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From Resource, July 2004
Copyright by LOMA
Creating a Customer-Centric
Culture
Sure, everyone wants loyal
customers. However, when it comes to how to go about getting them, no one seems
to agree on where to start. But based on their extensive research of ‘loyalty
leader’ companies and their peers, Dr. Jodi Simco and Dr. Mark Royal of Hay
Group have identified the fundamentals you need to take your place among the
companies customers admire most.
By Stephen Hall
"Nowadays, having satisfied customers isn’t enough. You need loyal
customers."
As declarations of customer
service philosophy go, the above statement doesn’t exactly qualify as going
out on a limb. The importance and benefits of having customers who are so
enamored of your company and its products that they wouldn’t think of doing
business elsewhere is a concept that just about everyone agrees with on
principle. But when it comes to how to make it a reality, enthusiasm tends to
give way to confusion: Just how do you take your customers from
satisfaction to loyalty? And how do you go about convincing everyone else in
your organization that it will pay big dividends in the long run?
Those were the questions Dr. Jodi
Simco and Dr. Mark Royal of Hay Group, an integrated human resources consulting
firm, sought to answer for attendees of LOMA’s recent Customer Service
Conference. Simco, a consultant with Hay Group, and Royal, a senior consultant,
both specialize in employee and customer survey research, and their firm is
probably best known for the work they do annually with Fortune magazine
to help identify its "Most Admired Companies" and rank them, both
overall and by industry. In their presentation, titled "Creating a
Customer-Focused Culture," Simco and Royal talked about the work they’ve
done with various organizations to help them build a loyal customer base, as
well as the link they’ve found between business culture, employee loyalty,
customer loyalty, and revenue growth.
"First of all, it’s
important to ask ourselves just what our definition of customer loyalty
is," Simco said. "And based on our research, we’ve determined that
it’s when your customers have a strong bond to you and come back to you time
and time again. They view you as the provider of choice. So they’re not just
looking for the lowest-cost vendor, and if there’s a bump in the road or any
issues that arise, they’re going to come back to your company and not only use
your current products and services, but maybe start using some new ones and
recommending them to others."
Customer Loyalty: How to Create
It—And Why You Should
Simco identified two factors that
determine whether satisfied customers will become loyal ones: the outcome that
customers experience, whether it’s a product or service, and the process by
which they receive it. "We’ve all gone and bought cars, and the car we
bought might be the most wonderful car, so the outcome was positive," Simco
said. "But we might decide not to go back to the car dealership we bought
it from because they were a pain to work with. In this case, the process was
negative." People, in the form of employees, are part of that process, she
explained, and "one of our key messages today is that people are your key
competitive advantage. Your people are who developed those relationships with
your customers, and you really need to focus on them."
Furthermore, when it comes to
convincing people in your organization of the impact that customer loyalty can
have on your bottom line, the business case for building loyalty is quite
simple, according to Simco. "None of us are surprised that loyal customers
are going to repurchase at two to four times the rate of just purely satisfied
customers," she said. "And they’re going to enthusiastically
recommend your company to others. So they can serve as your best marketer—and
in a business such as insurance, where referrals are so important, I think
loyalty can really help. Loyal customers are also willing to pay more for your
services because they’ve developed a relationship with you."
Customer Loyalty Measurement:
Best Practices
"You have to know where you
are before you can know where you’re going," goes the old business
proverb. That wisdom certainly holds true for building customer loyalty,
according to Simco, who explained that the first step toward knowing how far you
have to go to create loyal customers is to determine how well you’re doing at
creating them today.
"We found that about 85
percent of customer loyalty leaders use surveys, many of which are online,"
she said. "And doing it on an ongoing basis is important. A lot of the
customer loyalty leaders don’t just measure it once a year; they measure it
regularly, some of them as many as two or three times a year at critical
junctures in their relationship with customers, so they can act quickly on
issues that arise."
It’s also critical to measure
the kinds of things that matter to customers, Simco added. "As part of the
process of developing and implementing a leading-edge customer loyalty program,
many of these loyalty leaders sit down with their customers prior to beginning
the engagement to find out what the customer expects from them and how they
define success." These measurements also need to take employee feedback
into consideration, she continued, to "determine what the facilitators and
barriers of customer loyalty are, from an employee standpoint. Employees are the
key contributors to customer loyalty."
Based on the feedback that
resulted from "loyalty leader" companies who built these practices
into their customer measurement programs, Hay Group has identified a few primary
factors about a company and its products and services that can make the
difference between customer satisfaction and customer loyalty. "The top
factor is value, as in ‘Is this company’s product or service having a
positive impact on my business? Do I have a strong return on investment?’"
Simco explained. In addition, the quality of a company’s products and services
is another leading indicator of customer loyalty. "Ease of doing business
is a big thing, too," she continued. "Are you easy to do business
with, or are you a pain? Do people really not want to work with you anymore?
