Business Corner
STRATEGIES & ANALYSIS
BY PHIL PHILLIPS, PH.D.
CONTRIBUTING EDITOR
PHILLIPS@CHEMARKCONSULTING.NET
GROWTH: the keystone to sustainable
profitability
Measuring the
importance
of customer
loyalty.
The paint and coatings industry has been negatively affected by the severe general economic recession.
We all know the symptoms: major multi-industry wide job losses in concert with significant budget cuts. In these very bad
sometimes devastating times, to satisfy the
abstract thinking stakeholders, personnel
cuts are made on the short term that are
either the wrong ones or they are too deep
or many times both.
In a recent article by Dr. Rosabeth Moss
Kanter, she states that “in a recession, put
everyone in marketing.” Kanter delineates five
suggestions:
• Increase customer contact and communications. Customers cannot play second fiddle to
support elements such as banks and investment analysts;
• Start looking for new markets now. All companies need the flexibility to move quickly into
promising markets. Adjacent markets where
technologies can match and growth is greater
than the incumbent segments. Seek the aid of
employee teams for ideas;
• Invest in employee morale. When morale is
down, fear sits in and worries reduce productivity and attention to customers suffer;
• Emphasize and reward small wins.
Everyone should be involved in undertaking
small improvements that can become large
positive impacts taken together;
• Stick with values. Cutting corners with customers doesn’t work. Marginal ethical tactics
such as “gifts” to a purchasing agent are short-lived tactics that many times have a reverse
impact on the relationship.1
Kanter was indirectly discussing “loyalty.” She
was talking about loyalty to and concentration
on being loyal to one’s customers and remembering what Peter Drucker said, “If you don’t have
customers, you don’t have a business.”
The other side of the loyalty success and
growth equation is customer loyalty to you, the
supplier of important products and services.
LOYALTY & GROWTH
What is loyalty? Loyalty is the willingness of
someone (customer, employee or friend) to
make an investment or personal sacrifice in
order to strengthen a relationship. For a customer, it can mean staying with a supplier who
treats him well and gives him good value over
the long term even if the supplier does not
offer the best price in a particular deal.
True loyalty undoubtedly affects profitability. While regular customers aren’t always profitable, their choice to stay with a prod-uct/service typically reduces the customer’s
acquisition costs. Loyalty also drives top line
growth. Customers who are truly loyal tend to
buy more over time, as their company incomes
grow or they devote a larger share of their
wallets to a supplier they feel good about.
Loyal customers spread the word about
their supplier. Word-of-mouth recommendations are one of the best indicators of loyalty
because of the customer’s sacrifice in making
the recommendation. That is, in making a voluntary positive statement about a supplier is
figuratively the equivalent to giving a part of
the recommender’s heart and soul to another
part of the value chain. They put their reputations at risk acting in this manner.
So, the important question is, when will a
loyal customer place their reputations at risk?
They will do so only when they feel intense
loyalty. Intense loyalty by a customer can provide the supplier with the opportunity to gain
new customers—at no charge to the supplier—
which is particularly beneficial as a supplier
grows, especially if it operates in a mature
industry, such as much of our own.
MEASURING LOYALTY