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Time to Rethink Customer Loyalty
Most businesses
understand the tremendous value associated with highly loyal customers.
That is why businesses of every size and shape have implemented loyalty
programs to keep their best customers coming back again and again.
Unfortunately, this traditional loyalty model has grown tired and
provides little differentiation in the market today. As a result, it's
time to rethink customer loyalty.
THE LOYALTY FLOOD
Unfortunately for
many businesses, any advantage that was originally gained through loyal
programs has quickly eroded. While airline, hotel, and car rental
agencies were the pioneers of mainstream loyalty programs, other
businesses were quick to jump on the loyalty program bandwagon. The
result is a business environment where every restaurant, gas station and
pet store has some form of loyalty card or program.
As a result, having a
loyalty program is no longer a competitive differentiator. It has become
a mainstay of a business environment where loyalty programs have become
a commodity and a potential detractor to the overall customer
experience. They get in the way of business efficiency - often requiring
an additional step in the customer experience process. They have become
nothing more than another way to offer a price promotion. Loyalty
programs can also create disdain for customers that can't receive the
benefits or special pricing offered exclusively to program members.
WHEN LOYALTY PROGRAMS
BITE BACK
Some loyalty programs
miss the point entirely and can actually drive customers away. Hilton
Hotels, for example, has a long-standing loyalty program called Hilton
Honors that accumulates points based on the number of overnight stays at
their network of hotels. For a career traveler, these loyalty points may
continue to accumulate over a 10 or 20-year time span.
On the surface,
Hilton's loyalty program appears simple and straightforward; The more a
customer stays - the more rewards they will receive. In certain
circumstances, however, the fine print can really bite back. If changes
to a customer's travel habits keep them out of a Hilton property for 12
consecutive months, the customer will lost ALL accumulated points and
privileges. This policy, in effect, erases 20 years of loyalty and any
associated rewards or benefits.
The customer may have
been loyal and may even have been an advocate for Hilton. Penalizing a
loyal customer for lack of activity for 12 months will certainly damage
any good will that may have been accumulated over the prior 10 to 20
year time span.
IT'S TIME TO RETHINK
CUSTOMER LOYALTY
If companies want to
reap the benefits of true customer loyalty - it's time to rethink what
customer loyalty really means. Customer loyalty is not obtained by
holding a card, accumulating points, or redeeming rewards. Furthermore,
loyalty can not be measured simply by customer longevity, frequency, or
purchase volume. Customer loyalty is not a one-way street; it cannot be
determined solely based on what the customer has done for the company.
Instead, customer
loyalty should be turned upside down. Perhaps more companies would get
it right if they measured loyalty in terms of the degree to which the
COMPANY is loyal to the customer rather than vice versa. Companies
should strive to remember repeat customers, address them as individuals,
call them by their name, and treat them special.
Think about the
simple lesson of customer loyalty that was demonstrated each week on the
1980's sitcom "Cheers", the bar where everyone knows your name: At the
beginning of each show, the bar's best customer, 'Norm', would enter the
bar and proceed to 'his' barstool. There was no loyalty program, no card
to scan, and no 'platinum' level required to gain entry. Everyone indeed
knew his name, he had his own seat at the bar, and the bar owner knew
exactly what he wanted to drink. 'Norm' was indeed loyal, but the
establishment was extremely loyal to him as well.
In order to create a
competitive differentiation, companies should begin to rethink customer
loyalty:
Old School: "What has
the customer done for me lately?"
New School: "What have I done for my most loyal customers?"
SUMMARY
Individual customer
loyalty is a simple concept that is often overlooked in today's business
environment comprised of multiple touchpoints, channels, and markets.
When businesses get large and complex, the customer becomes nothing more
than a number, a body, or an inconvenient commodity. When that happens,
it becomes increasingly difficult to treat truly loyal customers
differently.
With the
overabundance of loyalty programs today that offer nothing more than
price discounts, it's no wonder that customers are becoming decreasingly
loyal to any one brand.
With so much at
stake, it's time to rethink customer loyalty.
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Robert Howard is
the Founder and Chief Executive of
ClearBrick LLC, a
leading provider of customer experience business solutions,
research, and online
customer experience
advice. |
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