Tag archive for "consistency"

Ten Tips for Creating a Profitable Customer Experience

Customer Retention, Employees, Marketing, Small Business, Small Business Marketing, Success in this Economy

Ten Tips for Creating a Profitable Customer Experience

3 Comments 29 July 2010

Andy and I are privileged in our work to conduct a lot of one-time consultations with small businesses who need a push in the right direction and an action list to help them take their small business marketing to the next level and create a more remarkable and consistent customer experience.

We also have the privilege to work very closely, literally in the trenches, to develop, implement and then teach a small number of business owners how to execute marketing strategies and tactics as well as customer experiences that will grow their businesses for the long term. In these relationships, we seek to be game changers – revolutionaries – who encourage “drastic and far-reaching changes in ways of thinking and behaving” when it comes to small business marketing and small business customer experiences. (If you’ve been hanging around here a while, you’ll recognize that quote as the dictionary definition of “revolution” and the reason behind the name of this blog.)

Looking for a customer experience revolution for your small business? Here are TEN posts from the deep archives of this blog that I thought were worth a second (or third) look when it comes to helping you create a profitable customer experience. These posts are FULL of great ideas and tips for small business customer service and experience improvements. Your customer experience, after all, is the most critical element to the short and long-term success of your business. It is the linchpin to your success. Click on the tip to read a full blog post on the topic (and don’t forget to leave behind your comments and ideas on each topic!).

1. Make sure your front-line sales team knows how to do their job – and the importance of it.

2. Make keeping customers (customer retention) and getting new customer referrals from your happy customers a primary focus.

3. Don’t assume anything about your customers. They probably do NOT know what to do with your stuff.

4. It really does pay to understand your customer. Customer feedback is critical (a bonus post for this tip!).

5. Use great photography in your small business marketing.

6. Use lighting as a cheap and easy way to improve your customer experience and to market your business 24 hours a day.

7. Pay attention to the auditory aspect of your customer experience. It matters.

8. Make shopping with you more convenient for the time-crunched shopper – which is all of us.

9. Don’t forget that marketing doesn’t stop when the customer walks in the door – it’s really just beginning.

10.   Last but not least, here are a few more great ideas for improving your customer experience. A revolutionary customer experience is possible for your small business!

Want more? If you’ve been trying to figure out how to achieve that in your business or are looking for a small business revolution, community or non-profit organization, please get in touch with us – we’d love to hear from you.

Photo Credit: advencap

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Consistency is a Customer Experience Requirement

Customer Retention, Employees, Marketing, Small Business, Small Business Marketing, Social Media, Success in this Economy

Consistency is a Customer Experience Requirement

4 Comments 28 July 2010

For all businesses and organizations, regardless of size, the experience that the customer has with your business from start to finish – from the moment they meet you via marketing or word of mouth until the moment they cease to be your customer – must be flawlessly consistent.

When small businesses pull off this hat trick of “consistency” especially well, they reap generous rewards on the bottom line. Consistency in a desired customer experience that makes your customers feel like insiders is a sure meal ticket to success – the magic formula that all businesses are looking for – and few achieve. A desired customer experience is one that is remarkably different (for a true understanding of “remarkable” – read some Seth Godin books), convenient, and most of all creates a simple, easy-to-understand and experience…well, experience.

What does consistency look like in small business?

Merriam-Webster.com defines “consistency” as “a condition of adhering together” and as an “agreement or harmony of parts or features to one another or a whole.” But this is the part I really like… Merriam-Webster says “specifically: ability to be asserted together without contradiction.”

That’s really the bottom line. Examine your business today and look for anything that might contradict the specific and remarkable customer experience that you want for your customers to get from your small business. Marketing is only one piece of that puzzle, but it is critical that everything from your social media messages (including the tone and frequency of your posts) to your visual advertising to your visual merchandising and in-store way-finding to your employees’ dress, attitudes, personalities, expertise and ability to serve the customer… to the shopping bags, the after-the-sale service and follow-up to the on-going e-mail marketing, customer loyalty and retention efforts to yes, most of all, the experience that you put forward through your 24/7 presence on-line through your web site and blog – it all must be CONSISTENT. It must go together without contradiction.

Customer experience

Are your employees confusing your customers? Does your marketing message contradict your in-store experience? Is your in-store experience confusing – do all of your sensory experiences not play together to make a “harmony of parts or features to one another or a whole” in your small business?

Then, when you’ve created a system of customer experience that is consistent – you must replicate that system of customer experience every single day. It is this repetition that will grow your business.

Set your sacred cows aside today and look at your business in an effort to banish inconsistencies and create systems and experiences that grow a consistent customer for your business. A great customer experience is not an optional exercise.

What are you doing today to improve your consistent customer experience?

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ResultsRevTV

Small Business Publicity Tips Fit for Royalty

No Comments 03 March 2010

Jill Conner Browne on ResultsRevTV talking about how to relate to the media and customers during a small business PR and marketing show.

This week on the premier of ResultsRevTV, our audience learned from Multiple #1 New York Times Bestselling Author and small business mega-success story, Sweet Potato Queen Jill Conner Browne. Jill had a lot to share, especially on the topic of dealing with the public – from her customers to the media. Best of all she offered encouragement to all of us as small business owners to “do what makes your heart sing.” Jill said the best advice she ever received was to “do what makes your heart sing – what you are passionate about – and the money will follow.”Jill Conner Browne talking about her marketing and media experience while building her Sweet Potato Queens kingdom.

While much of her advice is simple, few of us apply such basic principles consistently in our businesses. Based on Jill’s experience and success, consistency in the small things could mean big returns for your small businesses.

Production Note: Each week, our show will be archived in this space for you to watch and learn. However, due to a production problem, this week’s show will not be archived. However, please register for the Results Revolution, and we will send you a copy of this week’s e-mail lesson. In addition, you can interact with the conversation about this event on Facebook and see more photos from the event there, too.

Jill Conner Browne is telling a marketing story to illustrate how she has dealt with the media over the years.Show Sponsor: Many thanks to our show sponsor, Mangia Bene Restaurant Group. Whether breakfast, lunch, supper or catering needs 24/7, please remember to Mangia Bene Catering, Broad Street Baking Company, Sal & Mookie’s New York Pizza & Ice Cream Joint, and Bravo! Italian Restaurant & Bar.

Tune in next week as we learn how to grow our small businesses by marketing smarter with small business owner and restauranteur Jeff Good, co-owner of Mangia Bene Restaurant Group in Jackson, Mississippi. Next week’s show will be live at 12:00 p.m. on Tuesday, March 9.

A huge special thanks to Jill Conner Browne for being our guest on our premier broadcast!!

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About Marianna Chapman

For the past 15 years, Marianna Chapman has been creating game-changing big ideas resulting in big returns for dozens of businesses and communities across the U.S.

Today, Marianna and her team help business and non-profit clients at Big Idea Company, Inc., writes the Results Revolution blog, serves as Executive Editor for Eat Cities, LLC media outlets, and is a frequent speaker to national and regional conferences.

Marianna is a professional problem solver and rainmaker for hire.

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Media Mentions





Entrepreneur.com
American Express OPENforum
MSN Business on Main
Return on Behavior magazine
SnapRetail
NFIB.com
Mississippi Business Journal
Greater Jackson Business
Clarion Ledger

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