How to grow your Ideal Clients by 25% with zero cost of sales
I’m a big fan of “growing loyalty” among Ideal Clients over pretty much
any other business building tactic—it’s the lowest cost sales activity
you will ever engage in, since you are already doing business with
them, you already know what they want and need, and you can easily find
out if they are being wooed by someone else. How easy is that?
And
yet… we have hundreds of examples of business owners who not only don’t
take advantage of this fantastic opportunity, they positively destroy
it. See if you recognize yourself in these stories:
A customer
who spends $100 a month in your hair salon calls to make an appointment
only to find her favourite stylist has left. Did you keep a database of
all the clients who came to the salon, which allowed you to contact
them, tell them the news and offer them an incentive to remain a loyal
client? If not, you lose $1200 a year.
A customer who has been
leasing his upscale cars from you for years needs some emergency
service. Your service centre is booked up so you tell him you’re just
too busy. The customer not only takes the car somewhere else for
service, he never comes back. Did you check to see how much that
customer’s business was worth and find a way to accommodate him? If
not, you lose a lifetime value of $500,000.
A customer buys over
a thousand dollars in clothing and accessories from you. He is
particular but happy to spend to get the quality he wants. He leaves
the store and never hears from you again. Did you add him to your
database with a checklist of his preferences so you could contact him
when specials were available? If the answer is no, you lose the $10,000
he would have spent with you over the next five years.
What
would it take not only to keep those customers, but “grow” their
business by 25% without spending a cent you wouldn’t have spent anyway?
The
first step is a database of every single customer who does business
with you. If you can, link it to your point of sales system, so you
know how much they spend, on what, and when. At least, set up a
spreadsheet with columns as follows: first name, last name, street,
town, postal code, phone, email, and a column you can put an X in for
the kinds of products and services they buy. Since your computer
already comes loaded with Excel, that’s free.
The second step is
to sign up for an automated email service (we like
www.ConstantContact.com – go look it up so you’ll be ready for part two
of this column next week) Sending to up to 500 customers, more than you
will ever need, will cost you about $20 a month – almost free. And the
first 60 days are completely, 100% free.