to quickly adopt

    and find useful. This may cause errors in the acquisition and analysis of CRM data or cultivating

    the wrong information that ultimately may be more damaging than no CRM program. Technology

    is the means to an end, it is not the end itself. But a CRM program has to start somewhere and if

    resources require a small effort, then get that up and running; you can always add components to

    CRM (Thompson, 2015). Sixth, push the project. Identify a project leader who has enough clout

    with employees to be the change agent, and continue to be the change agent as the CRM program

    takes shape, encounters problems, and needs modifications. Lastly, provide training and support

    and prepare for continuous improvement. Successful CRM is an ongoing process requiring the

    right people and the right training. CRM is also organic; it will grow and change over time as the

    company reaps the results of successful customer relationships (Thompson, 2015).

    How does a company know if its CRM program is successful? In general, there are three

    categories of metrics to consider. The first are the traditional business performance metric such as

    number of retained customers, renewal rates, or the amount of new revenue from current

    customers. The second category is user adoption metrics such as number of visits and time spent

    on websites, completeness of customer provided information. The third category is customer

    perception metrics such as customer satisfaction rates.

    2 . 4 K E Y T A K E A W A Y

    Customer relationship management (CRM) is a process for creating, maintaining, and expanding
    profitable customer relationships. CRM programs differ depending on many factors both inside and
    outside the company, but all CRM programs divide customers into levels and focus most of their attention
    on the company’s most valuable customers (MVCs). CRM is high data driven, but the data is only one
    piece of the CRM puzzle. The other pieces include the analysis of the data and the strategies the company
    develops in response to that analysis. The goal of CRM is to increase a customer’s lifetime value (LTV) by
    offering superior products and services as identified by the customers.

    29

    2.5 Ethics, Laws, and Customer Empowerment

    L E A R N I N G O B J E C T I V E S

    1. Apply general ethical principles and concepts to online marketing.
    2. Explain the laws that regulate online and other types of marketing.

    While we are discussing customers, now is a good time to introduce the concept of marketing

    ethics and laws government marketing practices. Ethics has become even more relevant than

    truth in advertising now that we have customer communities that are virtually unedited.

    You are about to graduate and move to another city to start a new job. Your employer is paying for

    your moving expenses, so you go online to see what people have to say about the different moving

    companies. One company has particularly good reviews, so you hire it. Yet what actually happens

    is vastly different—and a complete disaster. Little surprise, then, when you later discover that the

    company actually paid people to post those positive reviews!

    Unfortunately, such an experience has happened so often that the Federal Trade Commission

    (FTC) is now considering rewriting rules regarding endorsements and whether companies need to

    announce their sponsorships of messages.

    Once upon a time, before the days of the Internet, any form of selling under another guise or a

    phony front was called sugging (a word created from the first letters of selling under the guise,

    or SUG). The term was primarily applied to a practice in which a salesperson would pretend to be

    doing marketing research by interviewing a consumer, and then turn the consumer’s answers into

    reasons to buy. Some companies have hired young, good-looking, outgoing men and women to

    hang out in bars and surreptitiously promote a particular brand of alcohol or cigarettes. Sugging

    seems to be a good term to apply to fake reviews, as well.

    Truly, in no other marketplace should the term caveat emptor apply as strongly as it does on the

    Internet. Caveat emptor means, “let the buyer beware,” or “it’s your own fault if you buy it and it

    doesn’t work!” Product reviews can be posted by anyone—even by a company or its competitors.

    So how do you know which ones to trust? Often, you don’t. Yet many of us do trust them. One

    study found that over 60 percent of buyers look for online reviews for their most important

    purchases, including over 45 percent of senior citizens (Neff, 2007).

    30

    While sugging isn’t illegal, it isn’t fair. Not only is the content potentially misrepresented, but the

    source certainly is. As you already know, a marketer cannot make promises about an offering’s

    capabilities unless those capabilities are true. Sugging is similar—it involves misrepresenting or

    lying about the source of the information in an effort to gain an unfair advantage.

    The consequences of being caught while sugging can be high. Even if the information posted was

    actually an accurate depiction of the offering’s capabilities and benefits, consumers will be less

    likely to believe it—or any of the other the company’s marketing communications, for that matter.

