Loyalty Based Management ( The Loyalty Effect) Frederick F. Reichheld ‘The Loyalty Effect’ Harvard Business School Press, 1996.
Who is Fred Reichheld ? Director of the leading strategy consultants Bain & Co Highly respected speaker and writer on business strategy. Published ‘The Loyalty Effect’ in 1996. Also ‘The Ultimate Question’ and ‘Loyalty Rules’. Blog: http://www.netpromoter.com/netpromoter_community/blogs/fred_reichheld You can also check his talks on YouTube.
The problem identified by Reichheld : Most corporations lose: 50% of customers ever 5 years 50% of employees in 4 years 50% of investors in less than one year Disloyalty stunts company growth by 25% to 50%
Reichheld’s solution: Customer retention is the best way to measure how well a company creates value Creating value for customers builds loyalty Loyalty builds growth and profit The fundamental mission of business is not Profit but Value Creation
“Business must be run at a profit , else it will die. But when anyone tries to run a business solely for profit, then also the business must die, for it no longer has a reason for existence.” Henry Ford
The benefits of Customer Loyalty: Increased revenues and market share Sustainable growth attracts and keeps the best employees Long term employees reduce costs and improve quality Long term customer relations exclude competitors
The economics of customer retention Lower acquisition costs Less promotion, smaller sales force Long term base profits Sustained profit on basic purchases Revenue growth Customers spend more over time Lower operating costs Long term customers make fewer demands on admin and servicing Customer referrals Bring the right customers Premium pricing Satisfied customers are less price sensitive The company needs to quantify and profile the lifecycle of profits from long term customers:
Reichheld’s Loyalty Management Strategy Build a superior customer value proposition Find the right customers Earn customer loyalty Find the right employees Earn employee loyalty Gain cost advantage through superior productivity Find the right investors Earn investor loyalty
1: Build a superior customer value proposition Develop a value proposition that offers selected key customers truly superior value in compared to the competition Better quality products – better performance / design Zero defects Better quality service at each point of customer contact high performing retail intermediaries d on’t exploit ‘hostage’ customers
2: Find the right customers Target customers. Look for: Inherently ‘loyal’ customers – prefer stable, long term supplier relations Profitable customers Spend more, prompt payers, need less service Customers that value your offering more than that of the competition Fit your strengths with customer needs
3: Earn customer loyalty Aim to retain customers to increase life time value. Manage loyalty by designing customer-value into: The product offer Pricing policies Employee incentives & bonuses Service level delivery
4 : Find the right employees Be selective in the people you employ. Look for people who: Have character and share company values Have skills to achieve high productivity in long-term careers Develop policies which attract, hold, motivate, recognise, reward and serve people who deliver customer value.
5: Earn employee loyalty Invest heavily in developing and training employees Career paths and company structures which enable staff to make the most of their abilities Share the ‘productivity surplus’ with staff Loyal employees build loyal customers
6: Gain cost advantage through superior productivity Better employee and customer loyalty grows a ‘productivity surplus’ Employees earn better salaries, but bonuses take a lower percentage of revenues compared to competitors Correctly structured incentives also cut expense claims Reduce costs by making it possible for employees to earn more by providing higher levels of customer value and service
“Cutting wages does not reduce costs – it increases them. The only way to get a low cost product is to pay a high price for a high grade of human service...” Henry Ford
7: Find the right investors Mutual and private-owned companies are inherently more stable and focuses on the long term Public companies should target long-term investors / partners Investments based on stock market expectations do not foster long term growth Growth comes from delivering customer value, not shareholder value
8: Earn investor loyalty Investors should earn fair return before bonuses are paid to managers Managers are incentivised to re-invest profits where they will create maximum (customer) value
What else? Examine failures honestly why did a key customer defect? How do you measure success? Track retention / defection rates of customers, employees, investors Develop tools and training to analyse failures and continuously improve value
Strive to create so much value for customers that there is plenty leftover for employees and investors
The service-profit chain ( Heskith )
Other sources: Heskett , James L., Jones, Thomas O., Loveman , Gary W., Sasser , W. Earl, and Schelsinger , Leonard A. " Putting the Service Profit Chain to Work ", Harvard Business Review, (March-April 1994) 164-174 Heskett , James L., Sasser , W. Earl Jr., and Schlesinger, Leonard A. “ The Service Profit Chain: How Leading Companies Link Profit and Growth to Loyalty, Satisfaction, and Value .” The Free Press, New York, 1997. Reichheld , Fredrick and Sasser , W. Earl Jr. " Zero Defections: Quality Comes to Services ." HBR September-October 1990