Managing Relationships
on the Internet
by Adina Levin
Losing Control
Do you worry
about the web? If you don't, maybe you should. Because the web is taking
away some of your control over your business, and giving it to your customers.
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Customers
shopping for cars today can't be taken in by the usual car sales theater
- they know exactly how much the dealer paid for the car. Five years ago,
when the salesperson went to check with the manager, who offered a "special
deal," customers had the uneasy feeling they were being manipulated - now
the customers know the score.
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As information
sources proliferate, it gets harder and harder to get a customer to pay
attention to your marketing messages. Unlike television, which people view
passively; the internet is an interactive medium; your customer is in charge
of the interaction, and has a trigger finger on the mouse.
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Barriers
to switching have fallen to the floor. To change suppliers a customer simply
needs to type www.competitor.com.
Customers have more knowledge about prices and products, so they're harder
to manipulate; customers will not sit still to listen to your marketing
messages, and customers can take their business elsewhere with terrifying
ease.
But change is seldom all good news or all bad news. Along with the change
in control, the web also provides businesses with powerful new opportunities:
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To attract customer attention by meeting their needs for information, entertainment,
and community
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To increase customer loyalty by providing better service
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To collect an unprecedented amount of information about individual customer
interactions and use this for profitable target marketing.
Managing Customer Relationships
How do you manage your web business when you've lost control over the customer
interaction? The secret is to manage the relationship with your customers.
You can use what you know about your customers to attract customers, to
keep from driving them away, and offer them increasing value over time.
You can use your increased ability to gather information to maximize --
and to measure -- the value of your customer relationships.
It's that simple. It's also difficult, because it involves doing business
in a different way.
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You need to compete by offering convenience and holding your customers'
attention - not simply by offering good prices.
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The best way to serve the customer changes over time. You need to keep
track of the stage of your relationship with each customer, and optimize
your interactions for each stage of customer lifecycle.
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Managing customer relationships based on the "customer lifecycle" is not
just a good idea, it is also a precise method of measuring success. Instead
of measuring success by the profitability of your product lines, you measure
success in terms of the lifetime profitability of each customer.
These are the basic ingredients of managing a successful web business.
Let’s examine them in more detail.
The Mechanics of Customer Relationships
Convenience, attention, and content
Because customer attention has become such a scarce resource, it is critical
that your web site is easy to use and contains relevant, useful information.
The web site needs to provide easy navigation for customers who are
coming to you with different levels of experience and different goals.
The same site must serve novices and long-term customers; people who are
browsing for a future purchase, people who are looking to make a quick
purchase, and people who are desperately seeking customer service. Building
in ease of use is an iterative process: you need to continually test the
effectiveness of your web site in meeting the multiple needs of your different
customers; and improve usability based on what you learn. This attention
to ease of use and to your customers' process will provide your customers
with a good online experience - which is the heart of your company's image
and reputation online.
In order to hold your customer's attention, it is important to consider
why the customer is coming to your site, and then to provide information
that is relevant to that purpose. The goal is to keep the customers coming
back. Travel sites like Preview
Travel hold customer attention over time with information about tourist
attractions and special events, book and music sites contain reviews, financial
web sites like E*Trade and Intuit's
Quicken.com
contain research reports and financial advice. Thinking about what the
customer wants to pay attention to often leads to broader business offerings.
For example, travelers are often interested in finding out about entertainment
at their destination; this might lead a travel site to provide sports or
theater tickets.
To provide ease of use, a good online experience, and compelling content,
it is imperative to manage your web site's content. You need technology
and processes that enable you to provide easy and flexible navigation,
to continuously improve your site to meet the needs of your customers and
grow your business, and to bring in fresh content that is compelling to
your customers. This is not just a publishing process, it is a business
process. Your customer's attention is key to establishing and keeping the
relationship. By analyzing and understanding your customers' interests
and processes, you will gain important clues to how to build your business
online.
Lifecycle and intelligent personalization
Once you have the user's attention, how do you turn that attention into
purchases and loyalty? Use the customer data at your disposal to conduct
target marketing and offer personalized service. This is how you can get
more money from your customers and compensate for price pressures.
The web allows you provide personalized service and to conduct targeted
marketing more cost-effectively than any other medium. You can gather user
data, and generate personalized services and promotions at almost no incremental
cost.
Personalization is a valuable technique -- but it needs to be used in
ways that are appropriate to the different stages of the customer lifecycle.
Intelligent and gracious use of personalization can help you provide better
customer service, engender more customer loyalty, and generate more revenue
per customer. But clumsy use of personalization can drive your customers
away.
