How to Understand Your
Customers
Buyer orientation - understanding
and satisfying your customers - is essential for commercial success. This
guide explains how small companies can profit from understanding their
customers.
Understanding one's customers is so important that large corporations
spend hundreds of millions annually on market research. Although such
formal research is important, a small firm can usually avoid this expense.
Typically, the owner or manager of a small concern knows the customers
personally. From this foundation, understanding of your customers can be
built by a systematic effort. A comprehensive system for understanding is
what Rudyard Kipling called his six honest serving men. "Their names are
What and Why and When and How and Where and Who."
What
A seller characterizes what customers are buying as goods and services
- toothpaste, drills, video games. cars. . . But understanding of buyers
starts with the realization that they purchase benefits as well as
products. Consumers don't select toothpaste. Instead. some will pay for a
decay preventive. Some seek pleasant taste. Others want bright teeth. Or
perhaps any formula at a bargain price will do.
Similarly, industrial purchasing agents are not really interested in
drills. They want holes. They insist on quality appropriate for their
purposes, reliable delivery when needed, safe operation, and reasonable
prices.
Video games are fun. They are bought for home entertainment, family
togetherness, development of personal dexterity, introduction to
computers, among other satisfactions. Commercial customers include
arcades, pizza parlors, and assorted enterprises. They benefit from a
potential source of income, a means of attracting buyers to their
premises, or perhaps a competitive move.
Similarly, cars are visible evidence of a person's wealth, reflection
of life style, a private cabin for romance. Or they represent receipts
from leases, means to pursue an occupation. . . Some people even buy cars
for transportation.
You must find out, from their point of view, what customers are buying.
The common names of products mean as little to them as the chemical names
on the label of a proprietary drug. (A sick person's real need is safe.
speedy relief.) Understanding your customers enables you to profit by
providing what buyers seeks - satisfaction.
Products change, but basic benefits like personal hygiene,
attractiveness, safety, entertainment, and privacy endure. So do
commercial purposes such as quests for competitive superiority or
profitability.
Successful manufacturers and service establishments produce benefits
for which customers are willing to pay. Successful wholesalers and
retailers select offerings of such demanded benefits that they can resell
at a profit. Successful businesspeople, in other words. understand the
reason for their customers' buying decisions.
Why
The reason that customers buy is logical from their point of view.
Understanding customers derives from this fundamental premise. Don't argue
with taste.
Everybody is unique. Each person has individual pressures and criteria.
Moreover, perceptions differ. The astute businessperson deduces and
accepts the buying logic of customers and serves them accordingly.
To learn why customers buy can be quite difficult.
Some buyers hide their true motivations. In many cases the reasons are
obscure to the buyers themselves. Most purchase decisions are
multi-causal. Often, conflicts abound. A car buyer may want the roominess
of a large vehicle and the fuel economy of a subcompact. The resolution of
such mutually exclusive desires is usually indeterminate.
Sometimes the reasons why customers buy are trivial. If customers feel
indifferent toward a product or store, the selection is apt to be
happenstance. Perhaps several rival offerings meet all the conditions that
a purchaser deems important. Consequently, minor factors govern. This
explains the rationale of the consumer who chose a $ 22,000 car because
its upholstery was most attractive. The point: Pay attention to details.
They may be crucial to customers.
Often the best clues are the customers' actions. Shrewd businesspeople
respect what people say, but pay special attention to what people do. More
important than why customers buy is why former customers have taken their
patronage elsewhere and why qualified buyers are not buying. What is now
keeping them from buying?
Can this obstacle be surmounted? Businesspeople monitor competitive
offerings and buyers' reactions to infer clues. Informal conversations may
also reveal some reasons. Special offers may overcome resistance and boost
profits.
All the time the manager must be careful to retain the company's
regular customers. For instance, a specialty dress shop may try to widen
its patronage through a new line at bargain prices. This move could
disturb the store's usual patrons. They may take their trade to another
store that caters exclusively to their social class.
Many of the dresses were bought for special occasions when projection
of a genteel image was important to the customer. Understanding of
customers includes awareness of the time of the purchase and use of the
merchandise.
When
A seller must be ready when the buyer is, lest an opportunity be
irretrievably lost. Customers buy when they want an offering and have the
time and money to purchase it. Buying patterns can often be discerned from
an analysis of customers and their purchases. For example, wants for many
consumer goods and services are tied to customers' rites of passage. The
following purchase occasions in the adult life cycle are typical:
1. Marriage, separation, divorce
2. Acquisition of a home
3. Change in employment or career
4. Graduate study; running for office
5. Health care, injury, illness
6. Pregnancy, nurture of children
7. Children enter school; graduate
8. Children leave home (for college or permanently)
9. Move to another area
10. Vacations; major social activities
11. Permanent retirement from work
12. Death of a family member.
Shrewd retailers keep track of such key buying events and gain a head
start on making sales. Logs of birthdays and anniversaries are a case in
point. Additional purchase occasions are impersonal. Seasonal factors
include recurring holidays and weather changes. Among other favorable
influences on purchases are start of the school year, semi-annual white
sales, introduction of new models and clearance of old ones, special price
concessions, and improvement in economic conditions or buyer's confidence.
