Marketing's
Greatest Enemy
by Jay Conrad Levinson
You work like crazy trying to attract
attention and business, operating from a marketing calendar, committing
to your strategy and doing everything right, resulting in an influx of
customers -- but you lose them. They never come back. You did your
marketing so well and marketed so wisely that you're almost in a state
of shock at how your customers ignore you.
You treated them well while you were making your business transactions.
You gave them a fair price, knew that the quality you put into your
offering matched the quality they got out of it. You assured them that
service is your middle name. You smiled and used their name when you
said good-bye, thanking them for the sale. And then, after all that
caring attention on your part, they completely ignored you, never set
foot in your business again.
Do you want to know why they ignored you, why it was so easy for them to
put you out of their minds?
It's because you ignored them. It's because you made the sale and then
made the grave but all-too-common error of thinking that your marketing
job was over. That was a terrible error. But at least you've got a lot
of company making the same terrible error. Nearly 70 percent of business
lost in America is lost due to apathy after the sale. Apathy is the
deadliest enemy of marketing. A "love 'em and leave 'em"
attitude is usually fatal to profitability.
The opposite of apathy is follow-up. Guerrillas have a "love 'em
and love 'em" attitude, marketing to prospects like crazy till the
sale is made, then continuing to market like crazy to them after the
sale. Apathy never sets in. Customers never feel ignored. Guerrillas do
all in their power to intensify the relationship with caring follow-up
and loving attention. They know that once they have established a
relationship, their product or service is no longer thought of as a
commodity. Businesses that offer commodities often lose customers due to
competitors offering lower prices. Businesses that form warm
relationships transcend being thought of as a commodity and maintain
their customer relationships with service and constant contact.
No wonder they don't lose business so readily. People want
relationships, want the businesses they patronize to stay in contact,
want to feel cared for and not ignored. All guerrillas know that their
customer relationships are their most precious assets. They know that if
customers purchased from them one time and had an enjoyable purchase
experience, they are very likely to buy from them again. And again and
again. And to provide many referrals over time.
To nourish these kind of lasting relationships, guerrillas send
thank-you notes after the sale -- within 48 hours. They contact
customers within a month of the sale to make certain they are satisfied
and have no questions. They get in touch with customers once again three
months after the sale, this time suggesting new items that may tie-in
with the original purchase. And three months after that, they make
another contact. This kind of guerrilla follow-up not only prevents
dreaded apathy from setting in, but also increases business anywhere
from 20% to 300%. That's because customers, in their hearts, silently
hope for recognition, acknowledgment, information, advance opportunities
to purchase, and new calls to action.
Instead of the kind of apathy that loses customers forever, constant
attention and follow-up results in healthy back-end sales. This means
repeat sales, ancillary sales and referral sales. And this means big
profits to you -- because it costs six times more to sell something to a
new prospect than to sell that same thing to an existing customer.
These days, all the true marketing experts ask you to calculate the
lifetime value of a customer. If you don't understand the damaging
effects of apathy after the sale, that lifetime value is pretty small,
probably a few hundred dollars, if that. If you do all in your power to
prevent apathy from ever setting it, the lifetime value of each customer
may be measured in hundreds of thousands of dollars, maybe even more.
You'll profit from the initial sale, from the repeat sales, from the
referral sales and from the long, mutually beneficial relationship. It
happens only when you defeat the most deadly enemy of marketing. And now
you know how to do that.
Jay Conrad Levinson
is responsible for some of the most effective marketing campaigns in
history, and his 29 books have been published in 39 languages. We highly
recommend that you attend his upcoming Guerrilla
Marketing Boot Camp that Seth Godin called "the most
important business event of the new millennium." Be sure to use
this gift certificate code: G8017
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