Finally, your people are important, in terms of whether they embody
responsiveness, integrity, trust and professionalism."
Creating Customer Loyalty Through
Your People
From there, Dr. Mark Royal (who
took over for this portion of the presentation) made the case that when it comes
to customer loyalty as a competitive differentiator, people play a much larger
role than do products and services. "In today’s marketplace, where most
organizations are facing global competitors and a rapid flow of information,
competitive differentiation is hard to maintain because best practices translate
across an industry very rapidly," he said. "But it’s much harder for
your peers to duplicate a successful organization that consists of a lot of
highly motivated, highly engaged people who are focused on the customer. It’s
also harder to implement, even if you’re the first to do it, which is why very
few organizations have succeeded. But it’s precisely because it’s hard to do
for the first time—and therefore harder to replicate—that it provides real
opportunities for competitive advantage."
But before employees can deliver
the kind of customer service that inspires loyalty, Royal said, the organization
must establish a foundation that consists of three key ingredients. "First,
there needs to be a strong focus on teamwork," he said. "We find that
in organizations where employees perceive strong levels of teamwork, both within
and across business units, there tends to be a much higher level of customer
satisfaction. The second ingredient is training: If we want people to drive high
levels of customer satisfaction, we have to make sure they have the skills, the
knowledge, the expertise and the resources to deliver them. And the third
ingredient is empowerment, which means that organizations need to do three
things: empower employees and push decisions down to the lowest level; enable
people to make decisions and take risks; and make sure that people enjoy
freedom, autonomy and discretion in carrying out their job roles."
The Culture of a Loyalty Leader
To help clarify what separates a
"loyalty leader" company from its peers, Royal discussed a type of
research that Hay Group conducts on a regular basis called "targeted
cultural modeling." In it, teams of executives and employees at an
organization are given a list of 54 cultural attributes and are asked to sort
them on a bell curve, ranking them according to which attributes are most
emphasized in their company.
"We did this exercise with a
number of ‘Most Admired’ companies, as well as a matched set of peer
companies," Royal said. "And at one point, we asked executives and
employees to tell us two things: what the current culture of their organization
looks like, and what their ideal culture would look like."
Not surprisingly, the survey
revealed a sharp contrast between the culture of "Most Admired"
companies and their peers. "One of the things you see right away is that
‘Most Admired’ companies are emphasizing some of the things that we feel
should be emphasized on the employee side to drive high levels of customer
satisfaction," Royal said. "They’re telling us that they emphasize
teamwork at all levels of the organization, as well as taking initiative—pushing
decisions down to the lowest level possible, encouraging people to take risks
and make decisions, all of which supports high levels of customer service."
Meanwhile, the peer companies tended to be more inward-looking, the studies
found, with cultures that emphasized procedures, achieving budget objectives,
supporting management decisions, and respecting the chain of command.
In addition to the fact that
there is very little difference between the current culture of a "Most
Admired" company and the one it aspires to, the studies also found that
both peer companies and "Most Admired" companies were striving for
basically the same ideal culture. "For ‘Most Admired’ companies,
customer focus, teamwork, innovation, taking initiative, fair treatment of
employees —all of those elements are there in both the current and ideal
cultures," Royal explained. "So these companies have managed to make
the ideal real, to a large extent. As for the peer companies, you see a yawning
gap between where they are and where they want to be. And this gets to why
culture is a differentiator. The best practices are out there; we know what the
right answer is. But the real differentiator for "Most Admired"
companies is that they’ve managed to conquer the difficult task of actually
making it happen, of getting employees focused on these things that all
companies acknowledge they ought to be focused on."
Critical Success Factors for
Building Loyalty
In closing, Simco emphasized
several components that need to be in place for a customer loyalty initiative to
have staying power in your organization instead of fading away in a year or two.
"First, you need to incorporate customer loyalty into your strategy and
your mission statement," she said. "Next, you need to involve
employees, customers and managers in the process. At Hay Group, when we design a
customer loyalty survey, we always connect the focus group discussions with
customers. I could say, ‘Well, I think my customer cares about these five
things, and that’s what I’m going to measure them on.’ But maybe they care
about two other things, and you’re not even measuring those."
In addition, getting employees
and customers involved in the action planning is critical, Simco said. "You
need to understand your customers and recognize that they have different needs,
which require different surveys and processes for different segments," she
said. "Ensure that your customers see action in response to their issues
and concerns. Too many times they don’t, and that program will die right away.
They’ll never participate again, and they’ll probably be less satisfied than
they were beforehand. Use that action-planning meeting with your customers to
continue to build relationships. Hold employees accountable, set customer
loyalty targets, and finally, focus on your people. Don’t forget that when it
comes to having loyal customers, they’re your most critical asset."
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