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Relationships and networking are how businesses succeed, aspire, and thrive. Every business needs customer relationships to maintain and advance as a business. The customer relationships that a business forges need to grow and prosper right along with the company. The longer a business has a good relationship with the customer, the more trustworthy and authoritative it becomes. To make the best out of that relationship, it should be fostered by an evolving CRM strategy that takes the customer’s relationship into account.
Here is how you evolve your CRM strategy alongside your evolving customer relationship.
When a potential customer first interacts with your business, both parties are excited. The customer is pleased to find something they like at a reasonable price, having gained a new resource, and you are happy to have a new customer.
Thus, your CRM strategy should reflect that.
The first CRM interaction is likely the easiest to track, which is why you must get it right. You need to recognize that this customer is new and thank them for their support. Whether they bought something from you or not, merely giving you their information is a show of support. However, if they did buy something from you already, make sure your interaction acknowledges that.
Each interaction needs to be as personalized as possible. That means giving special attention to the customer and asking them about themselves. For instance, CRM interactions during the Visitor Stage are like the first couple of dates. You want to find out as much information as you can. Here is information you want to form your interactions toward gathering:
Now, some of these answers can come from the entries on a contact form. This information can also come from a sales-person at a brick-and-mortar storefront. The important part is to record the data in your CRM system. This information will be necessary for personalizing future interactions and advancing your CRM relationship status.
The best time to strike to turn a Visitor into an Engaged Visitor is just after they sign up. After all, they signed up to receive communications from your business for some reason. When the relationship is heating up, you need to give the customer what they want or lose the opportunity.
Once you start learning about your customer, you want to categorize (segment) them to serve their needs better. No one wants to be just another order number. To avoid making customers feel this way, segment them into categories to ensure you send the right content to the right customers when you tailor your marketing messages.
You should segment customers based on what the customers viewed, where they found your ad, and what marketing technique caused them to act. Paying attention to the details can tell you a lot about your customer.
Sometimes, you can convert a visitor into a customer during the first interaction. If you are transparent enough about your offerings, you could receive an order request right off the bat. However, that isn’t a given, and so, you may need to massage them into buying from you, especially if you are a B2B seller.
Therefore, the prospect stage is where you want to put the information you have collected thus far and show them you are an authority in your industry.
Even though your ultimate goals are to sell your product, you always need to offer valuable content. Whether your customer sees an ad, an email, or an article, you want to provide relevant content. You never want to send content just to stuff their inbox or vie for their attention. You want your messages to mean something, offer them something, or inform them of something relevant to their situation.
Of course, you don’t want to lose customers, but if customers aren’t finding value in your content, you don’t want to make it difficult for them to stop receiving it. So, you always want to give customers a straightforward and easy option to unsubscribe.
Even though it is always good to keep earning customers, you never want to ghost the customers that support you. Remember, it is cheaper to get someone who had an excellent experience to buy from you again than to recruit a new sale. Ultimately that is why you need to focus on maintaining and growing customer relationships.
To keep customers coming back, you need to keep them engaged and interested in your products. If people feel appreciated, they will respond in kind, usually by making it a point to do business with you.
Here are some of the best ways to keep customers coming back:
Not every customer will become an advocate, but the more advocates you have, the easier it will be to grow your business.
How do you turn a customer into an advocate and keep them excited about their role?
Everyone wants to feel special. So, the best thing you can do for your advocates is to offer them exclusivity. This unique treatment doesn’t have to be expensive. It just has to be desirable. Here are some of the best ways to showcase your exclusivity to your advocates:
In summation, businesses need to use their CRM resources to turn a visitor into an advocate, or at least a repeat customer. This task may seem daunting. Fortunately, SimpleCRM can guide you through the stages every step of the way.
For more information or to start updating your status with your CRM system alongside the evolution of your customer relationships, connect with us at info@simple.works today!