Customer Service Consultants Nottingham
This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Customer Service Consultants. You will find helpful, informative articles about Customer Service Consultants, including "Ignoring customers and other ways to help your business fail". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Nottingham that will answer all of your questions about Customer Service Consultants.
Juice Marketing Ltd
0115 9725999
1A Elm Avenue
Nottingham
Juice Marketing Ltd
0115 9725999
1A Elm Avenue
Nottingham GB.NG104LR
Data Provided by:
Jast Partnership
0115 9720085
The New Media Centre
Nottingham
Jast Partnership
0115 9720085
The New Media Centre
Nottingham GB.NG102DL
Data Provided by:
Boom Online Marketing
0845 474 0974
23 Johnson Way
Nottingham
Boom Online Marketing
0845 474 0974
23 Johnson Way
Nottingham GB.NG96RJ
Data Provided by:
Apples & Pears Marketing
0115 9255999
40 Wollaton Road
Nottingham
Apples & Pears Marketing
0115 9255999
40 Wollaton Road
Nottingham GB.NG92NR
Data Provided by:
Perfect Motion Ltd
0115 9258777
72 Wollaton Road
Nottingham
Perfect Motion Ltd
0115 9258777
72 Wollaton Road
Nottingham GB.NG92NZ
Data Provided by:
E Shotz
0115 9736300
Meadow Lane
Nottingham
E Shotz
0115 9736300
Meadow Lane
Nottingham GB.NG102FE
Data Provided by:
Ingirum Strategic Marketing
01332 872913
22 Meadow Close
Derby
Ingirum Strategic Marketing
01332 872913
22 Meadow Close
Derby GB.DE723EL
Data Provided by:
R J H Marketing
0115 9436777
13 The Strand
Nottingham
R J H Marketing
0115 9436777
13 The Strand
Nottingham GB.NG96AU
Data Provided by:
Urban Mosaic Ltd
01773 533538
Cole Lane
Derby
Urban Mosaic Ltd
01773 533538
Cole Lane
Derby GB.DE723RB
Data Provided by:
Stb Direct Marketing Consultancy
01509 670567
2 Borough Street
Derby
Stb Direct Marketing Consultancy
01509 670567
2 Borough Street
Derby GB.DE742FF
Data Provided by:
Data Provided by:
(First appeared in Second Opinion Marketing e-bulletin May 2010 - subscribe to the e-bulletin here ). Avoid the sin of ignoring your customers
I’m going to be controversial in this issue of Practical Marketing: you ignore your customers and prospects, and in doing so you miss massive opportunities to generate more business.
Ok – hopefully you’re still reading so that I can explain myself and provide you with some useful pointers for how to avoid this sin in the future.
How many of our businesses have a regular method for open dialogue with clients? How frequently do you communicate with them – both sending and receiving information – and I don’t just mean transactional communications? Have you ever bought, rented or used a mailing list of target prospects, mailed them once or twice and then abandoned them?
I’m sure we’d all be lying if we said we weren’t guilty of at least one of these sins.
You know how it is, when you first start the business you are close to all your customers, they get 1:1 attention from you, you speak regularly, you listen to their requirements carefully and you are able to respond easily and quickly to what they need. As your business grows and more people become involved, as both customers and members of staff, a divide grows between you and the client. Before you know it you spend 12 months without speaking to or writing to a client, and then you’re surprised to learn they are buying from someone else!
Research which looked at the reasons customer defect proves the point perfectly:
Why do customers leave?
- Move away or die/become insolvent - 4%
- Influenced away - 5%
- Get a better deal - 9%
- Unresolved conflict - 14%
- Perceived indifference - 68%
(Source: Michael LeBoeuf – How to Win Customers and Keep them for Life)
When I first saw those figures I was astounded. Customers leave because they don’t feel ‘loved’. We’ve ignored them! This is our life blood we are talking about, without customers we can’t survive, and we’re letting them leave, for some businesses in their droves.
The same research suggested that a customer thinks you’ve forgotten them if you don’t speak to them for 6 weeks or more. Wow. That’s a big ask for most businesses, but it does demonstrate why the modern keep in touch mechanisms via Twitter, Blogs, Linked In and so on, which put the customer or receiver of information in a position of control, have been so effective for some brands.
I always recommend to clients regular communications via e-newsletters, e-shots, mailings, service calls and face to face meetings with the most important customers. You can make the process as formal or informal as you like and of course it doesn’t have to be the business owner making the contact. As a business grows it’s important to not only delegate work t... |
Click here to read more from Second Opinion Marketing