Feature
posted 1 Sep 2000 in Volume 4 Issue 1
This
time it’s personal
How well do you know your clients? Terry Wilcox explains how to begin
personalising customer contact, and how making the best use of customer
knowledge can convert online browsers into buyers.
Do you feel as if the more customers
you have, the less you know them? But no matter how many customers you have, you
need to understand each one and treat them as special. Any less and you’ll lose
them to your competition. It’s rare to have that personal relationship,
especially with the volume of customers that online business can bring, but with
today’s technology, it’s perfectly possible. It’s just a question of getting and
using customer knowledge correctly to personalise all contact that you have with
them.
Where to
begin?
As
with any major business decision, taking the long-term view on a knowledge
management strategy will help you decide what’s really right for your company.
There are many e-business vendors in the market selling solutions with all sorts
of three letter acronyms that offer instant results. But technology is only half
the equation.
A two-way process
The first thing to do is to
concentrate on the most important part of your business – your customers. It’s
easy to focus on initiatives and decisions that bring internal efficiencies like
installing Interactive Voice Response systems or workflow systems. Both these
technologies save money by speeding up the flow of work. But do they directly
benefit the customer? For your company to truly succeed, you must take advantage
of your customer and use the knowledge they have. So rather than simply managing
the flow of knowledge internally, you need to ensure that the data you gather is
used to improve external communications, which will directly affect the
customer. This will help you understand your customer and be able to do business
how and when they want. You can use the Internet as a base for gaining and
sharing this information, helping you create this customer-centric view.
Breaking down
barriers
The
next step is to make sure that the view your company has of the customer is a
complete one. To do this, you need to break down the internal barriers to the
flow of information. In many companies, customer data is often not shared as it
could be. How many times have you contacted a company repeatedly, only to find
that the sales, service and accounts departments have separate databases and do
not pass on their knowledge? So each time you contact them, they have to
re-learn your history. Once again, you can share and leverage this customer data
using the Internet. If information is available over a web browser to all
customer-facing employees, this doubling of effort never happens. It also avoids
the dreaded duplicated databases, since all databases are dynamically linked to
a central one, meaning that any changes are automatically updated throughout the
enterprise. This not only cuts the workload of some departments, it helps you to
know your customer fully so you can offer them a better service.
You’ve also got
to consider the level of information that you offer your online customers. Very
often the detail given on products is sketchy or inconsistent. The flow of
information from your company to its eventual publication on a website can be
like a game of Chinese whispers. The more people there are, the less accurate
the end result is. At the end of the day, the standard of information on your
website has got to be the same as your printed material.
They’re the same
customers
It’s easy to separate the online and offline businesses, treating the
two as different parts. And it is easy to forget the lessons learned offline,
meaning you have to learn them all over again. But whether you are doing
business off- or online, you are dealing with the same customers. One good
example of how not to treat online customers is to hit them immediately with a
long form to fill in. You need to gain information on the customer, but you
can’t be too aggressive about it. How many times have you gone into a shop to be
handed a questionnaire immediately? Never. So why is this suddenly acceptable
online? The answer is that it’s not. Far better to follow the example of The
Gap, who have greeters that meet you at the door of each of their shops who can
point you in the right direction. This lesson can be applied to the way you do
business online. You can use a customer’s existing buying patterns or ask them
where they want to go as soon as they step through the virtual door so that
their journey through your site is personalised.
So using knowledge effectively is not
just about technology. Firstly, it may involve a shift in your approach. When
seen as part of a complete e-business strategy, the rewards are
compelling.
Reaping the benefits
The most obvious reward is an increase
in sales. If your sales department has access to each customer’s full history
and buying habits, then their efforts will be a lot more successful. They will
be able to cross- or up-sell, either through personal contact, or via an
automatic email response. Because the information they provide is timely and
relevant, customers will be more responsive. For example, if a customer has just
bought a mobile phone, the order confirmation can be emailed with a note at the
bottom suggesting a spare battery, a different cover or an alternative tariff
rate.
This is a
classic example of how information shared between departments, in this case the
sales and service departments, can be used to good effect. The success can also
extend to marketing. A precisely targeted marketing campaign is bound to be more
successful than a scatter gun approach.
Filling the virtual
trolley
Using
customer knowledge correctly can also increase your sales by helping you to turn
browsers into online buyers. There are three options – your company can lead
customers to a frequently asked question (FAQ) area on the website, you can
provide assistance virtually or you can offer contact with a customer service
representative, in person. All of these options process information to provide
real time help so that your customer makes the purchase they require.
