How To Build Customer Loyalty In Your Online Business
64There Are Differences Between Offline & Online
Recently, I published a hub entitled, How To Ensure Customer Loyalty. While some of the tips and techniques could be used for internet businesses, they were most applicable to the offline variety. As online businesses can have an even tougher time developing a loyal customer base, there is a strong need for a complimentary version for internet entrepreneurs. How To Build Customer Loyalty In Your Online Business was suggested by DrRichard as a way to remedy that.
DrRichard, I hope How To Build Customer Loyalty In Your Online Business doesn't let you down.
Why It's So Much Harder to Build Customer Loyalty Online And How To Give Your Site A Fighting Chance
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand that the online experience lacks the personal touch of a brick and mortar business. Whereas a customer may visit a physical store once or twice before making a purchase, webpreneurs wait an average of 7 or 8 visits to their site by the same person before that person decides to part with their hard earned cash. That means your site had better be good enough to draw a customer back that many times.
Tips
- Make sure that your site is user-friendly, easy to navigate for the average person. Give customers a reason to stay awhile instead of presenting something that they'll give up on in frustration.
- When developing your site, forget all the fancy stuff! No flash, no butterflies that follow your mouse, no bells, no whistles. All those things distract your customer away from your product or service. They'll forget about you, but remember how irritating that butterfly was.
- Clearly display your contact info. This establishes a certain amount of trust. A potential customer will feel that they can contact you with questions or problems, and that once they give their credit card number they won't be abandoned and helpless with no one to consult. No contact information can make people wonder if you are a "fly by night" operation.
- Beware of what you promise on your site! There is a saying in offline sales that I feel should also apply online: Under Promise and Over Deliver! I cannot stress this point enough. If you do it the other way around, it won't take long for people to figure out that they've been duped.
- Infuse your ethics with a little Karmic perspective to reap some gratifying rewards in the customer loyalty arena. Stand by your customer (you loyal to them) and they will stand by you (them loyal to you). See how nicely that works? Post any guarantees that you are seriously willing to honour in plain sight. If you make claims that you won't back up just to get sales, you will seriously harm your reputation and business. Don't forget that people talk about dealings gone sour.
Following these tips alone will take you a long way towards building customer loyalty in your online business.
Travelocity Did It The REALLY Expensive Way!
Everyone these days knows who and what Travelocity is, there's not much point in me explaining it, except to say that it is a large and publicly recognized company that found the most incredibly expensive way to gain customer loyalty.
The story goes something like this:
It seems that Travelocity had a poor customer loyalty rating. They were missing out on a lot of repeat business because travellers did not associate their site with real people, considered it some automated thing. People buy from people, not companies or automated things.
One day, there was the accidental sale of $2,000,000 worth of airline tickets to Fiji - for $7.50 each. Yes folks, that's 7 dollars and 50 cents. The fares were worth $2,000 a piece!
If it was your company, would you panic and send out an announcement that you couldn't possibly honour that ridiculously low price? I'm sure it probably crossed the minds of the people at Travelocity. The company didn't do that, however. Instead, they HONOURED THE PRICE for each and every person who purchased. Yes, it cost them a ton financially, but what it did to boost their ratings with customers was priceless. The fact that they stood behind their sales did more to increase the loyalty factor with their customers than anything else they'd done to that point.
If you'd like to read more about how Travelocity increased their customer loyalty, go here.
The amount of money involved in this accidental 'campaign' can make your head reel, but it isn't the cash value that scored the company so many brownie points. It's the fact that Travelocity stuck by their word and their customers. That is exactly the type of behaviour that carries weight with your clients, too. Just please, choose cheaper ways to do it.
After that whole incident was taken care of, Travelocity developed a Customer Bill of Rights, complete with guarantees of customer satisfaction and good treatment. That is something everyone can do, and it doesn't cost a cent.
Travelocity tumbled into all of this. You don't have to anymore. Are you beginning to figure out how to build customer loyalty? In your online business, you are free to be as creative and innovative as you want. Take these ideas and put your own, unique spin on them.
It's Not Hard to Build Customer Loyalty in Your Online Business
It really is quite a simple matter to develop a customer following, especially if you mean everything you say to them. Planning ahead to decide the best treatment and value you can offer before you publish your site will make things go smoothly.
To summarize:
- Design a customer-friendly website that will encourage repeat visits
- Under promise and over deliver - every time!
- Put guarantees and contact information in plain sight
- Stand by your word, service and product.
