What is a brand? More than a mere product, service or company, a brand exists in the mind of the consumer as an association with a particular product, service or company. These associations are based on a combination of objective and subjective factors. Objective criteria include quality, price and consumer reports, while subjective criteria tend to reflect a highly personal sense of nostalgia or aspiration on the part of the consumer. Given the surfeit of products available today in every imaginable sector, a proactive branding campaign is vital for separating your product, service or company from the competition and generating a heritage of customer loyalty.
Because brands exist in the minds of consumers, brand positioning should always focus on the minds of your target market. Before this can happen, you must define who and what that target market is – i.e., who your customers are, and where your product, company or service will compete. Only then can you properly deduce the set of characteristics that best describe your brand. It is important to note that this information must come from your customers, not you. (When it comes to branding, it's not who you think you are that counts – it's who your customers think you are.) After collecting perceptual information about your product, service or company from a sample of customers, you can apply this learning to calculate the ideal combination of brand characteristics for your target market.
While all brands are essentially an amalgam of consumer perceptions and expectations, there are a number of brand positioning techniques for creating the impression that a brand associated with a particular product, service or company is special or unique. One key method is to create value. This can be accomplished by manipulating the projected image of a product, service or company in a way that makes the consumer view it as intrinsically valuable. The right advertising campaign, for example, can do wonders for brand value – with many going so far as to convince consumers to pay premium prices for products or services that are relatively inexpensive to produce or provide.
Another method is to secure brand recognition. By making your brand widely recognizable in the marketplace – i.e., through advertising, event sponsorships or other marketing initiatives – you will directly inform – and elevate – your consumer's perception of your product, service or company. In addition to having positive ramifications within the culture at large, brand recognition pays off where it really counts – in the retail environment. When choosing between a branded product and its generic counterpart at the point of purchase, customers often select the more expensive “name brand” option on the basis of reputation.
The fact that brands exist in the minds of consumers does not preclude the possibility of brand management. On the contrary, successful brands are actively positioned on a regular basis – long after they've been unleashed on the market and become part of the cultural landscape. By defining your target customers and tailoring your product or service to their needs and preferences, you can obtain the value and recognition necessary to make your brand a leader in every relevant category.
Changes To The Environment
The ten domains of customer satisfaction include one dimension called commitment to the customer. This element is, statistically, a huge influencer during the customer-supplier relationship. May suppliers of products and services will tell you that, "yes we are committed to our customers", but what does this really mean? How can we recognize and quantify this behavior - 'being committed to your customer' , more objectively?
The first thing is to understand the concept, and a favorite metaphor for the concept of customer commitment is the personal relationship, perhaps between two sweethearts. Commitment is the romance in the relationship, the sacrifice, the chivalry and the loyalty. Like your sweetheart, the customer wants to believe that they are the most important one to you, the supplier. Customers want to have a relationship, to feel valued and needed, just like your sweetheart. Customers want your full attention and concentration, and don't want to be interrupted or compete for your affections and attention.
Customers are looking for a high quality realtionship, but often they are the ones doing the wooing, to try and find a supplier who will even give them the time of day. It is continuously amazing to me to see the poor relationship skills that are demonstrated by retail clerks in department store chains or 'box superstores' where often even finding a sales clerk to listen to your needs is a challenge. It is not uncommon to see sales clerks in the middle of a checkout or other transaction, stop everything to take a phone call from another potential customer calling the store. Understanding how to give customers your full attention is a critical customer service skill. Your sweetheart wants you to be 100% present, and your customers do too.
When customers need to find the location of an item, they don't need someone to just gesture in the general direction, they want the supplier's representative to take an interest in what they need, and guide them to where they can get their needs fulfilled and help them make a purchasing decision if necessary. If special arrangements or circumstances need to be arraged to fulfill the customer's needs, the customer expects their relationship partner to help them handle it, not to leave them out in the cold. It is this author's belief that this type of customer attention yields great rewards that will offset any additional costs of employee service and satisfaction training. The opportunity is to form a relationship with the customer where the customers needs are focused on and fulfilled, and real satisfaction is created. If the relationship is successful and pleasing to them, the next time this customer comes in, they will look for that relationship.
Customer commitment means more than just giving customers your undivided attention and best behavior, it also means being honest with them. Customers, like your sweetheart once again, appreciates when you give them the straight story all the way down the line. Customers feel betrayed when the supplier is dishonest or witholds details or conditions of the sale. Many suppliers boast of the great relationship they want to develop withtheir customers and then utilize bait and switch strategies or other subterfuge to extract more inthe ways of charges and fees that were not originally brought out in the open. Whn suppliers are dishonest, it can ruin the relationship for life. Think of the stilted girlfreind who finds out you have been lying to her. The effect is very similar. Suppliers must train themselves to be totally honest when committing to delivery times, pricing and all other details of their product or service, or risk losing the entire relationship.
So what about when the supplier makes genuine mistakes, or when he has to give a customer bad news? Once again, in the relationship with customers, the best policy is to take responsibility when things go wrong. The quicker the supplier gets into correction mode, the faster the relationship with customers can be restored. It is a great test of a supplier in the relationship to see how they take responsibility when thigns go wrong and how fast and how far they will go to correct their shortfall or mistake. The more chivalrous and dramatic the corrective action, the better customers like it. When the boyfreind screws up, he brings flowers. Intelligent suppliers will even plan ahead and develop mistake recovery interventions to be armed with in the case of their inevitable mistakes. Free desert for a dinner not cooked right in a restaurant, free car wash and wax for a delayed service appointment, 10% off the overall invoice for late or innaccurate delivery. Usually the cost of these recovery overtures pales in comparison with the potnetial loss of ongoing and repeat business from a particular customer.
So what's the lesson here? Commitment to the customer means giving them your fuill attention and anticipating their needs. It means treating each customer like your most important cusotmer. It means going out of your way to demonstrate the importance of each customer. It means being an honest relationship partner who can always be depended upon to tell the truth. Commitment means taking responsibility when things go wrong and taking chivalrous corrective action to restore confidence in the relationship. Enlightened suppliers will rigorously train all personnel who interact with customers the importance of customer commitment and will support front line personnel with the resources they need to make their customers happy.
Both Gareth Schweitzer & Bart Allen Berry are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Gareth Schweitzer has sinced written about articles on various topics from About Branding, Internet Marketing and Sales and Negotiation. Gareth Schweitzer is the Founding Partner of Kelton Research, a full service marketing research company. For more information on Kelton Research,. Gareth Schweitzer's top article generates over 2400 views. to your Favourites.
Bart Allen Berry has sinced written about articles on various topics from About Branding, Customer Service. . Bart Allen Berry's top article generates over 2900 views. to your Favourites.
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