The LEGO - Apple - Nordstrom Expert Path To Customer Loyalty:
Consulting How Great Brands Build Customer Service Engagement
LEGO retail store greeter,
Copenhagen © Micah Solomon micah@micahsolomon.com
Customer loyalty has a dubious
relationship to customer loyalty programs, customer loyalty cards, customer
loyalty rewards. Dubious at best.
Programs and rewards deserve
consideration in your marketing mix, but it’s a novel, even cynical use of the
English language for a consultant to tell a merchant that when a customer hands
you a card to scan at the register it’s somehow akin to having created a loyal
customer.
Take 23 seconds to think about it.
Apple customers are famously loyal. Nordstrom customers are famously loyal.
Southwest Airlines customers are famously loyal.
Yet there’s not a single shopper
I’ve ever surveyed who’s responded “I’m loyal to Nordstrom because of their
rewards program.”
(Instead, loyal Nordstrom customers
I survey say it’s because “I like my personal shopper”/”They delivered my shoes
to me at home when I was on crutches”/”They take back my returns, no questions
asked”/”I feel they have my back when something goes wrong.”)
And I’ve never heard: “I’m loyal to
Apple because of their [nonexistent] rewards program.”
(In my own case, my longtime — since
1981 — Apple loyalty was reinforced this year by the genius at the store at
Suburban Square who was able to resolve an issue with my beloved MB Pro Retina
within hours. )
And I haven’t ever heard:
“I’m loyal to Southwest Airlines
because of Rapid Rewards.”
So what does create a loyal
customer? Well, I think you can see a theme in my examples above:
Sometimes, it takes having something go wrong–and handling it correctly, rising
to the occasion in a way that cements your customer’s attachment to your brand.
What does “handled correctly”
mean? It means that your customer service problem-resolution process
successfully serves the emotional needs of your customers.
This means, in part, teaching your
staff to apologize and empathize immediately with the customer’s version of the
story, sincerely and without hesitation or equivocation, saving the idea of
‘‘right and wrong’’ for another time.
This can feel uncomfortable, but
it’s worth it: A response like this can make a customer more loyal than
if things hadn’t gone wrong in the first place.
I know this sounds a tad like
pollyannish hooey, so let me give you an example, featuring one of the truly
great brands of our time: the Danish company, LEGO. Then I’ll explain the
methodology behind the approach.
LEGO knows that every once in a
while some of its plastic bricks will fail to make it into one of its kits, or
that one of LEGO’s youthful customers will lose a few specific bricks and
become frustrated partway through a challenging project. Where the problem
originates doesn’t matter; either way, LEGO realizes that it’s a problem for
the company. I became aware of this when my ten-year-old was three quarters of
the way through a challenging LEGO kit modeled on Fallingwater, Frank Lloyd
Wright’s architectural masterpiece.
(LEGO kits are of an order of
magnitude more intricate than what was available when I was a kid,when yellow,
blue, and red were the primary — get it? — options available.)
‘‘Hey Dad, there are two bricks
missing.’’ Forgetting that my daughter’s twice
as smart as me, I cluelessly asked, ‘‘Are you sure?’’ ‘‘Yes, Dad, I’m sure,’’ she responded impatiently, and, of course, she proved to be right.
as smart as me, I cluelessly asked, ‘‘Are you sure?’’ ‘‘Yes, Dad, I’m sure,’’ she responded impatiently, and, of course, she proved to be right.
We looked on the web together and
discovered that LEGO had a convenient way to order missing pieces, gratis.
Super. But what was really super was the letter that came with the replacement
bricks. Some highlights from their letter:
Thanks for getting in touch with us.
I’m sorry there were item(s) missing from your new LEGO set. We try really hard
to make sure all LEGO toys are perfect, but sometimes a faulty one sneaks
through. Actually—controlling the quality of the toys that leave our factory is
a big job (about seven LEGO sets are sold every second!) . . . and we have a
whole department of experts (and machines) who test every LEGO set before it
leaves us—they even weigh every box to make sure there’s nothing missing. We’d
like to get even better at catching any faulty LEGO sets, though, so I’m
passing your comments on to the team in charge of testing. It’ll help them
make sure this doesn’t happen again. [Emphasis
mine.]
A response like this can make things
better–bring the customer closer to, more engaged with, and ultimately more
loyal to your brand than if things hadn’t gone wrong in the first place,
through its well-thought-out, customer-involving approach.
How can that be? Because it
brings a customer closer to the company: now the customer has gone through this
event with your company, has come out the other side, and feels that they’re
both on the same team.
Note, especially, how the LEGO
letter makes a point of including my daughter in the process of improving
things at LEGO.
****
Expect things to go wrong. Plan for
this eventuality, keeping the
emotional needs of your customer central.
emotional needs of your customer central.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/micahsolomon/2013/12/14/legos-expert-path-to-customer-loyalty-consulting-their-brick-by-brick-approach/
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