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7 Ways Small Offline Businesses Can Use Online
Tactics To Keep Customers Loyal
by
Allan J. Katz - The Loyalty Coach
Many traditional
retailers, who perform services for
homeowners and other businesses, feel they cannot
use the internet as an effective marketing tool.
After all, you can’t do landscaping or dry cleaning
on the web. If you look at the internet as just
another extension of the service you provide or
strictly as a sales vehicle, you are severely
limiting your potential.
The internet is merely another marketing
channel to be used in conjunction with the other
elements of your marketing mix. Therefore, even a
retailer or service company can effectively
supplement their advertising and marketing by using
a web site and email as loyalty building weapons.
I was approached by a dry cleaning client who
wanted to take advantage of this powerful medium to
build ongoing relationships with clients and reward
customers for their continued loyalty.
While creating their marketing plan, I
developed 7 unique, online tactics for them to
utilize this medium to its fullest extent.
1. Auxiliary products
and services
One of the most effective tools on the web is
the concept of affiliate programs. Affiliate
programs are basically referral fees paid to people
who recommend your products. Amazon.com is the
founder and largest user or affiliate programs on
the web. Millions of web sites selling books, refer
to Amazon.com. Amazon.com then pays those referrals
for linking people to their site.
Retailers and service companies should use
this same concept both offline and online. Find non
competitive companies that share the same database
of similar customers. Have them send a letter,
postcard or email to their customer list referring
them to your product or service. When someone
orders you give the referee a commission. Online,
the more people who link to you, the higher you’ll
end up on the search engines. It’s basically like
hiring commissioned salespeople to spread the word
about your product or service.
A licensed laser hair removal company offers
discounts on their packaged hair removal programs
for clients who refer 3 or more people for
treatment. The hair removal clinic also visits
health clubs, beauty salons, day spas and cosmetic
companies and offers a rebate to the receptionist if
she’ll refer people for hair removal.
2. Joint Ventures
A carpet cleaning company recently approached
a synagogue before the Passover (spring cleaning)
holiday to offer its members a special package deal
to have their homes cleaned before the holiday. A
personal email was sent out to the membership saying
the synagogue had made a special deal with this
carpet cleaner to offer to clean 3 rooms and they
get the next room free. The carpet cleaner would
never have been able to penetrate this very slim
niche market without the personal endorsement of one
of its members.
Retailers and service companies can bring
products and services to non competing businesses
and arrange for them to endorse the products to
their existing database. You pay for the mailing
and split the profits. Dry cleaners can partner
with clothing stores and offer a dry cleaning
“package” for those people who buy a certain amount
of clothing. Buy a suit and get 3 months of dry
cleaning free.
3. Education through
information
What sets you apart from your competitors? If
you’re running traditional image building ads,
you’re losing out on one essential element of
advertising.
People read newspapers and magazines for the
editorial content. One way to set yourself apart
from your competition is to offer informative
reports and articles that entice your reader to
learn about the pitfalls and advantages of your
service. Since you’re providing the report, they
naturally will want to do business with you.
Retail and service companies should set up
informational articles on their web sites that
describe industry standards, ethical practices,
pitfalls to avoid, 5 things you must know before you
buy your next ???.
Send out frequent newsletters and articles that
talk about how you’ve easily solved the major
problem your clients have.
Both of these methods gather valuable
information and email addresses from potential
customers. Once you have their email address you
can then begin to correspond with them on a regular
basis and begin to build loyalty. Send
frequent offers to email subscribers to get them to
come into your store or take advantage of your
services.
4. Reward programs
According to Michael LeBoeuf, Ph’d, “The
Rewarded Customer Buys, Multiplies and Comes Back.”
Consumers today are bombarded with offers,
information and discounts. It is becoming
increasingly difficult to rise above the pack and
establish a profitable base of loyal customers. In
my book, “The Complete Guide to Retail Loyalty
Marketing,” I discuss the concept of
rewarding customers according to their buying
habits.