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Some web sites make the mistake of asking new customers for personal information
before they can access the site's content. Customers don't want to be interrogated
before they enter a store in a mall, and the same goes for the world wide
web. Imagine a clothing store that asked your age and weight before you
could shop for slacks. Columnist Jesse Berst calls this approach "the bouncer
strategy." It is important that a customer’s first experiences of a web
site are friendly. Customers need to trust you before they provide personal
information. And surveys show that if customers don't trust a web business,
they fill out forms with false data.
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Personalization is sometimes discussed as if it were the ultimate goal
of web communication. The ideal web newspaper is the "Daily Me," consisting
exclusively of articles about collecting antique watches and updates on
the marital status of Julia Roberts. But people don't always want to live
in their own little room - seeing only the information they asked for.
Customers often want shared context, and community - as well as the ability
to view personalized information. Customers read The Wall Street Journal
because they trust the perspective and context created by the news editors,
not just because they can track personal investments and create a personal
page with selected stories.
Personalization is not one thing, but is a collection of approaches to
the customer. Each personalization technique has benefits that are useful
for particular business goals and at different stages of the customer relationship.
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With a new customer, it is useful to be able to adjust the content based
on what the user is looking at or searching for. In this way, the web business
can provide the user with relevant information, without knowing any specific
information about the customer's identity.
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Collaborative filtering technology can be useful when you have a few pieces
of information, based on the customer's behavior. For example, Amazon.com
uses collaborative filtering to generate book recommendations, based on
a customer's previous book purchases. Amazon doesn't need to ask the user
any personal questions in order to generate these recommendations.
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Rules-based personalization, which takes actions based on the customers'
behavior and stated preferences, can be extremely valuable in retail merchandising
to help cross-sell and up-sell products. For example, a person purchasing
hiking boots at LL. Bean's web site
could be offered a discount on a pair of socks.
Personalization is a powerful and valuable tool. But some of the evangelism
about one-to-one marketing can be misleading. Personalization is a technique,
not an end in itself. The goal is good customer service and increased customer
loyalty. Sometimes you can achieve those goals through personalization,
sometimes through creating interesting and relevant context, and sometimes
through creating or enabling user communities.
Measuring Success
The ultimate goal is profit - and it turns out that you can directly measure
the relationship between customer loyalty over time and your bottom line.
But this requires new ways of keeping track of your business activity and
measuring success.
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Success is measured by the lifetime value of each customer, not
by product line.
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Success is measured in terms of share of each customer's purchases,
not just in "market share."
Lifetime Value of Customer
It is possible - and on the web, increasingly feasible - to measure the
lifetime value of a customer - the profit that your company makes over
the lifetime of the customer relationship. This calculation has two main
components.
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The lifetime cost of the customer, including acquisition cost, operating
expense, and customer service
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The sum of the expected lifetime revenues of a customer
This model focuses your attention on the value of keeping customers over
time, and the role that service plays in creating profitable, loyal customers.
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Maximizing the "lifetime value" equation requires maximizing the rate of
new customer acquisition, the conversion rate of new visitors to buyers,
and the repeat frequency of existing buyers. Focus on the metrics gives
you new ways to evaluate the performance of your web business.
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The costs of acquiring new customers are substantial. This means that existing
customers are responsible for near term profits, and new customers will
only contribute in the future. It is not economical to build your business
only on first time buyers -- a continued customer relationship is critical
to short and long term profits.
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In a traditional model, profit is measured by balancing the revenues from
the sale of a product against the costs of making, selling, and servicing
the product. In this model, customer service is a cost to be minimized.
By contrast, using the "lifetime value" model, it is possible to weigh
the value of customer service against lifetime value of customer. It is
often worthwhile to provide additional services that maximize the customer's
value over time.
Customer Share vs. Market Share
An important strategy to maximize the lifetime value of your customers
is to increase "customer share" - to meet more of the related and ongoing
needs of your customers. Following this strategy, you build your business
by extracting more from each customer, rather than a little from many customers.
This strategy is different from the traditional focus on market share.
In the age of mass production and mass marketing, market share was a critical
metric in determining success in the marketplace. The market share ware
is a zero-sum game - winning the war allows a business to mass-produce
and distribute goods at the lowest cost, and to amortize the costs of mass-marketing
against largest number of customers.
Managing your business online requires you to consider both market
share and customer share metrics as the cornerstones for determining
success.
In a web business, market share remains important in the customer acquisition
phase of the lifecycle - each new customer you acquire is one fewer for
your competitor. In the customer retention share of the lifecycle, however,
customer share becomes the key strategy.
