Little Things You Can Do That Have Huge Impact and Keep Customers Buying
A few months back I asked for examples of what you do to get through to decision makers. We got some great ideas and best practices and compiled many of those into a free ebook. (Get that here if you haven’t already).
Not to be overlooked is how to continue building and strengthening our relationships with customers. After all, our best and cheapest source of new business is from our customer base.
And you can bet that your competitors are trying to romance them. If the extent of your relationship with them is solely handling orders and transactions, they will eventually wander elsewhere if they see a better deal.
Don’t let that happen.What your customers can’t get elsewhere is YOU. Businesses don’t buy from businesses. People buy from people. Go out of your way to do the little things that form a personal connection that is unique to you.
Kim Andersen, a sales manager, asked for ideas from her group about what they do to keep customers happy and strengthen relationships. Here are some of the ideas from her reps.
Send Out Magazine Subscriptions Pertaining to a Customer’s Favorite Hobby. For $15.00 my name rings in that customers head every month when he receives that magazine.
Give Away Books to Customers. I remember getting a great book on management from a placement service I once used in my inside sales manager days. It was titled Managing to Have Fun. To this day I remember who I got that book from.
A Smokin’ Idea. In the lobby of one of my customers I saw a Thompson Cigar catalogue with the owner’s name as the addressee. Since he was a very busy man and never seemed to have time to see me, I needed a way to get his attention. Since there were several issues of that catalogue lying there, I felt they would not miss one. I called Thompson Cigar Company and gave them his ID code on the back of the magazine. They were able to tell me exactly what brand he had ordered regularly. I sent him a box of his favorite cigars that Christmas. From that point forward he thought I was the most resourceful salesperson around.
Memberships are Remembered. In my territory, fishing, hunting and the shooting sports are very big. I recently sponsored a customer into a “fish and game” club that I belong to. The customer also enrolled his son.They will spend hundreds of hours together doing what they love—and our company will be remembered for it.
Focus on Spouses. For example, Joe Customer is a sports fan and rarely takes his wife out. Joe’s wife enjoys Broadway shows and fine dinners, not ballpark hot dogs. At the beginning of the local theater season I gave Joe a copy of the theater show schedule and asked him to pick out a show that he and his wife would enjoy. Dinner at a nice restaurant and a great Broadway show, Joe’s wife was in heaven. Keep in mind, if Joe’s wife is not happy, Joe is not happy. It also gives me more opportunity to get close to Joe and see what makes him tick. Often a customer does not let his guard down in his office but might relax in a more casual situation.
Don’t Forget the Kids. Finding out what your customer’s kids enjoy also can pay relationship dividends. Whether it is sports, fishing, music, and figure out a way to impact the relationship between your customer and his kids. One of my customers had a child over five years ago, when the child was born I bought a US savings bond in the name of the child. Guess what, that customer is still a customer.
Send an Anniversary Card. Send it one year after they have placed their first order. This works well if the relationship has developed over the year. It forces them to think back and usually be surprised how far things have come in just 1 years time, and remember all you have done. It’s also a reminder that you still value their business and that you haven’t forgotten how it used to be. It shows you don’t take their business for granted.
Sell Healthy. When calling, if they had a bad cold, or I could tell they were sick, I would send a can of chicken noodle soup and/or roll of vitamin C tablets. Enclosed a note saying “Always looking for ways to make things better for you.”
Send “Thank You” Notes! For first orders, large orders, unusual orders, for tours on plant visits, or time spent during a meeting. They are very quick and easy to do, but gets your name in front of them again, associated with a nice sentiment. Be sure to be sincere! Fake or form written thank you’s can cause opposite reactions.
The key to relationship building is to find out what your customer and his/her family is passionate about. Then make an impact and be thoughtful.
What do you to add a personal touch with customers? Please share in the comments section at my blog.
Header image credit: Stokpic
Header image edited with Canva
Reblogged with permission by the author
Author bio
For over 30 years, Art Sobczak has been helping salespeople get more sales and appointments by phone, while avoiding “rejection.”
Great post! Thanks for sharing! 🙂
My pleasure Laura, really enjoyed it too and the ideas are brilliant for translator friends as well 😉
Strictly speaking the article is advocating corruption… 🙂
It’s maybe a bit provocative to state that, but it is important to remember that if you give something whilst expecting something in return, it is no longer a gift, but a bribe! Similarly, if you offer a gift that influences the judgement of the receiver or is meant to, then it is being used as a bribe as well.
After all why are you making the gift? Because you just want to thank someone? 🙂
Gifts can be an ethical minefield depending on the culture and the industry. But boxes of cigars, tickets (not just for the person, but also their partner) to shows, presents or savings accounts for children definitely seem improper. Under Section One of the 2010 UK Bribery Act the “intent to induce improper conduct” can result in gifts being interpreted as bribes.
Here are a few links to a few articles/resources on the topic:
http://www.scu.edu/ethics/practicing/focusareas/government_ethics/introduction/gifts.html
http://www.ethicalcorp.com/business-strategy/how-corporate-gift-giving-can-be-ethical
https://www.transparency.org/whatwedo/tools/business_principles_for_countering_bribery/1/
http://www.giaccentre.org/gifts_policy.php
http://blogs.wsj.com/totalreturn/2012/12/21/the-big-corruption-in-small-gifts/
https://www.ibe.org.uk/userassets/briefings/ibe_briefing_29_ethics_of_gifts_&_hospitality.pdf
And an example of one company’s corporate gift policy:
http://www.telenor.com/about-us/corporate-governance/anti-corruption/anti-corruption-handbook/gifts/
Hi Duncan! Thank you for your very interesting comment which made me smile this morning; I’m Greek after all, that alone makes me an expert in corruption (I don’t have to do it to know it well) 🙂 I think Art is talking about gifts to existing clients, not to new ones (i.e. trying to ‘bribe’ them so they send work), so I wouldn’t consider the suggestions in the article as bribes. When you are corrupted, you can turn any gift, whatever its nature and purpose, to a bribe. When you are not, it’s simpler; your intentions are good and, yes, your gifts are just simple way of thanking your clients, I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that. Plus, the ideas above can also be applied to colleagues who sometimes are also dear friends.
I don’t really share your point of view. I don’t exclude the giving of gifts, but you need to be aware of how they might be viewed. A lot of Anglo-Saxon companies have strict policies on them, and at least half of Art’s suggestions would raise flags in some of the companies I have dealt with.
And it should be that your clients want to thank you for all the extra value that your work has created for them! 😉 (then you can thank them back)
Of course you always need to be aware how the gifts might be viewed, there are cultural aspects to consider.