    The loss of trust makes building any kind of lasting relationship with a buyer extremely difficult.

    Legal Requirements

    So far, there are no regulations regarding sugging, although that may change if the FTC decides a

    crackdown is needed. There are, however, regulations affecting how one uses e-mail to sell.

    Specifically, the CAN-SPAM Act prohibits the use of e-mail, faxes, and other technology to

    randomly push a message to a potential consumer. Spam is a term for unwanted commercial e-

    mail similar to junk mail. Using e-mail and other forms of technology to sell is legal if the seller

    and the buyer have a preexisting relationship or if the buyer has given his or her permission.

    Permission marketing is a term that was created to suggest that marketers should always ask for

    permission to sell or to offer buyers marketing messages. The idea was that when permission is

    granted, the buyer is willing to listen. Now, however, anything “free” online requires that you sign

    up and give “permission,” not just to get the freebie but also all kinds of future spam and

    annoying messages. You might also inadvertently give a seller permission or allow it to sell your

    name and contact information. When you sign up for contests or agree to the seller’s privacy

    statement when you order something online, you may have given the seller permission to resell

    your contact information to one of its “partners.”

    Because of trust issues and the overuse of permission marketing, many consumers

    create dump accounts, or e-mail addresses they use whenever they need to register for

    something online. The dump account is used only for this purpose, so that all spam goes to that

    account and not the person’s personal account. Many consumers find it easier to use dump

    accounts rather than read every privacy policy and try to remember which vendors won’t sell the

    e-mail addresses to their “partners” for marketing purposes. Therefore, when you are a marketing

    manager, don’t expect all the e-mail addresses you collect from a free offer to be valid.

    31

    Figure 2.6

    Attendees to the LinuxWorld trade show agree when they buy their tickets to allow the

    exhibitors to send them e-mail, postal mail, and marketing messages through a variety of

    channels. Some companies use preshow e-mails to get attendees to visit their booths.

    Postshow e-mails might be part of a follow-up campaign.

    Source: Photo by Arnold Reinhold. (2006). Wikimedia Commons. Used under
    the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license.

    In the B2B world, when attendees sign up for a trade show, they often give the show’s exhibitors

    permission to send them e-mails and other information. Most sellers won’t send marketing

    communication to fax machines because they are often shared by a number of people, and there is

    no guarantee that the intended person will receive the fax. Using e-mail, however, is acceptable

    because the buyer gave permission.

    Privacy Laws

    US privacy laws apply to both Internet marketing and other forms of commerce. The laws limit

    the amount and type of information a company can collect about a consumer and also specify how

    that information can be used or shared. In the EU, the types of data a company can collect are

    fewer, and the sharing of information is far more restricted. For example, a company cannot share

    information about customers in one division with another division. (Sending out unsolicited e-

    mails to potential buyers is also restricted in Europe.)

    The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 requires financial institutions to provide written notice

    of their privacy policies. Privacy policies are statements regarding how a company will use and

    protect a consumer’s private data. The law was broadened in 2003 to apply to a wider array of

    companies and consumer information.

    32

    The FTC requires a company to follow its policy or face severe penalties, even if the company is

    not required by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act to have a privacy policy. So, if you own a bookstore

    and you have a privacy policy, even though the law doesn’t require you to have one, you have to

    follow the FTC’s rules. And if you decide to change your privacy policy (for example, you decide to

    sell your customer list to Amazon), you have to notify your customers of the new policy.

    What kind of data do companies want on you? (Refer to Week 3, “Consumer Behavior: How

    People Make Buying Decisions,” and Week 4, “Market Segmenting, Targeting, and Positioning.”)

    They want to know where you live so they can apply data to know you better and create marketing

    messages more likely to persuade you to buy something. They want to know how much you make

    to see if you can afford a higher-priced product. They want to know about the other things you

    buy, because that will likely affect what you buy in the future. If you own a boat, for example,

    you’re more likely to buy fishing gear in the future. If you buy fishing gear, you’re more likely to

    buy clothes from Columbia. And so on. The more they know, the more they can create offers

    tailored to fit your lifestyle and to entice you to buy.

