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The Most
Common Customer Management Mistakes
You’re probably making them now
How we manage our customers is
critical to the on-going success of our
business. After all, without customers we have
no revenue, and without revenue we have no
business. Yet many companies and sales people
don’t pay enough attention to their existing
customers to build loyalty so they’ll remain as
clients who continue purchasing from us. The
focus of many companies seems to be biased
toward acquiring new customers at the expense of
their existing ones. Since it costs so much more
to sell to new customers (up to seven to 10
times more) due to added marketing and sales
activities, it just makes plain sense to focus
more efforts on retaining our bread and butter
customers.
Here are seven common mistakes that companies
and sales people make when managing their
customer relationships.
1. Not following Up. The surest way to
destroy customer retention is to not follow up
with your customers. Many companies and sales
people find it increasingly difficult to keep up
with their customer’s requests, not to mention
staying in touch with important information,
updated material and new happenings with their
own company and products. One key ingredient to
making this more feasible is to use CRM
technology to keep track of your commitments and
to automate many of the “touches” you should be
making with your customers; including periodic
emails, phone calls, newsletters, and even
occasional meetings. However, no technology in
the world will help you do these things if you
don’t consider this to be a critical requirement
for retaining customers. You have to WANT to
follow up. You have to make an effort to stay in
touch with your customers over time to maintain
your relationships. And you have to always
follow up when your customer wants you to do
something or needs something from you, as long
as it’s reasonable.
2. Losing Track of Activities. This
mistake is a follow on of the previous one. In
today’s hectic business world, it’s near
impossible to manage your schedules. Meetings,
phone calls, correspondence, and other important
activities become overwhelming and confusing.
Frequently, there’s no way to track what’s been
done and measure what has worked and what has
not, let alone produce accurate results,
reports, forecasts, etc. As a result, this
affects your ability to successfully manage your
customer relationships (See item #1 above). When
you drop the ball, the customer suffers, as well
as your relationship with him. Clearly, getting
organized is part of the solution and using
technology is the ingredient that can help keep
you on track.
3. Lacking Customer Knowledge. Successful
selling requires getting as much knowledge about
your customer as possible, retaining that
information in a single information repository,
and sharing it with everyone in your
organization who has contact with that customer.
To successfully manage your customer, you need
to understand him, his markets, his business and
his industry, in order to support him and
address his needs. Yet, many businesses obtain
only small bits of information that are not
shared and have limited value. Collecting
relevant information about your customer; such
as buying habits, purchasing history,
demographics, interests (personal and
professional), and more, will help you address
his needs while building your relationship. You
need to commit efforts and resources to gather
such information and store it in your CRM
system. You can simply ask your customer for
much of this information. Monitor how, what and
when he buys. Research information about his
company and market. There is a variety of
methods for collecting this data. Just do it,
store it, share it, and use it to communicate
with and educate your clients.
4. Motivated by Commission. One sure way
to mismanage your customers is to focus more on
your commission than on what’s right for your
customer. If you focus on his needs and address
them with the right solutions, then the money
will follow. However, if you’re thinking about
how much more money you’re going to make off
this client, he will see right through you and
your relationship will be in jeopardy. Become a
trusted partner by being truly interested in
your customer’s needs and try helping him
instead of counting dollars. Once you solve his
problems or make his life simpler, he will buy
from you. Then you can count your commission.
5. Going Solo. Customers like to deal
with a company, instead of just an individual,
so they have more than one person who can
resolve specific issues. If it is a sale or
pricing issue, he can deal with his sales rep.
If it’s a support issue, he can deal with the
service manager. If it’s a technical issue, he
can deal with the systems engineer. If it’s a
billing issue, he can deal with accounting. This
is advantageous to both the customer and the
sales person. The customer benefits because he
has multiple resources he can deal with. The
sales person benefits because he, in essence,
has delegated certain issues to the subject
matter experts instead of having to deal with
everything himself. So don’t go solo, or let
your sales people go solo. Engage a team selling
approach so your customers have multiple team
members to work with. Additionally, when a sales
person leaves a company and takes his clients
with him, it’s usually because the clients only
had a relationship with the sales person and not
with your company. If your customer is being
taken care of by a team of experts, he will be
less inclined to leave you to follow one sales
person to your competition.
6. Selling the Wrong Product. This one
can come back to bite you later. If you didn’t
properly ask the right questions in the sales
process to find out precisely what problems the
customer was having and, as a result, sold him
the wrong product (i.e., it didn’t address all
his needs because you didn’t understand them, or
it won’t address his future needs because you
failed to ask what they were), eventually it
will be very clear that your customer wasted his
money. Aside from other negative ramifications,
you will at a minimum lose this client forever,
as well as everyone else he tells. By making
sure you asked the right questions and listened
well during the sales process (see next mistake)
you will be able to present the right solution
for the customer, thus enabling him to be
successful well into the future, along with your
relationship.
7. Not Using a Sales Process. A sales
process defines the steps needed to move a
customer through the sales cycle while helping
the sales person perform the right selling
activities at the right times. A good sales
process, however, doesn’t stop when the sale is
made. It continues on forever in order to keep
your customers so they don’t go to your
competitors when it’s time to purchase more
products, buy service agreements, upgrade, or
spend their money on the other products/services
you offer. An on-going customer retention
program is an integral part of your sales
process. Define this and use it and you will
improve your customer management results.
Good
luck and good selling!
Russ Lombardo
PEAK
Sales Consulting, LLC
russ@peaksalesconsulting.com
(702)
655-5652
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