free email subscriptions

Email Publications
Active Internet Marketing
Marketing Tips Daily

Special Lists
What's New!
Software
Hardware
Website Design
Business Opps.


FOLLOW-UP OR FALL ON YOUR FACE. 
By Jay Conrad Levinson 

Why do most businesses lose customers? Poor service? Nope. 
Poor quality? Nope. Well, then why? Apathy after the 
sale. 

Most businesses lose customers by ignoring them to death. A
numbing 68% of all business lost in America is lost due to
apathy after the sale. 


Misguided business owners think that marketing is over once
they've made the sale. WRONG WRONG WRONG. Marketing begins
once you've made the sale. It's of momentous importance to
you and your company that you understand this. I'm sure you
will by the time you've come to the end of this online 
column. 


First of all, understand how guerrilla marketers view follow
up. They make it part of their DNA because they know it now
costs six times more to sell something to a new customer 
than to an existing customer. When a guerrilla makes a 
sale, the customer receives a follow-up thank-you note 
within 48 hours. 

When's the last time a business sent you a thank-you note
within 48 hours? Maybe once? Maybe never? Probably never. 


The guerrilla sends another note or perhaps makes a phone 
call 30 days after the sale. This contact is to see if 
everything is going all right with the purchase and if 
the customer has any questions. It is also to help solidify
the relationship. 

The what? The relationship. Guerrillas know that the way 
to develop relationships, the key to survival in an 
increasingly entrepreneurial society, is through assiduous 
customer follow-up and prospect follow-up. And we haven't 
even talked yet about prospect follow-up. 


Back to the customer. Guerrillas send their customers 
another note within 90 days, this time informing them of 
a new and related product or service. Possibly it's a 
new offering that the guerrilla business now provides. 

And maybe it's a product or service offered by one of the 
guerrilla's fusion marketing partners. Guerrillas are very 
big on forging marketing alliances with businesses throughout 
the community

-- and using the Internet, throughout the world. These
tie-ins enable them to increase their marketing exposure 
while reducing their marketing costs, a noble goal. 


After six months, the customer hears from the guerrilla 
again, this time with the preview announcement of an 
upcoming sale. 

Nine months after the sale, the guerrilla sends a note 
asking the customer for the names of three people who might 
benefit from being included on the guerrilla's mailing list. 
A simple form and postpaid envelope is provided. Because 
the guerrilla has been keeping in touch with the customer 
-- and because only three names are requested -- the customer 
often supplies the names. 

After one year, the customer receives an anniversary card
celebrating the one-year anniversary of the first sale. 
Perhaps a coupon for a discount is snuggled in the envelope. 

Fifteen months after the sale, the customer receives a
questionnaire, filled with questions designed to give the
guerrilla insights into the customer. The questionnaire has 
a paragraph at the start that says, "We know your time is 
valuable, but the reason we're asking so many questions is
because the more we know about you, the better service we 
can be to you." This makes sense. The customer completes 
and mails the questionnaire. 


Perhaps after eighteen months, the customer receives an
announcement of still more new products and services that 
tie in with the original purchase. And the beat goes on. 
The customer, rather than being a one-time buyer, becomes a 
repeat buyer, becomes the kind of person who refers others 
to the guerrilla's business. A bond is formed. The bond 
intensifies with time and follow-up. 


Let me put this on numeric terms to burn it into your mind. 
Suppose you are not a guerrilla and do not understand
follow-up. Let's say you earn a $200 profit every time you
make a sale. Okay, a customer walks in, makes a purchase,
pays, and leaves. You pocket $200 in profits and that one
customer was worth $200 to you. Hey, $200 isn't all bad. 
But let's say you were a guerrilla. 


That means you send the customer the thank-you note, the
one-month note, the three-month note, the six-month note, 
the nine-month note, the anniversary card, the questionnaire, 
the constant alerting of new offerings. The customer, 
instead of making one purchase during the course of a year, 
makes three purchases. That same customer refers your 
business to four other people. Your bond is not merely 
for the length of the transaction but for as long as say, 
twenty years. 


Because of your follow-up, that one customer is worth 
$400,000 to you. So that's your choice: $200 with no 
follow-up or $400,000 with follow-up. And the cost of 
follow-up is not high because you already have the name 
of the person. 


The cost of prospect follow-up is also not high. Email 
makes it even lower. Prospect follow-up is different from 
customer follow-up. For one thing, you can't send a 
thank-you note --yet. 

But you can consistently follow up, never giving up 
and realizing that if you're second in line, you'll get the 
business when the business that's first in line messes up. 
And they will foul up. You know how? Of course you do. 
They'll fail to follow up enough.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Jay Conrad Levinson is the creator of the Guerrilla Marketing
series of books - the best selling series of business books 
in history. He is also responsible for some of the most
successful ad campaigns in history, including *the* most
successful in history: The Marlboro Man. Jay is responsible 
for countless small businesses becoming huge household names. 
Learn how he does this in his latest book: "Guerrilla 
Marketing for the New Millennium": 

Make Money ---- Contact Us/Feedback ---- Web Hosting ----Home

 

Win A Marketing Manual

Win a Palm Handheld

Get Your Own Free Classified Page

Get your own Affiliate Site and Make $$$

e-Book Software

Article Archive