What price loyalty...?
How many brands are you really loyal to? When the time comes to replace your car is it
automatically another Ford, another BMW or another VW you choose? When you head off for your weekly shop is it
a regular visit to the same Tesco, or ASDA or Waitrose? And when it’s time to
book your holiday is it Thomson, Thomas Cook or your local independent you turn
to for advice and help?
Loyalty is funny concept.
In my experience there are precious few things that people are categorically
and consistently loyal to; sports teams, political parties, religions, family
and country. After that it seems to me
it’s mostly all about convenience, habit and laziness. I’m exceptionally loyal to the post office
shop in my village for the sole reason that it’s a two minute walk from my
front door. When I do a big shop I know
that ASDA is a little bit nearer than Tesco and probably cheaper, but I’m just
in the habit of shopping at Tesco - it’s familiar and I know where everything
is. I even head to the same area of the
car park each time I visit.
When I consider the brands I’ve been most loyal to, in the
main it boils down to laziness. Hands up
if your current account is still with same bank you joined when you left school
– mine is. Not changed your energy
supplier since you moved house? Me
neither. I’m not sure this even counts
as loyalty, it’s just inertia.
There do though seem to be a couple of reasons why some
people consistently stick with their chosen brands. The first is a lot to do with vanity. It’s about the badge on the bonnet, the label
on the t-shirt, the apple on the phone.
I drive a Porsche, I wear Ray Bans and a Gucci T-shirt, and I make sure
my Calvin Klein pants can be seen above my belt. None of which is true, obviously, but for a
certain type of fashionista (fashion victim) it’s exactly this type of brand
association that keeps them loyal.
The second reason people stay loyal is much deeper and more
stable because it’s built on an unwritten contract which goes roughly like this:
‘I (the customer) recognise that you (the merchant) have done more than just
sell me a product. You have genuinely
added value to this transaction. You
have spent time with me, understood my needs and tailored the right product
accordingly. I will repay your individual
attention with my loyalty.’
There’s something in our makeup that drives us to reward
those who help us most.
The best quote I’ve ever heard from someone in travel came
from David Speakman who founded Travel Counsellors. He said ‘If customers come to you for price,
they will leave you for price.’ In other
words, loyalty built on price alone isn’t loyalty at all. Only by building a trusted relationship with customers
can we expect them to stick with us.
Comments
Post a Comment