Some of the latter factors also apply to manufacturers. Small plants
work closely with their buyers' inventory managers and replenish stock at
their reorder point. A current vogue is just-in-time delivery. Interactive
computers make replenishment notices routine.
Many consumers have time for shopping only during offhours. in the
evenings, and on weekends. The trend from a single breadwinner per family
toward having all adults of a household engage in commercial employment
has intensified this time peculiarity. Astute retailers adjust their
hours, staffing, and availability of merchandise to customers' shopping
convenience. Bartenders know that business booms on payday. Manufacturers
profit from timing their offers to their customers' budgetary cycles.
Thus, knowing when products are bought and used is a valuable facet of
understanding customers.
Although a transaction may be concluded in a moment, most purchases
actually entail a drawn-out process.
This process will be described in the next section which analyzes how
customers buy.
How
Knowledge of how customers buy pays off in several ways. (1) Sellers
can design their offerings to meet the exact needs of their buyers. (2)
Sellers can influence decision makers at crucial steps of the buying
process. (3) Sellers can lay the groundwork for repeat business.
Buying methods are best visualized as processes. Household purchases
usually start when a consumer has a desire or a problem that an
acquisition might satisfy or solve. Industrial purchases usually start
when a user or a routine sets off a signal (requisition) for approval of a
procurement.
People are diverse. Every consumer, every firm pursues a buying process
of its own. Buying processes also depend on the significance of the
product to the buyer and on other circumstances. Although buying processes
are not uniform. some steps are common to most of them. The seller needs
to know only these critical steps when he or she can affect the outcome of
the buying decision.
Shrewd sellers delve into the behavioral milestones of purchasers. But
for each very important customer the buying process should be diagrammed
individually, showing names of influencers at each decision stage, elapsed
time between stages, and any other pertinent information.
Perhaps a change in life style or a demonstration at a friend's house
has caused this consumer to recognize the need for a personal computer.
But lack of knowledge and the fear of a wrong decision may counteract this
desire. The process continues, however, if advertisements and expected
benefits persuade the consumer to act. Despite budgetary constraints and
uncertainty about future needs, the consumer proceeds to compare stores
and brands.
At this search and evaluation stage advice from present satisfied
customers is especially influential. Make sure your customers are
satisfied and favorably recommend your merchandise or service. To the
contrary, poor shopping facilities or irritating personnel can sway the
potential customer against making the purchase from you.
Sooner or later, further search does not seem worthwhile. If the
positives still outweigh the negatives, the consumer picks a store and
brand. The transaction itself is consummated quickly, assuming the wanted
item is available. The satisfied customer makes recommendations to others
and gives you his or her repeated, regular business.
Businesspeople can create sales by predisposing potential buyers to
their product or store. Manufacturers can offer exclusive benefits in
their goods, such as friendly relations, efficient operations, and easy
manuals. Enticing advertisements help persuade prospects to visit a retail
outlet and ask about a particular brand. Creative salespeople overcome the
customer's objections and doubts and close the sale. Post-transaction
service keeps the customer satisfied. Referrals usually follow.
Specific details are needed to track acquisition of something complex,
say a computer. On the other hand, less detail is needed if the purchase
is laundry detergent or some other staple with which the customer is less
involved. In the latter case, depletion of the home inventory triggers a
routine, leading directly to choice: the usually purchased brand. If the
usual brand is out-of-stock or another brand is on sale. a substitute may
be bought quickly. Brand comparisons follow or may be omitted.
Some products are bought when an emergency need for them arises. A
physical examination and the filling of a prescription are urgent when
sickness strikes. Arrangements for funerals follow immediately after the
death of a family member. Umbrellas are in demand when it rains. An
unexpected snow storm generates extra calls for tire chains, towing
services, and car batteries. Often, convenient availability determines
when these goods and services are purchased. And even if customers do have
ample time to select merchandise, sellers who stand ready to supply wanted
or expected brands are apt to gain preference and profit when shoppers
decide where to buy.
People want options. Although convenient availability is the main
buying criterion for many routine household products, savvy merchants
stock a selection conforming to the diverse preferences of their patrons.
Some people demand manufacturers' advertised brands. Resellers' brands are
favored by others. On some classes of goods, generic brands have become
popular in recent years. Moreover, many consumers seek occasional variety.
Clearly the decision of which products to stock is important.