    Figure 2.7

    Your university may know a lot about you, including your health history, your financial

    situation, and even the car you drive—not just the make and model, but the specific car. The

    Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act requires your school to protect that data so your privacy is protected.

    Source: Wikimedia Commons.

    Some organizations also have data, such as your social security number, that criminals could use

    to steal your identity. For example, think about how much information your university has on

    you. It not only has your social security number, but your university may also have your financial

    information (through financial aid), your health information (through the campus health center),

    and your vehicle information (through parking fees). Protecting that information so you aren’t

    harmed is a huge responsibility for the university.

    33

    Privacy policies and privacy laws apply to both business customers and individual consumers. As

    we will discuss in Week 6, “Using Marketing Channels to Create Value for Customers,” many

    business buyers require vendors to sign nondisclosure agreements (NDAs) that specify what

    information is proprietary, or owned by the customer, and how, if at all, the seller can use that

    information. NDAs are not an online tool specifically but are often used in the normal course of

    business.

    What about the offering itself? When you buy something online, you don’t get to see it first, so

    how do you know it is what the seller says it is, and what can you do if it isn’t?

    The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) is a group of laws that govern commercial practices in

    the United States. The UCC defines many aspects of sales, such as when a sale actually takes place

    and what warranties buyers can expect.

    Warranties and Promises

    A warranty is a promise by the seller that an offering will perform as the seller said it would. The

    UCC makes a distinction between two types of warranties. The first is an expressed warranty,

    which is an oral or written statement by the seller regarding how the product should perform and

    the remedies available to the consumer in the event the offering fails.

    An implied warranty is an obligation for the seller to provide an offering of at least average

    quality, beyond any written statements. For example, when you buy a new car, there is an implied

    warranty that it will run as promised after you drive it off the lot. You also have the right to expect

    average quality for any characteristic of a product that you buy online, except for those

    characteristics specifically described in the online material. If you were able to inspect the product

    before you bought it, such as looking at it in a store, the implied warranty only applies to those

    aspects you couldn’t inspect or observe in the store.

    Where the law gets tricky is when it comes to other forms of writing. Marketing messages,

    whether written in a brochure or advertisement or stated by a salesperson, are considered implied

    warranties. Any written statement about what the offering does has to be true, or it violates the

    UCC’s definition of an implied warranty (and is therefore punishable by law).

    Keep in mind that a salesperson can create an implied warranty in an e-mail or during an online

    chat session if he or she makes a promise. Even if the salesperson says something that contradicts

    a company’s written material elsewhere, the consumer has the right to believe what the

    salesperson says. As such, the salesperson’s promise is legally binding.

    34

    Protecting Your Company
    As a marketer, you have an obligation to protect your company from consumers who might not

    have honest intentions. For example, have you noticed how you sometimes have to reproduce a

    strange-looking set of letters or words before you are allowed to make a purchase when buying

    something online? That simple step prevents automatic ordering by bots. A bot, which is short

    for robot, is a kind of program that performs automatic functions online. One of those functions

    could be to purchase products, such as tickets to a highly desirable sporting event, which the

    buyer can then resell at a higher price. Or a bot could be used to obtain many units of a freebie

    that someone can then resell. Bots can be used for many illicit purposes; a good marketer

    anticipates their uses and creates barriers to prevent being taken advantage of.

    A legal tool to help protect your company is the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. This act is

    designed to prevent copyrighted material from being pirated online. While prominent cases

    involve downloading music, your marketing information is also included. When you find a good

    way to market your offerings online, a competitor can’t just steal your communications and insert

    its name. You are protected by this act.

    What is very difficult to protect against is phishing, or soliciting personal information in order to

    steal an identity and use it to generate cash fraudulently. However, you may find it reassuring to

    your customers to remind them of your privacy policies and your customer contact practices. For

    example, a bank may remind its customers that it will never ask for a social security number by e-

    mail. Making sure your customer contact policies protect your customers can also help protect

    them against phishing from someone pretending to be you or your company.