The FAQ is
perhaps the first example of using data to provide online customer self-service.
When you have a query on a website, you can select the relevant FAQs to set
yourself back on the right track. This may help in some situations, but often
you can’t understand the answer, or it doesn’t fit your situation exactly. Doing
business on the Internet is all very well, but sometimes you actually need
assistance in narrowing down the choices, which can’t always be done via an FAQ.
Are you being
served?
This
is where technology can help customers, in the form of a virtual sales
assistant. They can step in on request and ask you questions about what you
want, so that they can direct you to the relevant products. They draw on the
personalised information that your company holds on each customer to offer them
informed advice. At each decision, they ask the customer the criteria involved
in their choice, and present the possible solutions.
The technology behind this, developed
using expertise from the MIT, is perhaps the most sophisticated use of knowledge
management in an e-business environment. Using Trusted Advisor technology,
customer information is sub-divided either demographically or physcographically
into segments where similar buying preferences or lifestyle factors can be
identified. A Bayesian engine can then estimate a ‘best product fit’ based on
these microsegments. The engine then works to fit the request to certain product
attributes, such as size or cost, to produce a relevant answer. Since this
process is complex, the development process involves a learning curve of several
months to ‘get up to speed’ with the company’s products and customer’s requests.
To see a virtual
assistant in action, you can log on to Proflowers.com where Emily will help you
choose flowers for a bouquet, or Compusa.com where Jill will help you choose a
laptop. Jill is praised by customers, as she gives them timely, fair advice
about what best suits their needs. In particular, customers feel that they
receive personal advice, but are not ‘schmoozed’ into buying products that
aren’t suitable.
Some customers will always rather deal with a real person. If you have a
web-based call centre, you can offer them this option. Service representatives
can view a customer’s progress in real time and direct them to the right product
immediately.
Self service on the web
Sometimes assistance, whether virtual
or not, just isn’t needed. If a customer doesn’t want any help but instead is
offering or wanting to change information, why not let them do the job
themselves? A recent survey by the Chartered Institute of Marketing shows that
most customers prefer to drive a business relationship themselves, rather than
being contacted by the company. The more your company hands over the reins to
customers, the better the relationship. With an integrated e-business solution
that stores information on the web and links databases to dynamically update
them across your business, you can give your customers access to safe areas to
update their own details. Giving customers the opportunity to serve themselves
on the web like this both empowers them and cuts your call centre costs.
For example, if a
customer wants to change their account details, they can simply log onto the
website, access their account and change their address, tariff rate or service
plan themselves. One example is Sprint PCS, a mobile phone provider in the US.
Their research showed that a large number of their customer service calls were
answering the question: ‘How much time have I left on my call plan this month?’
Answering these calls meant that Sprint was actually making a loss on many
accounts. When Sprint PCS implemented a web-based e-business system, their
customers could log onto the Internet and answer their own questions. The
savings on not having to answer this question alone meant that the system paid
for itself within three months.
Loyalty is the key
Perhaps one of the
greatest benefits of using knowledge to personalise contact is that it reduces
customer churn. The usual statistic is that it costs six or seven times more to
sell to a new customer than to an existing one. If a customer has a bad
experience with your company, then they are not likely to return. Conversely, a
happy customer is usually a repeat buyer. If your customer feels known and
valued, then they will remain loyal to your company, returning to buy again and
again. It’s all about giving them a good experience.
This loyalty can open a few closed
doors for your company. Permission marketing is a hot topic at the moment. Push
technology means that you can send out emails to relevant customers, but many
customers find this intrusive. Pushing sales information to them may end up
losing you their business. But if your customers know that you will make sure
that the information is personally relevant, they will be more likely to choose
to receive those emails. Using the knowledge you gain from your customers to
personalise contact can help you develop a relationship of trust like this that
extends further than the usual merchant/customer interaction.
Looking to the
future
Information is the currency of the new economy. Every time a customer
approaches your company, there is an opportunity for you to learn a little more
about them so that you can offer outstanding service. The Internet is not just
another channel to market, it’s an invaluable business tool that has, and will
continue to change the flow of knowledge. Your business must adapt to this and
embrace it, otherwise you may find that your customers will start to look
elsewhere. Perhaps now is a good time to reflect: How much do you know about
your customers, are you using this knowledge fully to improve your service and
how can you do better?
Terry Wilcox is marketing director EMEA at Kana Communications.
He can be contacted via:www.kana.com
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