In Make Customers Love You

Roger Lodwig

Halfway through! And then this clown crawls out of the woodwork. To everyone who knows me – hi! To those that don’t – hi! Read around and listen to all the bad stuff people say about me – it’ll help you understand my warped writing (as much as anyone can).

So back to the question: Does the love matter?

Well, does it?

Have you ever wondered how and why people choose to do business with a particular company? Have you ever thought about why you do? Sure, a lot of these reasons are simply convenience, proximity or need, but the products you buy which have viable alternatives from different companies – ever wonder why you choose the way you do?

As a business owner, I have wondered, and analyzed, and over-analyzed, and… let’s just say I’ve looked into it. For a business such as mine which requires a steady, consistent stream of chemicals, mixes, and materials, as well as a healthy dose of reliability, I cannot take chances with an incorrect supplier or brand choice – my business would come to a halt. I have one main (multi-million dollar global) brand I use. Do you know why I chose them?

Customer love.

Not our particular brand of customer love, but the company’s extremely concerted effort to put just as much work into relationships with my tiny, tile installation business as they do with companies such as Home Depot. So how do I know that? (And why am I asking so many questions today?) I know that because I had a problem with one of their products.

Problems with my materials do not make me happy. When it became quite apparent I was not solving anything by whining to a bag of thinset (that’s the sticky stuff you use to adhere tile to a wall, floor, your competitor’s truck windows) I decided to call their technical support line. I know, brilliant, right? A really friendly woman answered, took down my information, where I was working, etc., and told me someone would be in contact within the hour. Thirty-five minutes later a truck pulled up in front of the house and one of the company’s technical reps hopped out.

My jaw dropped. I was flabbergasted for two reasons: I expected a simple phone call, and I rarely find the opportunity to use the word ‘flabbergasted’ in normal conversation.

This wasn’t quite the phone call I was expecting. The rep helped me get the problem solved, suggested a different product for that particular application, and even had two bags of it in the back of his truck for me.

THAT is customer service.

And that made me quite a happy business owner. At this point, they pretty much had me as a customer for life. But that wasn’t the end of it.

Two days later, I did receive that phone call – a follow-up from none other than the president of the company. Remember, this is a multi-million dollar company that supplies the entire world with their product. The president of the company called me to make sure the problem was solved, that I was happy, and to see whether I had any questions.

That is extreme customer love.

As a customer, it makes me feel like I’m not alone when a problem arises. That there is always someone with a solution, answer, or suggestion I may need to keep my customers happy. I think it means that, no matter how large your company, you need to understand what your product or service means to your customers. Why do they buy from you? And how can you make that better?

Figure out that one unexpected thing that will make you stand out from the crowd. It doesn’t need to be huge, expensive or require a load of effort. Just find that one thing that makes you unique (and memorable). Customer love doesn’t require thousands of company reps to immediately respond to your customers, although that would definitely help, but it does require a personal touch.

Make your customers know that there is an actual person behind that brand and that they are not simply another number to your bottom line. Know who they are – personally. Send a thank you email to one or two random past customers every week, just to see how they’re doing – without trying to sell them anything.

Or do what I do – leave them a rubber ducky in their brand new shower.

Of course, if you aren’t their tile contractor that may lend itself more to a restraining order than customer love – choose accordingly.

So to me the answer is yes, most definitely, customer love does matter. Get my attention, solve one of my problems, help me know I’m not alone. You will gain a customer for life.

So when you get halfway through this challenge (today) and might feel that there really isn’t a benefit to all your hard work, think about the products you buy by choice, the ones you simply choose to get from one particular business although it’s widely available. I’m absolutely certain you can trace that reason back to some form of customer love from that company. It works.

What can you do to get your customer’s attention? Tell me in the comments below.

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Showing 5 comments
  • Sandi Amorim
    Reply

    OK, here goes…

    1. I want a rubber ducky!
    2. Is that fella at the top of the post, THE Roger the Elf? Dude, where have you been hiding and what happened to your ears πŸ˜‰
    3. What I do to get my customers attention is so old school and simple but surprises my customers every time. I send them a birthday card. Yup, that’s it. I can’t tell you how many times people have called me to say how unusual that was for them. And memorable! But, when you think about it, most of the snail mail these days comes in the form of bills and junk mail. To actually get a hand written note is rather surprising.

    And that’s my intention, to leave my customers surprised and delighted by our work together.

    Great post Roger!

    p.s. Now where’s my ducky?

    • Roger
      Reply

      Hey Sandi,

      1. Okay – here you go: Rubber ducky in a shower niche. Anything beyond that I’m gonna need an address. πŸ˜€

      2. Yes, that is actually a very horrible picture of my ugly mug. I have been super busy with work … and … otoplasty. πŸ˜‰

      3. Snail mail never fails to get someone’s attention (unless it is in the form of the aforementioned bills and junk mail). It’s amazing what an impact taking five minutes to write a note or a card can make.

      Thanks!

      p.s. Ducky’s at the top. πŸ˜€

  • Phyllis Nichols
    Reply

    You’re my kind of contractor – smart, reliable and I’m sure you do amazing work. I’m now trying to figure out what my “rubber ducky” could be! Suggestions are welcome!!

    You remind me that the unexpected, when combined with the truly valuable really makes an impact and customer for life!

    Like Sandi, I love to send hand written thank you’s and notes of congrats. It must be rare because I’ve received thank you notes for sending a thank you!

    • Roger
      Reply

      Well hi there Phyllis! Howareya?

      My work is simply mediocre – I just polish it so it’s REAL shiny. πŸ˜€

      I think the secret isn’t so much it the item itself as much as the ‘unexpected’ factor of it. It could be something as mundane as a penny (which I also leave for my customers – but that’s a whole different post) as long as it makes you stand out and makes someone stop and go ‘wait…what?’ – you know, in a good way.

      Did you send back a thank you note for the thank you note for thanking them? πŸ˜€ Thanks, by the way, for your comment.

  • Reply

    Roger FloorElf! Good to see you about! πŸ™‚
    I’ve missed your wonderful writing, spot-on advice, and day-enlivening humor.

    Thank you for this step by step on how to (delightfully) surprise your customers.
    I shall now be thinking on wondrous ways in which to do so.

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