    2 . 5 K E Y T A K E A W A Y

    Sugging is selling under any phony type of front. It includes posting fake reviews about products online.
    Sugging damages a seller’s trust among buyers and should never be done. US laws govern how products
    can be marketed, both those that are sold electronically and through more traditional channels.
    Companies must have permission before they can send you spam, and they have to tell you how they will
    gather and use your personal information. Warranties—expressed and implied—are binding no matter
    how companies deliver them. Good marketers anticipate less-than-honest activities by individuals and
    take steps to prevent them. Bots are online robots that some people use to take advantage of marketers.

    W E E K 3 P R E V I E W

    Week 3 continues with our focus on the customer. Next week, we are going to uncover how consumers
    think when making purchase decisions—or decisions not to purchase. This is called consumer behavior.
    We will be looking at the process we use in our heads (and sometimes on a napkin) to outline our criteria
    for a purchase decision, how we seek information, and how we evaluate our criteria. We will discover that
    some of our thought processes are rational and some are very irrational. Also explored during Week 3 are

    35

    the things that go on inside consumers’ minds as they process the information and move through the
    stages of the buying process. These can be social or psychological. Since we are all consumers, you should
    enjoy this material and gain greater insight into your own buying decisions.

    Week 2 References

    Overview
    Ramani, G., & Kumar V. (2008). Interaction orientation and firm performance. Journal of Marketing, 72
    (1), 27–41.

    Section 2.1
    Abell, J. C. (2009, June 12). Dude—Dell’s making money off Twitter.
    Wired. Retrieved August 24, 2009, from http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/06/dude-%E2%80%94-
    dells-making-money-off-twitter

    American Marketing Association (AMA). Dictionary. Retrieved January 29, 2015, from marketing-
    dictionary.org.

    Beal, A. (2009, April 24). Forrester predicts huge growth for social media marketing. Retrieved August 26,
    2009, from http://www.marketingpilgrim.com/2009/04/forrester-social-media-growth.html

    Marketing Weekly News. (2009). Give real; Leading online gifting service Givereal.com partners with
    Bombay Sapphire to serve up the perfect summer cocktail through the web. 225.

    Section 2.2
    Ireson, N. (2008, September 3). Lexus first in owner loyalty survey, Saab last. Retrieved July 13, 2009, from
    http://www.motorauthority.com/jd-power-lexus-first-in-luxury-owner-loyalty-saab-last.html

    Reicheld, F., & Teal, T. (2001). The Loyalty Effect: The Hidden Force Behind Growth, Profits and Lasting
    Value. Boston: Harvard Business Press.

    Reinartz, W. J., & Kumar, V. (2003). The impact of customer relationship characteristics on profitable
    lifetime duration. Journal of Marketing, 67(1), 77–96.

    Tanner Jr., J. F., & Morris, D. (2009, March). Customer empowerment. BPT Partners, LLC.

    Van Yoder, S. (2008). Cause-related marketing. Retrieved October 10, 2008, from
    http://www.streetdirectory.com/travel_guide/5529/marketing/cause_related_marketing.html

    Section 2.3
    Lambert-Pandraud, R., Laurent, G., & Lapersonne, E. (2005). Repeat purchasing of new automobiles by
    older consumers: Empirical evidence and interpretations. Journal of Marketing, 69(2), 97–106.

    Levy, M., & Weitz, B. (2009). Retailing management (7th ed.). Burr Ridge, IL: McGraw-Hill.

    Lou, X., & Homburg, C. (2008). Satisfaction, complaint, and the stock value gap. Journal of
    Marketing, 72(3), 29–43.

    Reicheld, F. (2006). The ultimate question: Driving good profits and true growth. Boston: Harvard Business
    Press.

    36

    Souki, G., & Filho, C. G. (2008). Perceived quality, satisfaction and customer loyalty: An empirical study in
    the mobile phones sector in Brazil. International Journal of Internet and Enterprise Management, 5(4),
    298–314.

    Section 2.4
    Thompson, B. (2015, January 21). Best principles to practice for effective CRM. Businessweek.com.
    Retrieved January 21, 2015, from
    http://www.businessweek.com/adsections/care/relationship/crm_effective.htm

    Section 2.5
    Neff, J. (2007). Spate of recalls boost potency of user reviews. Advertising Age, 78(43) 3–4.

