"People don't care how much you know until they know how much you care."
It's
interesting to see how many small businesses try as soon as possible to
follow the example of some large corporations to build an impersonal
"corporate image."
People actually
prefer to do business with people, not institutions. The last time you
called an organization with a problem, weren't you frustrated and didn't
you experience emotional pain while "going through voice mail hell" or
being transferred until you got connected with a person who could solve
your problem? Corporate leaders with good marketing sense understood
this.
When we think of Hewlett Packard,
we think of Bill and Dave. Lee Iacocca rebuilt Chrysler largely by being
the corporate spokesperson in commercials. No advertising has been more
successful for Wendy's than Dave Thomas telling us about his latest
fast food offering. According to John Sculley, former president of Apple
Computer, it requires 16 times the investment for an existing customer
to replace the profits of one who is lost.
Keeping existing customers is a key to running a successful business.
Why we lose customers?
According
to a study conducted by the Technical Assistance Research Project in
Washington D.C., 3% leave for convenience, 9% because of a relationship,
15% because of product, price or delivery problems, and 5% for other
miscellaneous reasons.
That leaves 68%
for the most significant reason: perceived indifference. Customers want
to feel important and appreciated. A key to build customer loyalty is to
build a relationship with customers/clients/patients where they feel
important and appreciated!
In any
business, but especially a business where there is contact with a
customer and a representative of the company either in person or on the
telephone, the best way I know to cement that relationship is through
personal notes - thank you notes!
Personalize
thank you notes by hand addressing the envelope and using a real
postage stamp. A hand-written note is best. But if your handwriting is
terrible, be sure to sign the letter in blue ink.
When should you write thank you notes?
When
you are getting started in business or in sales, you should write a
note after any contact, including meeting someone at a seminar or when
you exchange business cards. Learn to be sincerely appreciative and
express that appreciation. If you deal with a problem, apologize
personally with a personal note and be sure the problem is resolved as
quickly as possible, maybe even sending another note after it's done.
You
certainly will want to acknowledge major purchases and referrals with
thank you notes. You can sometimes exploit or manipulate people and make
a sale. But when you become an "assistant buyer," a friend who helps
the customer make transactions in his or her best interest, and express
your interest in the customer as a person, you are building a business
or a sales career that will provide for you and your family for years to
come.