Monday, February 26, 2007

The shift in focus from non-customers to customers

I sloped off skiing for the past week, so light posting, but am back refreshed and ready to roll. I currently have a "relationship" bit between my teeth, and am finding my thoughts dominated by one seemingly simple sounding proposition: that non-customers are getting less important than current customers. As people insulate themselves from marketing messages and are influenced more by what their friends say than what expensively produced marketing materials say, the trick for companies to shift their wares is to convert current customers into their evangelists. All very Cluetrain 101. However, what strikes me odd as how badly companies manage their current customers, preferring instead to focus on non customers. This pic and post in Creating Passionate Users sums things up better than I ever could:



Don't stop paying attention. Don't stop being kind. Don't gain 50 pounds. Don't stop flirting. Stay passionate, stay sexy, stay caring. Answer their calls. Unfortunately, too many companies are all candle-lit dinners, fine wine, and "let's talk about you" until the deal is sealed. Once they have you (i.e. you became a paying customer), you realize you got a bait-and-switch relationship.


Put that together with Doc Searls' latest thoughts on relationships, and I'm led inevitably towards my thesis - advertising for new customers is not as effective (depending on product, geography yadayada) as it was, but the simple key proposition to is to manage and delight the current customers. However, the current tools that we've got for companies to manage them are pretty minimal. In particular those tools that allow customers to interact with brands using their mobile. This is an area that I'm thinking about quite a lot, so would be interested to hear about solutions already out there aimed at improving the lot of the embattled current customer.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Boy, am I happy to find out that I'm not the only Nokian, who read the Creating Passionate Users blog ...

Keep blogging Stephen !!!

Alexandr3 said...

I agree with you. Here in Portugal is exactly the samething. The problem is.. every company do that now, so there's o real comeptition in terms of call centers etc.
I hate to call them because 99% of the times they're just part time students that don't solve my problems... and don't let me talk to someone who could solve them...

It's very frustarting...

Unknown said...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QFS0xl4_LAA

Cheers
Niall