Amazon.com is an example of a web-centric business model that embraces
the notion of a customer lifecycle, market share, and customer share as
critical elements of their business model. They have built a $100M business,
becoming the worlds largest bookstore and taking customers away from Barnes
and Noble and others. Now that Amazon has a worldwide following of regular
customers, the company is beginning to sell music CD's to meet the related
interests of its customers. Amazon realizes that it may not in fact be
in the bookstore business, but is in the business of serving more of the
needs of its current customers.
The Big Picture
Though these changes may be scary, different, and difficult, you can ignore
them only at your peril. It is important to take a step back and realize
what these changes mean in historical context. The internet is transforming
the relationship between businesses and their customers, and it is transforming
the way that businesses are organized and managed.
In the years since the industrial revolution, the relationship between
businesses and customers has gone through two main stages. Mass marketing
succeeded by creating broad demand for mass-produced products through mass
advertising, which created positive emotional resonance and broad appeal
for soap, cars, and breakfast cereal. Over the last several decades, target
marketing has succeeded by identifying and meeting the needs of smaller
segments of the population. Target marketers have learned to analyze and
manipulate the hot buttons of specific groups of customers. Both of these
approaches assume that marketers have control over their customers' attention
and have the upper hand in understanding and controlling pricing.
On the web, customers have more information and control than ever before.
But marketers are able to compensate and profit by leveraging customer
information, and by managing their relationships with their customers over
the life cycle of that customer relationship.
The way that business are managed and organized is also changing fundamentally.
Since late 1800s, corporations have been organized by product line and
by functional division:
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Costs and revenues are measured by product line; allowing business to measure
their level of success at lowering costs, improving productivity, and increasing
sales for each category of product
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The business is organized by functional divisions - research and development,
production, sales, marketing.
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The main assets are inventory and equipment
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The goal is to maximize return on mass production and mass marketing expenses
by maximizing market share
On the web, the business needs to be organized and managed in a fundamentally
different way.
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The main assets are not inventory or production equipment; the assets are
the customer data and customer relationships
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Profits are measured by customer, not by product line. The key metric is
the lifetime value of the customer.
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The goal is to maximize share of customer, as well as market share
The result of all of these changes will be the creation of value and wealth
by profitably adding service back to the business equation.
Before the industrial revolution, many products were custom-made, and
all marketing was personal. Food, clothing, furniture were produced on
a custom basis, either by a family member, or, for the wealthy, by a servant
or hired craftsperson. The local shopkeeper knew which foods and other
items a household liked, and would make recommendations based each customer's
preference. Storekeepers dealt with a small number of customers, and kept
the information about their customers' desires in their heads.
Of course, before the industrial revolution, many fewer people could
afford more than the bare necessities. With the advent of mass production
and modern mass retailing, more people could afford small luxuries, but
the personal touch was gone. The web has the potential to bring back a
more personal approach - in a way that is still profitable.
Customers will quickly learn to expect new levels of personalized service
- their expectations will change permanently, and it won't be enough to
do business the old way. These changes that we are describing are long-term,
deep, and permanent - you can't just ignore them and hope they will go
away.
Conclusion and Recommendations
Just putting a catalog on the web and letting your customers shop online
is not enough to create a successful web business. In the short term, this
may reduce your transaction costs; in the long term, this will lead to
reduced prices and reduced margins. The techniques of relationship management
can give your businesses many new ways to compete, to add service and value,
and to create growth.
Relationship management involves more than the web, of course. It involves
other phases of customer interaction; in stores, over the phone, by mail.
But relationship management is absolutely imperative to success on the
web. It is therefore the place where many businesses begin as they develop
their customer relationship strategies.
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For the next three to five years, until high-bandwidth services are common
enough to allow the widespread use of voice and video online, the core
of the web will be text and graphics. The tools to attract customer attention
and to build on-line relationships are, therefore, content technologies:
content management, text-based customization and personalization, and text-centric
collaboration.
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It is important to use personalization intelligently - as a technique to
build customer loyalty and drive revenue. If you view a single personalization
approach as the goal of your web business, you will miss opportunities
to create value in other ways, and you may risk alienating customers.
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It is important to manage your web business using the appropriate metrics:
lifetime value of customer, and share of customer, rather than just market
share.
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Customer data is a key asset in your online business - it will be critical
to collect, track and measure customer interactions. Customer data is key
to driving personalization and measuring success by value and share of
customer.
Implementing these strategies is not quick and easy. If you attempt to
do all of these things at once, you will probably fail. Some things are
not possible with today's technology. Even the most successful web businesses
today, Cisco, Dell,
and Amazon, are only scratching the
surface of what can be done. In order to succeed and grow your web business,
you need to be flexible, in your strategy and in your technology, and prepare
for continuing change and improvement in the coming years.
The changes catalyzed by the internet are deep and permanent. Though
the change is painful, you can't stay on the sidelines. You need to move
now or be left in the dust.