Most reward program are based on recency,
frequency and monetary elements. The most effective
measure of a client’s loyalty is past recency of
purchase.
People who have just bought from you are more likely
to buy from you again, if you give them the
opportunity. That’s why many mail order companies
use the “bounce back” to offer merchandise and
services during the time they ship the client’s
merchandise.
Traditional retailers can use this technique to
entice your new client to come back with a reward
certificate good for a limited time. One of our day
spa clients had a problem. They were redeeming
hundreds of Valentine’s Day gift certificates and
attracting hundreds of new clients for massages and
facials.
However, it was difficult to get these people to
return because they felt a day spa’s services were a
luxury, not a health necessity.
We designed a new customer kit inviting the new
client to return and enjoy the relaxation once
again. We described the health benefits or regular
massage and skin care and offered a reward for
coming back within 2 weeks. This promotion was so
successful, the day spa increased their service
business 42% over the previous month a year ago. For
a sample of this successful promotion, please refer
to the “Complete Guide to Retail Loyalty
Marketing” ebook at
www.loyaltycoach.com.
5. Frequent visitor /
buyer programs
Retailers and service companies can use their
web presence to promote their frequent buyer
programs and reward frequent visitors to their sites
and services.
Most of us are just too busy working on the
mechanics of our business to stop and launch a
proper frequent buyer program. Still, this type of
program can be something as simple as a punch card
system (buy 12 get 1 free) or a complex point of
sale system that tracks recency, frequency and
monetary transactions in real time.
Whichever you implement, you must develop the
back end promotional materials that match the
spending habits of your customers. New customer
kits, fading customer letters, birthday and
anniversary announcements, rewards, specials, etc.
Once these are developed, you can automate the
process of developing the one to one relationship
you need with each and every client in your frequent
buyer program.
You can use the web to keep track of points
systems or just something simple like explaining the
rules and regulations of the program, with a sign up
form attached.
The most effective rewards program is one that
issues rewards on a surprise, random basis, when the
client least expects it.
6. Feedback
Often, as small business people, we assume we
know what our customers want.
Unfortunately, we use our own filters of the world
to determine what we offer customers. Then, when
they don’t buy, we wonder what the problem it.
A more scientific approach is the simple
survey. Prospect and clients who use the internet
enjoy expressing their opinions. It’s a perfect
medium to gather information about what you offer.
Use the web to set up chat forums, surveys and
discussion boards so that your customers and
prospects can discuss issues pertaining to your
industry.
When you participate also, you become the expert and
begin to establish rapport with your visitors, which
eventually will lead to increased sales and loyalty.
Most web developers and hosts have forms
available to set up these types of important
research vehicles. Take advantage of them
regularly. Also, check out the business to business
premier networking site,
www.ryze.com
to get an idea of how to utilize this concept on
your site. You’ll also meet some very knowledgeable
and interesting people.
7. Database
Marketing:
The key to successful retail loyalty is
database marketing. Many small business
people today believe that the way to build
loyalty today is constant discounting. All
discounting does is lower your margins and makes it
more difficult to profit from customers. With a
proper database marketing program, retailers and
service companies can tap into the goldmine that is
right before their eyes.
A
perfect way to do this is to unleash an auto
responder that will automatically send out
newsletters, announcements, broadcasts and messages
to your customer list. It’s one of the most
powerful and automatic marketing tools to come along
in a long time. For a free trial of this powerful
marketing software go to:
http://www.cyberwealthautomation.com/app?pr=13&id=49182.
By
incorporating these 7 online strategies, traditional
small businesses can boost their sales and
maintain genuine rapport with customers both offline
and online.
P.S. If you enjoyed this
article feel free to
share it with your own list, add it to your site, your blog, or add it to your
auto responder series. As long as you leave it intact and do
not alter it in any way. Links must remain live in the
article.
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