Tips to Remember in Managing Customer Relationships



Read More: Marketing

Original article is posted within Relationship Marketing .

Each business owner brings to the table their own style along with experience in managing their business and customer relationships. This discussion is solely for a springboard of thought for those who are brand new to managing their Home Based Business and are looking for some guidelines.

Action Steps for Customer Relationship Management

The following are a sample of action steps as simply a guideline for managing your relationships with your customers once they have joined your team.

1. Customer Relationships with Regular Communication

Regular communication is the first priority in building your customer relationship management action plan. Remember how you provided value and stayed connected with this individual over time until they made a decision? You had appropriate regular communication with them.  Relationship marketing brought your customer to you and relationship building keeps them in your business.

Communication does not end with the sale or partnership. This is the time to establish a stronger rapport. This is the time to nurture customer loyalty and provide business training for the new partner. You are the person these people turn to for guidance in using the product well and/or growing their business.

Make a commitment to yourself that each of your new team members will know that you have an open line of communication with them. Be sure to make it clear how they can reach you and when.

2. Managing Customer Relationship with Scheduled Communication

Scheduling your communication in your daily action steps will, in time, make this part of your business run smoothly, you will have fun with it while keeping yourself “in front” of your customer or business partner. Certainly, you are not talking with every team member every day, but on a regularly scheduled basis.

In some way, on no less than a monthly basis, your customer will appreciate hearing from you. Your phone call will especially be helpful to ensure their product needs are met. At the end of the month, ask yourself, " Did I go the extra mile to keep my customers happy and loyal?" If not, think about how to change that for the next month.  Your business partners will require closer contact for purposes of training.

In Romancing the Sale, Barbara Silva has a suggested schedule of communication for one of her businesses.

(a) Each new customer receives an immediate welcome/thank you letter from the autoresponder service you use. Include your contact information for their convenience.

(b) Within the first week of your new team member being on board, Email a value based newsletter teaching your customer about product use, your company, inside information on services they have access to.

(c) Be sure that in the first month your customers are reminded that they may contact you for any question. Appointments for conversation can be nicely managed with free Genbook software.

You can invite you customers/business partners to join you on your social networking site. This enables them to view current updates on your status. They can contact you directly and you can make them aware quickly of events they can attend with you.

(d) Plan to call your customer base on a regular basis. The purpose of the call is simply a reconnect for updates on customer satisfaction; customer service needs that change that you can address.

3. Training Your Leaders in Customer Relationship Management

As your team numbers grow beyond personal telephone contact, have a plan to train your business partners to assist with this kind of customer relationship management. Your daily action steps model for your business partners how you conduct business. Early in your working relationship with partners, delegate some of the team contact support tasks to them. Mentoring in this systematic way will ensure that your customer base will continually receive personal contact and support no matter how large your business grows.

There are many variations to how this can be done to fit your business, your personality. Have fun with the process and network with others on what works and does not work for you.

If this is all new for you, have a look at Renegade University. This is a free internet training site with click by click, 24/7 to learn at your own pace.

 

Pat Campbell is a Renegade Professional and Super Guide. She has learned Attraction Marketing with Mike Klingler since 2002. Online Attraction Marketing has been a breath of fresh air after years of cold calling, return calling with poor results. Pat is an RN and knows the effort it takes to juggle your passion around fulltime day job commitments and life. It is exhilarating to develop strength and skill sets within you that are brand new.


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About the Author: Pat Campbell

Member Since: 06/30/2008

Company: Mannaprise Global Inc.

Industry: MLM

Primary Web Site: http://www.campbellpat.com

Comments

Managing Customer Relationships

Good article, Pat. One suggestion that I always follow is to use words like "sir", "ma'am", and definitely "please" and "thank you". These tiny words mean so much to other people and rarely do we hear them these days. I am always impressed when someone addresses me in this manner and return the favor by being a loyal customer. Both parties win.

Jason Jahr — Sun, 12/27/2009 - 3:00pm

Nicely done. Customer

Nicely done.

