By Chuck Wallin
A business plan is an important part of any successful undertaking and includes developing strategies and then successfully executing the strategy.
While there are financial strategies; marketing strategies, and human resource strategies, recently there has been implementation of customer strategy. A sound customer strategy will analyze the customer base to find out what customer needs are being successfully met with an organizations products and services.
What are we doing right?
Who is benefiting most from or services?
Are our best customers increasing their business with us or are they ripe to be picked off by the competition?
Which customer needs are not being successfully met?
Which needs are we best suited to meet in the future?
These questions will separate where you want to go verses where you are now. Customer analysis can often be surprising and serendipitous.
If a business has the infrastructure in place to be the lowest cost producer in their market, then obviously they should maximize their position. However, a closer look at how most profitable customers view price may be a prudent step.
If an organization wants to be the low cost producer in a market, their customer base better bear that out. If analysis shows that the most profitable (or fastest growing) customers segments are those that are buying because of special features, extra options or fast delivery time, then a low cost strategy may have a disastrous effect on profits.
Many businesses strive to look more like their competition in the eyes of customers. However, a better approach would be to create a customer strategy from their internal strengths.
If the competition is a large organization then it s a fair bet that they are unresponsive to special customers needs. These areas can be uncovered through customer intelligence.
Why are your customers doing business with you rather than a larger competitor?
If a business can focus its efforts on where they are doing well and lift the bar higher and be even better, they will have a sound customer strategy to move forward.
A company s knowledge workers should be heavily involved in the formulation of any strategy. If employees are very experienced at dealing with a certain customer segment (even though it may be small) they should leverage that strength to the max!
Employees form the social connection that extends beyond product and price built up over time through continuous interactions.
The key to effective customer strategy is determining where to best invest your efforts based upon what is important to your customer.
Determine what is the most important driver to your success with customers?
What action can you take to support that customer driver?
Where do you stand in relation to the competition?
Invest where the payback is highest.
This customer strategy framework provides an actionable approach to marketing that is customer centered but also recognizes the competition.
Celebrate the differences between you and your competition instead of trying to beat them at their own game.
About the Author: Chuck Wallin is a 20 year IT and business consultant with an MBA. He has done work with such companies as Barnes and Noble, CHASE, Arrow Electronics, and First Data Merchant Services. His web site
thecustomerconcern.com
deals with issues of Customer Relationship Management.
Source:
isnare.com
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