SATISFACTION AND RETENTION: A KEY TO BUSINESS SURVIVAL (A CASE STUDY OF BERGER PAINTS NIGERIA PLC)
INTRODUCTION
It's difficult to over-stress the importance of customer
satisfaction. Sustained profitability is only possible through building
customer value and satisfaction. Profit comes as a consequence of building
customer value.
As
Henry Ford said:
"Business
must be run at a profit... else it will die. But when anyone tries to run a
business solely for profit, then also the business must die, for it no longer
has a reason for existence."
Value Defined
Something that satisfies a consumer's need or want has value
in the eyes of the consumer. Whether or not a consumer will buy a product
offering depends on whether what it costs them is greater or less than the
product's perceived value. Furthermore, when choosing between similar offers, a
consumer will choose the product that offers the biggest difference between
value and cost. Costs to the customer include not only monetary costs, but
everything associated to acquiring it, such as time and hassle. For example,
having to go and pick up concert tickets you've already paid for online adds an
additional cost. Therefore, even if your product is more expensive, it will
nevertheless be chosen if it carries more value in the eyes of the customer.
The difference between what the consumer perceives as the
value of the product offering and its costs, are known by marketers as the delivered
value. The goal is to ensure that the delivered value for your product is
greater than the delivered value of the customer's alternatives.
Customer Satisfaction Defined
Customer satisfaction is closely related to customer
expectations. Once acquiring a product, the customer will compare the actual
performance of the product with what was expected. The customer will have
feelings of pleasure if product performance meets expectations, and feelings of
disappointment if it doesn't. If actual performance exceeds expectations, the
customer is highly satisfied or delighted.
Customers form their expectations from a variety of sources
such as friends, past experiences, competitors as well as the marketer's
messages and promises. A balancing act must be made here. If you set
expectations too high with your messages, your customers are more likely to be
disappointed. If you set them too low, fewer will buy. The most successful
firms set expectations high and then are able to deliver performance to match –
at a profit.
Creating Customer Value
Given the importance of customer value, it's useful to use
what Micheal Porter of Harvard calls the value chain as a tool to find
ways to create more customer value. The value chain consists of company
activities that create value and add costs in an organization. The primary
activities in the value chain are:
- Bringing materials into the
company (inbound logistics)
- Converting materials into
finished products (operations)
- Shipping out finished products
(outbound logistics)
- Marketing the products (sales
and other marketing activities)
- Servicing the products
(customer service)
Primary
activities have secondary support activities which include procurement (or
purchasing), technology development, human resource management and firm
infrastructure. These support activities may be handled by specialized
departments or by multiple departments.
Your job as a marketer is to examine the costs and
performance of each value-creating activity, and find ways to improve in each
area. It's helpful to compare competitors costs and performance in the value
chain as a benchmark. If you can outperform your competitors you can gain a
competitive advantage.
It's important to note that internal departments sometimes
act in ways to maximize their interests rather than those of the company or
customers. For example, a credit department may take too long ensuring the
credit worthiness of a customer to avoid the possibility of a bad debt. During
this time, the customer is waits and waits, and the sales person becomes
frustrated.
The solution to this problem, is to ensure the core business
processes are managed smoothly, by using cross disciplinary teams to manage
core processes.
It's important to look beyond your own operations as well.
Finding competitive advantages beyond your own operations will increase your
chances of success. For example, Walmart's suppliers are plugged directly into
its inventory system so that they can track sales and replenish items as
needed. This reduces the chances of stock outages.
The importance of customer retention
Often, organizations focus a lot or their marketing efforts
on attracting new customers and far less attention retaining customers.
Satisfied customers are loyal customers. Here are some interesting statistics
from the Harvard Business Review (The Loyalty Effect by Frederick F. Reichheld
and Thomas Teal):
- It can cost 5 times more to get
a new customer than to satisfy and retain a current customer
- In a typical company, customers
are defecting at the rate of 10-30% per year
- The profitability of a customer
tends to increase the longer the customer is retained
A 5% reduction in the customer defection rate can increase
profits by 25% - 80%, depending on the industry
The consumer is faced
with an infinite number of choices in his buying behavior. He makes a decision
on whether to spend his money or save it. If he chooses to spend it, he has a
wide range of product choices available to him. Even within the relatively
narrow field of paint industries the consumer has, from five to ten different
brands of paints from which to choose in the average paint shop or depot,
obviously, no one brand is going to be sold for long if it stops giving the
customer what he wants. Hence, it is a total error for a marketing manager to
believe that the consumer must buy his product.
The consumer bestows
his favor on those who give him what he wants in product, price, promotion and
convenience. The penalty for disobeying his mandate is almost certain failure. There
are numerous illustrations of firms that refused to obey “Key consumer”,
thereby incurring his wrath. At one time, the Waltham Watch Company was held in
high esteem by watch buyers decided that the wrist watch was preferable to the
pocket watch and subsequently, the consumers changed their buying habit,
Waltham was a stubborn until the consumer forced it to do so by refusing to buy
pocket watches. Meanwhile, key consumer decided that he wishes his wrist watch
to do more than ten times, he wanted a fashionably styled time piece. The
majority of firm in that country immediately entered a competitive race on a
fashion basis, but not Waltham. His refusal to produce a properly style watch
eventually caused its failure.
Obviously, the
consumer seldom directly commands a manufacturer.
EDITOR SOURCE: Satisfaction And
Retention: A Key To Business Survival (A
Case Study Of Berger Paints Nigeria Plc)
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