The only thing I can think to add is to avoid spamming and pestering your list with a constant barrage of emails. That is one of the quickest ways to lose business. Contact them enough to let them know you're there and offering some good stuff, but no more than that.
Be there for your clients and they'll be there for you. Try it and see if you notice a difference.
I hope that How To Build Customer Loyalty In Your Online Business has helped you.
- 9 Tried and True Tips for Getting New Customers
Are your customer creation methods stale and outdated? Do you need some ideas to generate a flow of new clients? Try some of these 9 Tried and True Tips for Getting Customers.
CommentsLoading...
Another good one Shirley! "Under promise and over deliver - every time!" That was my philosophy at my tailorshop. Regular business know-how is quiet readily transferable to online business too.
great advice in your hub regards Zsuzsy
Shirley, this is very informative filled with cautions everyone should use in both offline and online -- ethics are sorely lacking in our businesses and carelessness abounds. Recently, due to several mistakes at work due to not paying attention, I spent hours looking for them and figuring out how to correct them A learning curve can be expensive when allowing assistants to gain experience.
I try to be patient because I've made all kinds of mistakes when learning this business...many more than once. However, they are costly...we need to "figure" that in to our bottom line and realize they're going to happen - thinking ahead helps cut the risk, and you've helped us do that with this valuable and well prepared piece!
Should be required reading, both hubs!! =))
Shirley - Great words to live by. I think you hit the customer service nail right on the head. Your information is always first rate. Dan
Wow I wish I had been able to purchase one of those seven dollars tickets to Fiji. No just kidding, but your hub is filled with great advice for all online businesses.
Excellent article.Shirley:
I have over thirty years of retail experience, most of it as an owner. I took a pharmacy in Michigan that had gone bankrupt twice and turned it into a seventeen year success story by furnishing the best customer service that I could possible give, not because of a game plan, but because I do my best to live the golden rule.
Once you give people the best you possibly can, fairly priced, they bring their kids and their grand kids into your business.
Kudos,
Bob Diamond
Spot on, as usual Shirley. It's so good to see someone who still understands ethics.
SO great this hub is. Filled with so much information. I so wish I had time to figure out how to link Amazon and Ebay into an article!! Great Shirley.
Great hub, I think a company can have the best products and intentions but if they have poor customer service or a hard to navigate webpage, they cannot be successful. Valuable reminders for those of us with online businesses!
Shirley, this is a great piece. Thanks so much for publishing it sooner than later!
You landed squarely on two of my pet peeves: butterflies and no contact information.
Animations and sound are annoying, to say the least. Not only that, don't people know how frivolous these intrusions can make their site appear? Personally, I can't take a business or even an information site seriously once I've been assaulted by these things.
When I visit a new site, the first pages I look for are "About" and "Contact". Period. Final. No exceptions. If that information is missing, I'm gone.
I wish everyone in the Internet Universe could read this Hub and take action where needed. More online businesses would be more successful.
Great stuff! I'm a fan now. ;-) Keep the content rolling in.
thank you shirley. we're working on our site and this hub comes at the best time. i'm bookmarking it for reference. thumbs up:)
I couldn't agree more. This information is so timely! Thanks for the tips. I'm absorbing as much as I can.! ")
Once again, great, and informative hub!
Shirley, this is a must read for any business, the tips about keeping the site user friendly is very invaluable, also the customer service tips. If you have a chance read Seth Godin's Meatball Sundae, an excellent book offers tons of marketing tips.
Great post! I hope that all business websites owners will drop by at your site and read this excellent piece of article.
Hi Shirley just catching up with this Hub! Iv'e never had a on line business but I was in an offline business for about 40 years, and I believe that I subconciously followed your advise, probably because it is just plain old common sense. It seems to me you are a down to earth, common sense type person?
Some people just can't see the trees for the forest!
btw "Dogs eye" rhymes with "meat pie" does that help?
Hi Shirley,
Your pointers are especially true during hard economic times. Anyone who follows these will create a competitive edge.
Nice hub ! thanks for sharing :)
Hi Shirley, I am presently making major changes to my business site. I've noticed that traffic hitting specific pages due to searches, stay in my site. But traffic hitting my home page, well, they go away fast. This hub of yours was fantastic and you have made it clear to me what I was missing with my home page. Thanks!





































ProCW 3 years ago
Very good hub! I wish that I had been one of the purchasers of tickets to Fiji!!! More companies should take Travelocity's stance and honor everything they claim, including mistakes.
ProCW
PS. TU