Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Giving Up On Customer Loyalty Too Easily



The best business leaders go to work every day to focus their business on earning the loyalty of their customers. They understand that long-term sustainability and profitability requires earning and retaining customers. The goal is to get customers to love them, to need them, to get excited and emotional about them, and to want their companies to succeed and flourish. To do this, business leaders have to understand what their customer’s value in all aspects of the relationship, and deliver it. According to the business press, on-line shoe and clothing retailer Zappos is in this space today.

There are a number of legendary companies that have done this for their customers at one time or another, usually under the leadership and guidance of entrepreneurial visionaries. Some that come to mind are: Walt Disney and The Walt Disney Company; Akio Morita and Sony Corporation; Thomas J. Watson and IBM; Steve Jobs and Apple Computers; Jeff Bezos and amazon.com; Howard Schultz and Starbucks; Richard Branson and Virgin Group; Isadore Sharp and Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts; and Anita Roddick and The Body Shop. Of course, there are thousands of other private corporations and sole proprietors who have earned the loyalty and dedication of their customers because they have set customer loyalty as part of their guiding vision and business purpose. Bose Corporation and The Teaching Company are two that come immediately to mind.

Earning customer loyalty is among the most difficult of all business objectives and one of the highest achievements of any business. It requires relentless innovation, integration and coordination in the areas of: understanding the customer’s value-drivers; design of business strategies and processes; applied human knowledge and capabilities; financial management; and corporate culture. Managers must be ever vigilant and aware that as each of these components advance and change, the other components must be adjusted accordingly. A high degree of corporate vitality and operational flexibility within an overarching framework of well defined guiding aspirational and operational principles is required to ensure that fidelity to profitably fulfilling customer values remains the guiding purpose of corporate action. 

Certainly not all executives have the desire or ability to organize and operate in ways that achieve customer loyalty. For many I suspect the concept is too lofty and abstract. Instead they strive for a lesser and often contextually equally valid objective to run an effective business to maximize sales, serve customers in an appropriate and respectful manner through adequately trained and motivated staff, and earn a profit for owners to the best of their ability. But this is a lesser effort that will likely result in nothing better than competitive parity rather than competitive advantage. It is in these types of businesses that we most often find customer reward programs offered under the guise of “loyalty programs” being used as a marketing and behavioural modification tool to add some more value to the total business offering or ‘value proposition.’ 

There is nothing wrong with such programs. If run well, they can increase customer satisfaction and profits. But often the loyalty programs being offered to induce customer loyalty are zombie-like copycat programs that provide no additional loyalty, no competitive advantage, and no additional profit. When given the opportunity to join a program for free and earn a discount or future reward, many people will do so. They will join your program and they will join the competitor’s program. And in the end, customers will continue to shop across a spectrum of businesses and brands, their preferences based on a number of unknown and unmeasured variables. Usually such programs result in higher consumer prices or lower company profits, and customers who are indifferent with respect to the operation and value of the ‘loyalty’ programs to which they belong.

When the focus of management is on reward program participation – or worse yet, number of members – rather then earning customer loyalty, the business will never find out why customers prefer to shop across competing brands and participate in multiple loyalty/rewards programs. Management will focus on increasing the number of members and card usage because they are easily measured, and will speak in the boardroom as if their loyalty club members and cardholders are actually loyal customers.

Borders Books is reported to have had 40 million members in their loyalty program when they filed for bankruptcy in 2011, but they didn’t have 40 million loyal customers. Their “loyalty” members were buying most of their books elsewhere.

There is only one way to build a world-class business: focus on understanding the needs of customers to win their loyalty and build an integrated system that can deliver everything they desire in a manner better than any competitive alternative. Earning customer loyalty is amongst the highest moral achievements of a business because it requires the creation and delivery of human values through rational human action. This should be an aspirational goal of every executive and their staff. Yet too often marketing executives and managers continue to focus on signing up new loyalty program members, and offering them discounts and incentives for spending, and ignoring the really hard job of creating unique value for customers that results in increased loyalty.