Book by Peppers Don Rogers Martha
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Chapter One: One-to-One Marketing: What It's All About--The Four Implementation Steps of a 1to1 Marketing Program
At its root, one-to-one (1to1) marketing is a type of relationship marketing. But not everything that could be called "relationship marketing" is in fact 1to1 marketing. To be a genuine 1to1 marketer, you have to be able and willing to change your company's behavior toward an individual customer based on what you know about that customer and what the customer tells you.
So 1to1 marketing is basically a simple idea:
Treat different customers differently.
The actual mechanics of a 1to1 marketing strategy depend on understanding the various ways customers are different and how these differences should affect the firm's behavior toward particular, individual customers. While the idea is quite simple, implementing a 1to1 marketing program is not. One-to-one marketing involves much more than just sales and marketing, because the firm must be able to change how its products are configured or its service is delivered based on the individual needs of individual customers.
When a firm really harnesses all its resources to address the different needs of individual customers--to implement a 1to1 marketing program--we call that firm a one-to-one enterprise. One enterprise, one customer. A true 1to1 enterprise considers the cultivation and management of customer relationships to be the single most critical issue it faces--and recognizes that the strength or weakness of those relationships is the key determinant of the enterprise's long-term profitability and success.
Smart companies have always encouraged the active participation of customers in the development of products, services, and solutions. For the most part, however, being customer-oriented has always meant being oriented to the needs of the typical customer in the market--the average customer. In order to build enduring 1to1 relationships, a company must continuously learn from interactions with individual customers. It must dynamically respond to the information those interactions elicit. The enterprise must engage its customers--particularly its best customers--and ensure they never want to leave.
The actual, detailed mechanics of building a 1to1 relationship depend on understanding the various ways customers are different and how these differences should affect the firm's behavior toward particular, individual customers. It's an idea that is critical to success in high-velocity, highly competitive times. It recognizes that no two customers are the same and that smart companies can capitalize on these inherent and essential differences.
Who Is the Customer?
Most companies sell not to end users or to consumers directly but to intermediaries--purchasing agents, dealers, distributors, retailers, or resellers. Whether your company sells consumer products through retail outlets or factory machinery to the contracting officers at large industrial firms, defining the nature of all your "customers" is a first step. But even if a company doesn't sell directly to the end user of its product, it still has an interest in creating a better relationship with that end user. It is the end user--the ultimate customer or consumer--who supports everyone in a network of value-creating relationships.
Ford Motor Company sells almost all of its cars to dealers, not to consumers, but it must recognize nevertheless that the ultimate drivers of Ford vehicles think of themselves as having a relationship with Ford. Hewlett-Packard may sell expensive testing equipment to the purchasing agents at large microchip-manufacturing companies, but the ultimate users of these products are the bench engineers who develop new products and test current ones. Even companies largely thought of as consumer marketing firms usually sell their products, in actuality, to retail chains, while running tens of millions of dollars in advertising to pull consumers into these stores to buy their products.
Regardless of how the customer is actually defined, one reason so many firms are beginning to focus on 1to1 marketing is that this kind of marketing can create intense customer loyalty and, as a part of the process, help a firm protect its unit margins. These benefits appeal to firms all over the world, in every industry, because everyone's business today is threatened to some extent by declining customer loyalty and by a kind of "creeping commoditization" that steadily erodes margins.
Learning, Loyalty, and Profitability
You can make your own customers more loyal and more profitable to you--one customer at a time--by establishing a "Learning Relationship" with each of them, starting with your most valuable customers. Think of a Learning Relationship as a relationship that gets smarter and smarter with every new interaction. The customer tells you of some need, and you customize your product or service to meet this need. Then, with each interaction and recustomization you get better and better at fitting your product to this particular customer. Now, even if a competitor offers the same type of customization and interaction, your customer won't be able to get back to the same level of convenience until he reteaches the competitor what he's already spent time and energy teaching you. In effect, by implementing a 1to1 marketing program you are making your product more and more valuable to this customer through every successive interaction and transaction.
