Don’t let rivals get ahead this year. From social media to feedback mechanisms, here's how to engage your clients successfully.
Social media – in a matter of seconds it can shower praise upon your brokerage, or do just the opposite.
Thanks largely to the plethora of technological opportunities, businesses are under more pressure than ever to communicate effectively with customers, says Andy Moy, director of Customer Engagement Management at Pitney Bowes Software.
“Tomorrow’s winners and losers will be increasingly determined by a brand’s ability to listen and respond to their customer’s needs, regardless of the channel,” he says.
“2014 will see a widening gap between the companies that do this very well and those that fail to do it.”
Pitney Bowes offers the following advice to engage customers this year:
1. Balance online and "offline" engagement
Understand how customers choose to communicate, and then respect that choice when interacting with them. For example, if a customer contacts a company via email, then it makes sense to respond via email. Likewise, a customer who telephones an organisation should have their call returned.
On social media, it's important to balance what's seen by all of a person's friends and followers with one-to-one interaction. For example, if someone complains about a product on Twitter, the brand should respond publically so that the user, and anyone else who can see the complaint, knows that the organisation is aware of the issue and is addressing it.
If addressing the issue necessitates the exchange of personal information, the company should use the social network to get permission from the customer to contact them via another channel, rather than immediately emailing or calling them.
2. Monitor trust and satisfaction
Set goals and objectives to measure the success of customer engagement efforts. Create a benchmark to measure customers’ reactions and satisfaction levels and solicit feedback.
Consumers notice and appreciate the brands that listen and respond appropriately. Conversely, a brand that solicits feedback and then fails to act on that feedback is sending a clear message that their customers’ opinions are not important to them.
When measuring the customer engagement program’s success, it is important for companies to remember that brand awareness is not enough. Trust and overall satisfaction are far more important indicators of whether a company has been successful in engaging its customers.
3. Take advantage of data
Any customer engagement generates large amounts of data. Smart companies gather and analyse that data to make more informed decisions about everything from when to run sales campaigns to which areas to open new stores in.
They also feed that data to appropriate channels. For example, complaints about pocket placement on a pair of pants should be funnelled to product designers as well as customer service or sales representatives.
4. Always think about retention
Effective customer engagement requires an ongoing commitment. An engaged customer will continue to interact with, and buy more from the company over time.
Brands that retain customers do so by constantly leveraging the details they know and using them to uncover ways to improve future experiences. These brands always look to the future, planning new ways to excite and engage customers and keep them engaged.
5. Deliver on your promises
If a brand asks customers to provide information, use it to enhance the customer experience. In many cases, customers are more than willing to provide information to brands in order to make their experiences better.
If a company fails to leverage that customer knowledge to deliver a personalised experience, the customer is likely to be disappointed and unlikely to continue a relationship with the company.
Related:
How to tell your broking brand’s not coping
What other strategies are effective for engaging clients? Share your thoughts below.
Thanks largely to the plethora of technological opportunities, businesses are under more pressure than ever to communicate effectively with customers, says Andy Moy, director of Customer Engagement Management at Pitney Bowes Software.
“Tomorrow’s winners and losers will be increasingly determined by a brand’s ability to listen and respond to their customer’s needs, regardless of the channel,” he says.
“2014 will see a widening gap between the companies that do this very well and those that fail to do it.”
Pitney Bowes offers the following advice to engage customers this year:
1. Balance online and "offline" engagement
Understand how customers choose to communicate, and then respect that choice when interacting with them. For example, if a customer contacts a company via email, then it makes sense to respond via email. Likewise, a customer who telephones an organisation should have their call returned.
On social media, it's important to balance what's seen by all of a person's friends and followers with one-to-one interaction. For example, if someone complains about a product on Twitter, the brand should respond publically so that the user, and anyone else who can see the complaint, knows that the organisation is aware of the issue and is addressing it.
If addressing the issue necessitates the exchange of personal information, the company should use the social network to get permission from the customer to contact them via another channel, rather than immediately emailing or calling them.
2. Monitor trust and satisfaction
Set goals and objectives to measure the success of customer engagement efforts. Create a benchmark to measure customers’ reactions and satisfaction levels and solicit feedback.
Consumers notice and appreciate the brands that listen and respond appropriately. Conversely, a brand that solicits feedback and then fails to act on that feedback is sending a clear message that their customers’ opinions are not important to them.
When measuring the customer engagement program’s success, it is important for companies to remember that brand awareness is not enough. Trust and overall satisfaction are far more important indicators of whether a company has been successful in engaging its customers.
3. Take advantage of data
Any customer engagement generates large amounts of data. Smart companies gather and analyse that data to make more informed decisions about everything from when to run sales campaigns to which areas to open new stores in.
They also feed that data to appropriate channels. For example, complaints about pocket placement on a pair of pants should be funnelled to product designers as well as customer service or sales representatives.
4. Always think about retention
Effective customer engagement requires an ongoing commitment. An engaged customer will continue to interact with, and buy more from the company over time.
Brands that retain customers do so by constantly leveraging the details they know and using them to uncover ways to improve future experiences. These brands always look to the future, planning new ways to excite and engage customers and keep them engaged.
5. Deliver on your promises
If a brand asks customers to provide information, use it to enhance the customer experience. In many cases, customers are more than willing to provide information to brands in order to make their experiences better.
If a company fails to leverage that customer knowledge to deliver a personalised experience, the customer is likely to be disappointed and unlikely to continue a relationship with the company.
Related:
How to tell your broking brand’s not coping
What other strategies are effective for engaging clients? Share your thoughts below.