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Customer Advisory Boards … The Golden Key To REALLY Knowing Your Customers and Making More Sales
Although there are a number
of methods to find out about your clients wants and needs one of the least
utilized but most effective strategies is creating a working advisory board. An advisory board is made up of your best
customers, those 20% who provide you with 80% of your income. By having a
board comprised of the "20%" you not only find out how to get more
customers like them but also how to keep them coming back. The main purpose of the advisory board is for
your business to get input on a regular basis. The advisory board gets
together between two to four times a year to review ideas, strategies,
plans, the mission, goals and specific marketing tactics. For example, at
one meeting you may want to get input on different business strategies or a
marketing brochure. Although you can get input from a number of
different people, many times it can be misleading. In one situation where I
was developing a marketing plan for a travel agency my client asked me for
my opinions about senior citizens travel habits. Since I'm not a senior
citizen my opinion is not as reliable as someone who fits this target
market. In fact, the major reason many boards fail is they are made up of
all types of clients and not just the 20% who make up the core of the
business. By sharing your plans and strategies with the
key target clients who make up your board you get invaluable information
about the attitudes and beliefs of your best clients. In addition, by
keeping a regular advisory board together you can call them between meetings
to discuss any new ideas. The board members can also help your company by
acting as "mystery shoppers". Every time they call your agency,
use your services or buy products, have them fill out a report and send it
to you with their experiences. You can also hire professional mystery
shoppers; my company supplies each of our mystery shoppers with a checklist
so they can rate their experiences after each visit. A board member or
mystery shopper might look at certain things such as, prompt approach,
verbal acknowledgment, eye contact, pleasant phone greeting, length of time
on hold, politeness, responsiveness, appearance of facility, agents
listening ability, add-on sales encouraged?, were benefits sold?, and more. As mentioned, the advisory board should meet
at least two to four times a year. The ideal size board is between nine to
twelve people. The most effective boards meet for at least three hours,
while some meet for a full day and others for a weekend getaway. In most
cases the board members are compensated. The most frequent kinds of
compensation include gift certificates, free weekends away, lunch or dinner
or a direct payment. In these turbulent times with strong
competition and uncertain consumer behavior, you need a winning edge --- and
one of the best investments to boost your bottom line is through a customer
advisory board.
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