Four Implementation Steps for a One-to-One Marketing Program
There are four key implementation tasks that can be used as a guide for launching a 1to1 initiative: identify, differentiate, interact, and customize. These principles are roughly in order of increasing difficulty and complexity, although, as we'll see, there can be a good deal of overlap. Nevertheless, these four implementation steps can be thought of as a sequential process for putting a 1to1 marketing program to work:
1. Identify your customers. It's critical to know customers in as much detail as possible. Not just name and addressable characteristics but habits, preferences, and so forth. And not just a snapshot--a onetime questionnaire, say--but across all contact points, through all media, across every product line, at every location, and in every division. This is not simple "targeting." It's important to know and remember each customer individually, and to link information about that customer across the entire enterprise, throughout the duration of a customer relationship. If a company hasn't acquired the addressable identities of at least a fair number of its most valuable customers, then it isn't prepared to launch a 1to1 initiative. (Or you haven't defined your customers the right way. Your only option may be to try to create relationships, not with end users but with the intermediaries and channel members whose identities you do have.)
2. Differentiate your customers. Customers are different in two principal ways: They represent different levels of value (some are very valuable, some not so valuable), and they have different needs from you. So, once you identify your customers, the next step is to differentiate them so as to (a) prioritize your efforts and gain the most advantage with the most valuable customers and (b) tailor your firm's behavior to each customer based on that customer's individual needs. The degree and types of differentiation in a firm's customer base will also help you decide which 1to1 strategy is more appropriate for a particular business situation.
3. Interact with your customers. The next step is improve both the cost-efficiency and the effectiveness of your interactions with customers. To make interactions more efficient, drive them into more automated, cost-efficient channels. Push call-center interactions toward your Web site, and push personal sales calls more to the call center. To improve the effectiveness of each interaction, gather only relevant information, when it is needed either (a) to better grasp a customer's individual needs or (b) to more accurately quantify a customer's potential value. In addition, every interaction with a customer should take place in the context of all previous interactions with that customer. A conversation should pick up where the last one left off, whether the previous interaction occurred last night or last month, at the call center or on the company Web site.
4. Customize some aspect of your enterprise's behavior toward your customer, based on that customer's needs and value. To lock a customer into a Learning Relationship, a firm must adapt some aspect of its behavior to meet that customer's individually expressed needs. This might mean mass customizing a manufactured product, or it could involve tailoring some aspect of the services surrounding a product--perhaps the way the invoice is rendered, or how the product is packaged (we will be discussing the mechanics of mass customization in Chapter Six). In any case, in order to practice true 1to1 marketing, the production or service-delivery end of your business has to be able to treat a particular customer differently based on what that customer said during an interaction with the sales or marketing part of the firm.
These four principles overlap considerably. F...
A practical guide to implementing the one-to-one marketing principles that Don Peppers and Martha Rogers have made famous throughout corporate America in their bestselling books The One to One Future and Enterprise One to One.
Every day, all around the world, managers worry about the declining loyalty of their customers. Customers are being wooed ever more feverishly by competitors offering better prices, better deals--a process that has dramatically accelerated with the growth of the Internet. As information about customers becomes more plentiful and detailed, and as customers themselves become more interactive with the companies they buy from, business success hinges increasingly on creating long-term, profitable, "one-to-one" customer relationships.
One-to-one marketing is nothing short of a revolution. Dell, Cisco, FedEx, Owens Corning, American Express, Amazon.com, Hewlett-Packard, and BellSouth, among others, have built their success on enhancing customer knowledge and interaction.
Yet managers and executives today find themselves wrestling with the issue of how to become a part of this revolution.
That's why one-to-one marketing pioneers Don Peppers, Martha Rogers, and Bob Dorf wrote this book.
The One to One Fieldbook is the first hands-on manual for implementing customer relationship management programs, featuring step-by-step guidance on how to initiate, evaluate, and upgrade one-to-one initiatives.
Among the topics covered in the book: how to determine whether you're ready to undertake a one-to-one program, how to evaluate what different customers are worth to your business, and how to customize your products or services. It includes chapters on gathering customer information, on how to measure results, on how to use the power of the World Wide Web--and much more. Each chapter features checklists of things to do, activities to enhance one-to-one skills, and questionnaires to evaluate your progress.
A complete toolkit for companies implementing customer relationship programs, The One to One Fieldbook will help you identify your best customers, keep them longer, and grow them bigger--so that you can compete more successfully in the Interactive Age.
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