      Week 2
      Customer Satisfaction, Loyalty, Empowerment, and Management
      2.1 Customers and Customer Communities
      Influencer Panels
      Organizing and Managing Influencer Panels
      Social Networking Sites and Other Social Media
      2.1 KEY TAKEAWAY
      2.2 Loyalty Management
      Behavioral Loyalty
      Attitudinal Loyalty
      Loyalty Programs
      The Positive Effects of Loyalty Programs
      The Longevity Effect
      The Blocker Effect
      The Spreader Effect
      The Accelerator Effect
      Criteria for Successful Loyalty Programs
      Good Performance by a Company
      Responsiveness by a Company
      Shared Identity Among Participants
      Clear Benefits
      Community Development
      2.2 KEY TAKEAWAY
      Customer Satisfaction Defined
      Customer Satisfaction Strategies
      Measuring Customer Satisfaction
      Complaint Management Strategies
      Handling the Complaint Process
      2.3 KEY TAKEAWAY
      2.4 Customer Relationship Management
      2.4 KEY TAKEAWAY
      2.5 Ethics, Laws, and Customer Empowerment
      Legal Requirements
      Privacy Laws
      Warranties and Promises
      Protecting Your Company
      2.5 KEY TAKEAWAY
      Week 3 Preview

    Week 2 Learning Activities.html
    WEEK 2

    1.  Customers and Customer Communities

    Just what is the difference between a need and a want? As the course readings explain, a need doesn’t become a want until a customer has the resources to fill the need. Can you distinguish between your own needs and wants? Think of something you need and something you want. What resources will it take for the need to become a want? 

    Amazon’s web site offers a “wish list.” It may be in the shopping cart area. Amazon wants to keep track of items you may potentially buy when you have the resources. The company is trying to help you turn needs into wants.

    Listen to this audio clip with Laura Carros, a JCPenney executive responsible for many of the company’s customer initiates who can give us some insight into the practical implications of customers and communities. http://app.wistia.com/embed/medias/376e05324b

    Then, listen to Carros again as she talks about how she developed the Ambrielle customer communities. http://app.wistia.com/embed/medias/6c19a49421

    2.  Satisfaction, loyalty & empowerment

    In one of this week’s discussion topics you will have the opportunity to review some corporate websites.  You will visit the three web sites to choose one to evaluate. You will have to go through more than just the main landing page—click on the current contests and other pages to get the data you need.

    What does this company do to build customer loyalty? To build community? Are customers are empowered to do anything here? Are there opportunities for customer feedback?  Anything else? Does the company partner with other organizations to leverage the loyalty those other companies enjoy with their customers? If so, what organizations?  What partnering activities is the company doing with those organizations? Are you a loyal customer of this company or might be consider becoming one? Why or why not? 

    What’s your favorite loyalty program? Why? What effect does it have on you, e.g., blocker, spreader, or accelerator affect? Does the loyalty program pass the criteria for successful loyalty programs outlined in the Week 2 readings?

    Many companies use cause-related marketing to build their customer relationships. You see this when a product or service indicates a portion of each sale will benefit a specific charity. 

    Check out the examples in the Week 2 Discussion Topic 2 and share your findings from this search.

    3.  Customer Satisfaction

    Review the customer satisfaction scores in Table 2.2 of the Week 2 readings. What do you think? Do you find these particularly low, and would you prefer to see them close to 100 percent? Why do you think they fluctuate? Can any company ever achieve 100 percent customer satisfaction? As a customer, what are some of the sources you use to assess customer satisfaction with a product or service you are considering? How dependable do you view that source? (Think of consumer sources like Consumer Reports, or customer-provided reviews, etc.)

    Required: Post your thoughts on this topic in Week 2 Discussion Topic 3. Feel free to comment on classmates’ posts, especially if they already identified one of your sources for customer satisfaction.

    Latest available data (updated May 2018):

    National ACSI = 76.7
    (weighted average of all sectors and industries)

    National, Sector, and Industry Results

    The American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) produces customer satisfaction results on four levels: national, sector, industry, and company/agency. The diagram shows the 46 industries and 10 sectors that comprise the Index, as well as the most recent scores available at the national, sector, and industry levels.