It is more important yet on shopping goods because buyers compare them
before purchase. And it is most important on specialty goods, those
preselected by brand name. If a store does not stock these uniquely wanted
brands, a prospect will leave without buying. Whoever offers them on
acceptable terms gains the sale.
Where
From a multitude of studies emerge different criteria for deciding
where to shop. Most research on the subject agrees that store location is
a major consideration, Stores usually draw most of their patronage from
their surrounding neighborhood.
Savvy store managers make a special effort to understand the
shopping-related motivations and preferences of local residents. New
managers of fast-food units, for example, canvass nearby dwellings and
introduce themselves to the households. Some supermarkets maintain
consumer advisory boards to elicit suggestions and reactions. Other means
of communication with customers include informal conversations at the
store and suggestion boxes with interviews and awards.
Incidentally, complaints are an excellent guide for making store
policies more amenable to customers. Personnel should be instructed to
thank patrons for their comments. Prompt consideration, followed by a
personal letter from the store manager, is highly desirable.
Location is extremely important to "captive" buyers. Exclusively
franchised utilities, shops in isolated hotels. and cafeterias or
automatic vending machines in factories are examples. At the opposite
extreme, shoppers escape spatial restrictions by buying from mail-order
firms or telephone solicitors.
Other patronage influences vary. They depend on the type of product.
type of store, and the characteristics of the consumer. The offered
assortment's perceived quality. depth, and breadth certainly are very
important. along with price, This does not imply that all goods have to be
top quality or all prices the lowest. Perceptions are decisive.
If quality seems high, some customers infer that prices are high too
regardless of the facts. The important point is to understand customers
and to provide what causes them to buy. For example, assurance of repair
service weighs heavily with the worrier type of customer. A
convenience-minded buyer is concerned with parking space or delivery
service.
Of course, shoppers must be told that wanted goods and services are
available. Advertising helps disseminate this information. So does a
store's reputation for consistent policies of satisfying its customers.
Occasional promotions inject some excitement into the tedium of
shopping. Some clients like to socialize, which can absorb much of an
employee's time and may even annoy other buyers. Nevertheless, personnel
should be friendly and helpful. Also influential, for some customers, is
the apparent socio-economic level of other shoppers.
Personal affinity for other customers or for salespeople is a decisive
factor in the success of party-selling, e.g., household goods and in-home
selling (cosmetics). The choice of where to buy items requiring major
outlays (securities, and insurance) often revolves around from whom to
buy.
In selecting a retail store, many customers consider physical features.
Layouts can invite or repel patronage. Motorists who are in a hurry, for
instance, are apt to use a gasoline station at which business can be
transacted quickly. Altogether, buyers perceive a mix of tangible and
intangible factors that comprise a store's atmosphere. Accordingly, they
either do or don't feel comfortable about shopping there.
To the casual observer, all supermarkets seem more or Hess alike, But.
in fact, store managers can regulate many of the above-mentioned variables
and thereby affect where shoppers buy. According to recent studies in
several American cities, household buyers perceive supermarkets in their
neighborhood as sufficiently different to determine their patronage
preference. The four main types of supermarkets offer: (1) High quality at
commensurate prices, (2) Lowest price level in the area, (3) Swift
completion, (4) Friendly atmosphere. Each can profit by appealing to a
different segment of buyers. the topic of the next section.
Who
Identification of customers and prospects makes effective targeting
possible. Small business owners pride themselves on knowing their
customers personally. In the industrial field, understanding of each major
customer and buying influence is essential. When dealing with a large
number of customers, however, individual familiarity is not feasible.
Hence mass merchandisers and others in this situation group their
customers, whose reactions to offerings are similar, into segments. Then
they design a separate appropriate marketing program for each segment.
Strategies vary, A small firm might prosper by concentrating its
resources on one segment. Because customers are volatile, the specializing
firm is vulnerable to sudden change in its target segment's patronage.
Hence some companies address several segments simultaneously. Although
expensive, a strategy of employing different tactics for different
segments can be quite profitable. Other firms scatter offers to just
anybody. They hope that segments will select themselves.
One basis for segmentation is geographic. Retail customers are apt to
live or work in the store's vicinity. Industrial buyers tend to
concentrate regionally. So do users of services. Intensive cultivation of
local potential customers can be efficient and lucrative. Personal
knowledge of local buyers and a shared community spirit help cement
relations with these customers.
Segmentation is an art. All "honest serving men" - what, why, when,
how, where, as well as who - can be the key to segmentation. Whatever the
basis, each identified segment should have sufficient purchasing power to
make a special effort commercially worthwhile. Accessibility is vital. How
can the segment be reached? Are advertisements, telephone solicitations,
or personal visits efficient? How about trade shows or personal contacts?
The ideal segment is stable in purchase needs and loyalty, helping you
fend off competition.