Customer service is becoming a Lost art with automation taking over.
I encouraged on of my client to drop the Automated phone service, Hire a REAL Person to answer the phone.
The added cost was absorbed immediately by repeat business and People to people Communication.
Besides he helped the "unemployment" problem.
People Buy from people and expect to be taken care
of BY REAL People

In our businesses the Highest ROI comes from satisfied
REPEAT Customers

Chuck Bartok
www.focussociety.com
www.youcanbuild.it
www.beginnersmarketingclass.com
530-798-0245

Chuck Bartok — Sun, 12/27/2009 - 9:19pm

Chuck

Chuck Bartok
www.focussociety.com
[url=http://directmatches.com/sbart][b]Post your Profile FREE[/b][/url]
www.beginnersmarketingclass.com
530-798-0245

Chuck Bartok — Sun, 12/27/2009 - 9:33pm

Great Points

Pat - it is always cheaper to keep your current customers than to try and get new ones. Keeping in touch and providing good service are key elements to a successful business.

Dr. David Enders — Sun, 12/27/2009 - 11:05pm

Elements For A Business...

Pat,

As Dr. David Enders has said, providing good service is the most important element. When it comes staying in touch with current clients.

Donna Wells

Donna Wells — Mon, 12/28/2009 - 5:03pm

A little Bit of Real Person... Respect

@Jason and @Chuck,
You both made good points. Jason, in a world of casual talk, using some time tested salutations of respect will go a long way. Thank you for adding that point, sir. :-) It is something I will implement personally and include in my writing. Chuck, in the world of voice mail mazes, I totally agree that using the phone personally builds relationships and business. @Dr.Enders and @Donna concur that personal customer service keeps current customers in your business.

Thank you folks for taking the time to comment.

Pat Campbell — Mon, 12/28/2009 - 10:16pm

Learn and Apply

If you don't know how to build a relationship that is on-going, then your article, Pat, is quite to the point on learning how to do so.

Where a lot of marketers fail, though, is actually doing it. Why they stop communicating is a mystery to me. After all it's by saying "Hi there, look at me here I'm paying attention to you" that you stay in front of people as you continue to build by giving value.

Marie Leonard — Wed, 12/30/2009 - 9:30am

Relationship Building

The more were are in contact with our customer, and prospect the great the chance to building a lasting relationship. Thanks for a great article.

Rallie Rallis — Sat, 01/02/2010 - 6:18pm

Great Reminder

Although I enjoy communicated with my groups, very much so, I find it difficult to keep up the communication. I do realize the huge benefits of communicating regularly and building those relationships.
I think having a schedule might be a key for me, as suggested.
Keeping in touch with your customers on a regular basis could be the difference between barely successful, and immensely successful.
It was a good reminder, Pat.

Becky Joubert — Mon, 01/04/2010 - 10:58am

Appreciating our customers

Pat your article is wonderful in addressing how we must go the extra mile to let our customers know that not only to we appreciate their interest in our business but that we are there for them when ever they need.

I know that even some that have left my business, I continue to communicate with them, never knowing when the time may be right for them to return. Continuing to build a relationship.

Also, some of the points that you mention are excellent and an excellent reminder.

Thanks,

Angela James — Thu, 01/07/2010 - 11:00am

In an ideal world, you

In an ideal world, you would be able to hire people who already possess the exact skills your business needs. But in today’s competitive labor market, demand for skilled workers far exceeds supply.

That’s where training comes in and training received from an ISO 9001 certified place is invaluable.

keith

Keith Russel — Fri, 01/08/2010 - 1:49am

very nice article

It's good to learn new things everyday. I thank you for writing this article. Customer relation is very important, if not the most important in running a business. Without the good customer relationship, a business will lose it's current customers and will not have any chance of gaining more customers in the future.

from Alessandra of
Tongkat Ali

Alessandra Bryes — Wed, 09/08/2010 - 9:34am

These Small Things Make A Big Difference

You definitely do have to stay in touch with your customers because then they are less likely to drop out of your home delivery program. Also since when they are happy with your services you get referrals.

If all that is missing then there is no business.

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