    Banks 81

    Credit Unions 82

    Financial Advisors 81

    Internet Investment Services 79

    Health Insurance 73

    Life Insurance 78

    Property & Casualty Insurance 80

    Finance and Insurance
    77.2

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Telecommunications
    and
    Information
    71.7

    70 Fixed-Line Telephone

    62 Internet Service Providers

    62 Subscription Television 

    68 Video on Demand

    75 Video Streaming

    74 Wireless Telephone 

    78 Computer Software

    75 Internet News & Opinion

    76 Internet Search Engines & Information

    73 Internet Social Media

             

    Apparel 80

    Athletic Shoes 80

    Breweries 84

    Food Manufacturing 81

    Personal Care & Cleaning Products 80

    Soft Drinks 84

    Manufacturing/
    Nondurable Goods
    81.1

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Retail Trade
    78.1

    77 Department & Discount Stores

    76 Gasoline Stations

    79 Health & Personal Care Stores

    82 Internet Retail

    79 Specialty Retail Stores

    79 Supermarkets

             

    Federal Government 69.7

    Local Government 71.3

    Public Administration/
    Government
    70.5

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Health Care
    and
    Social Assistance
    76.5

    77 Ambulatory Care

    76 Hospitals

             

    Automobiles & Light Vehicles 81

    Cellular Telephones 79

    Household Appliances 80

    Personal Computers 77

    Televisions & Video Players 85

    Manufacturing/
    Durable Goods
    80.9

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Accommodation
    and
    Food Services
    78.0

    76 Hotels

    78 Internet Travel Services

    78 Full-Service Restaurants

    79 Limited-Service Restaurants

             

    Cooperative Utilities 77

    Investor-Owned Utilities 75

    Municipal Utilities 75

    Energy Utilities
    75.2

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Transportation
    76.1

    73 Airlines

    81 Consumer Shipping

    73 U.S. Postal Service

     

    Updated May 2018

    National, Sector, and Industry Results (May 2018) Retrieved June 15, 2018: http://www.theacsi.org/national-economic-indicator/national-sector-and-industry-results

    4. Customer Relationship Management (CRM)

    The goal of any formal customer relationship management program is to attract and retain profitable customers with high customer lifetime value. Can you identify a company for which you might be considered a most valuable customer, where you are in Level 1 of their customers (See Figure 2.5, Levels of Customers Based on Profitability)? 

    In this week’s writing assignment, you will get a chance to calculate a customer lifetime value. This will be a simple calculation, but if you want more details about the calculation or perhaps use it for your writing assignment, visit https://blog.ometria.com/how-to-calculate-customer-lifetime-value-clv-in-ecommerce. This site will give you an example of lifetime value using Starbucks as an example. Note all the variables that go into lifetime value calculations.

    Required: Record your lifetime value calculation and discuss how the company tries to retain and grow your business as a most valuable customer in Week 2 Discussion

    5. Ethics, Laws, and Customer Empowerment

    All companies now have privacy policies in an effort to assure customers they are protecting their privacy. Yet, there are frequent and far-reaching damages caused by hackers who are able to access our private data such as the Target data breach discussed in the following article: 

    McGrath, M. (2014). “Target Data Breach Spilled Info on As Many As 70 Million Customers.” 

    One way Apple is trying to help us protect our privacy above and beyond any companies’ individual privacy policy is the use of Apple Pay, a service that adds another level of security to any purchases made using a debit or credit card the consumer has registered with Apple Pay. 

    What do you think? Were you a “target” of the Target data breach? How much damage did it cause you? How safe do you think companies keep our private data and what do you think companies can do to protect us even more? Are you using Apple Pay for your purchases? 

    Recap of Week 2 Learning Activities

    Since you are a customer, you should find the Week 2 Learning Activities easy to digest. The main point is to understand that customers are now empowered to participate in the marketing process. Inasmuch as customers should be at the center of all marketing activities, our role is key to ensuring we get the products and services we want and need.

     

     

     

     

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