Besides segmentation, understanding of customers also requires insight
into their buying roles. The buyer for a one-person household or
one-person business is the initiator of the order, the decider, and the
user. Even in this case, however, some outsiders are influential.
In larger households or businesses, these buying roles are usually
played by separate individuals. It helps you to know who activates
(requisitions) purchases, who exerts influence, who decides what and where
to buy, who uses the product-and what their criteria are. Then you tailor
and target your offerings to satisfy each major participant in the buying
process.
As has been shown, understanding of customers enables a seller to
increase sales. This same understanding can equally serve to reduce costs.
Higher sales at lower costs inevitably boost profits.
A small firm that understands its customers can buy or produce exactly
what they want-and nothing else. The firm's sales effort is efficient
because it builds on why its customers want to buy not on why others buy,
or why the vendor wants to sell.
Merchandise can be ready when customers need it. Thus a knowledgeable
seller avoids unnecessary inventory costs or penalties for late delivery.
Understanding how customers buy lets a seller employ promotional media,
appeals, and timing for maximum effectiveness. Transportation costs are
lowered by shipping merchandise to where it is needed. Knowledge of who
comprises suitable segments and the separate buying roles can reduce the
waste of soliciting unqualified or uninterested people.
Customers Are Dynamic
The best source for you to learn about customers is your personal
interaction with them. At work, social and civic activities, and chance
encounters, people talk and reveal their attitudes and motivation. Listen
to your customers. You can also keep abreast of purchasing patterns by
observing competitors' practices and by asking sales personnel who is
buying what, where.
Articles in business and trade newspapers and magazines give
information on products, trends, marketing, finance, the economy. Trade
directories, Yellow Pages, and brokers' direct-mail lists identify who
buyers are, and most industries have associations and specialized
marketing research that provide insights for understanding customers.
Food For Thought
Live in the past and you'll
be full of sadness, anger and guilt. Live and the future and your life
will be filled with fear, worry and anxiety. The best way to make a
difference in the world is to live in the present.
What can you do to make sure you're living in the present?
First, be aware of what's going on. Ask yourself, "what am I
noticing?" Be curious. Look at what's going on. Constantly take
inventory of the world around you. Then, ask yourself, "what am I
learning?" and "what are my current options?" Finally, ask yourself
what you can do differently as a result of what you've observed and
what you have learned. This will force you to focus on the present --
on what's going on now and on what you can do about it.
There's nothing you can do about what has happened in the past, and
the future will be empty unless you commit to living in the present.
The here and now is the place to make a difference. Make a habit of
taking notice, learning and adapting. Don't long for the past or put
off your life until the future. The time to live your life is now.
Whatever your goals may be, you can reach them faster and more
effectively if you'll open yourself up to innovation. So many people
spend the majority of their lives doing things a certain way, just
because that's the way they've always done them.
But that's not good enough if you're committed to being the best you
can be, and living a life of accomplishment and purpose. You must
learn to get everything you can out of everything you have and
everything you do.
What is innovation? It doesn't take a genius to be innovative. All it
takes is the desire to look for new and better ways of getting things
done. And the desire to try new approaches. Now that gets a little
scary, because it brings the possibilty of failure. But the only real
failure is never trying at all -- everything else is simply a learning
experience on the way to your ultimate success.
When you try new approaches and innovations, you can be certain that
most of them probably won't work. If you keep trying and learning,
though, you'll find your own forumla for success.
It takes the same effort to do something effectively as it does to do
it ineffectively. The difference is in strategy and innovation.
Imagine what would happen if you discovered your optimum strategy.
Imagine being able to improve your performance by a factor of ten,
without any additional effort or expense.
The secret is to try different things, and pay attention to the
results. You'll soon find the very best way to do what needs to be
done.
Your time is precious. Learn to make the very most of it.
Look at all the pain and heartache that happens in the pursuit of
"feeling good." Drug and alcohol abuse, obesity, infidelity, AIDS --
all are rooted to a significant degree by the desire to "feel" good.
It's a high price to pay, especially when you realize that (a) When
abused, things like food, drugs and sex don't really feel all that
good anyway, and (b) nothing outside yourself is really necessary in
order to feel good.
You can feel good simply by deciding that you do! You're in complete
control of your feelings. You can decide how to react to various
situations.
You don't need that cigarette or that package of cookies. You only
think you need them because of how you've been conditioned. But you
are more powerful than your conditioning or your habits. Your life and
your feelings are under your command.
When a problem comes up, instead of reaching for a six-pack to "drown
your sorrows" and make you "feel good", try a little re-framing. Look
at the problematic situation as an opportunity, and be thankful for
the chance to learn and grow. Then feel good about your ability to
meet challenges head on.
The best way to feel good is simply to allow yourself to do it. |
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