Beyond points and “likes”. True loyalty creates value for the customer and sustainable, tangible growth for the business.
More than half (53%) of consumers indicated that they were much more likely to buy from a local business instead of a national retailer during the COVID-19 crisis as a way to support local businesses and the local economy. This is loyalty. Loyalty to a community and a show of solidarity.
Prior to this crisis, customers have always shown their affiliation through their spending power. “Loyalty” strategies employed by retailers, vendors, and businesses have been around for many decades as well. Why? Because nurturing your best customers pays off. Let’s be clear, customer “points” programs are one way to entice purchase behaviour and social media “likes” are but one minor indicator but true loyalty is about so much more. Loyalty that can be defined as being part of a community requires:
This type of "knowing" can create incremental revenue increases (because the customer sees value) that in turn drive big results, achieving profitable, sustainable growth for the business. This is why it works.
Loyalty strategies blend the science of segmented customer management (the division of your market into meaningful and measurable segments according to needs, past behaviours and demographic profiles) with the art of marketing (creating meaningful conversations) to optimize net revenue.
When customer purchase behaviour data is combined with relevant, targeted, and personalized communications, it drives results.
Start by accepting a core fundamental truth: all customers are not equal.
Are you treating every customer the same way? If so, you might be under-serving some and over-serving others. This leads to lost opportunities to deepen relationships and win more business from deeply loyal and high growth-potential customers while investing time and effort into others who will never become frequent buyers.
It's important in this first step to understand where you’re at now. You’ll want to answer these questions as you develop your customer segments:
To get these answers, you’ll want to launch an 8-phase iterative process. We’ll look at the first three phases in this step:
Once you understand your customers a bit better, you’ll want to group them into clearly defined customer segments.
Customer segments need to reflect purchase behaviour, which may be a different approach than your existing segmentation. You’re looking for three segments:
The goal of step two is to create a strategy that allows you to “Move the Middle”: the art of driving incremental frequency and purchase volume from your Growth Opportunity Customers.
With your segments in hand, the next phase involves preparation for targeted marketing, communications, recognition and incentive strategies.
For your best customers, this means ensuring that they are appreciated and rewarded for their loyalty and their purchases. This group will become your brand evangelists, growing their loyalty over time and attracting new customers to you with their stories.
Too often businesses focus on the lower spend customers, investing significantly to try to boost their spend. The return on that investment is generally low. While you want to recognize all customers and treat them well, the biggest revenue opportunity lies with your best and growth segments. At Differly, we call this “Moving the Middle.” Here, you can strategically grow your customers' average basket size and frequency of visits, encouraging new product and category trials and incentivizing customers to add incrementally to their purchase behaviour.
The combined power of data and marketing are now at work.
If all is going to plan, your best customers are sticking with you and recommending you to others, and your growth customers are buying more and becoming more loyal. Revenue will be increasing, and as an added bonus, you’re learning about what works, so you can adjust tactics to optimize outcomes.
Don’t take your eye off the ball. This is your chance to learn and refine, and to target ‘lookalike’ customers - those who most closely resemble your Best Customers. At Differly, we use an 8-phase proven process to help our clients build loyalty with their customers. We’ve talked about the first three steps in the process already:
The rest of the steps in the process are much more tactical in nature:
Knowing who your best customers are is a great step toward improving your relationships and increasing revenue but steps 4 through 8, as outlined above, will allow you to engage your best customers and let them know you appreciate their business deeply.
The best time to reboot customer loyalty is now.
Even if you’ve been “on pause” most of the year, you can restart with a rebooted plan to understand, capture, and sustain the loyalty of your customers. Loyal customers will support you because you know them and serve them better than anyone else, even as you navigate new distribution channels.
Companies who implement data-driven customer loyalty strategies outperform those who don’t. The benefits of retention, growth, and attraction are within your reach.
Want to dig in even more? Download our e-book, Reboot Customer Loyalty and let’s talk!
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