Sadly, customer engagement is being ignored in so much of business-to-consumer selling that in many respects we have nowhere to go but up. In many sectors of B2C selling (not to mention marketing and customer retention), customer engagement is virtually nonexistent.
I define customer engagement as the prospect's/shopper's/customer's active involvement in the buying/selling process, as opposed to participating in a passive way, i.e., as an observer.
Customers long to be engaged. They have a desire to be raving fans, to be in relationships with providers of services and goods of all types, to have productive relationships...indeed, customer engagement is a win-win for both the seller and the buyer.
While almost every salesperson, sales manager, marketing executive, and business consultant agrees that customer engagement is a good thing, many sellers don't have their finger on the real pulse of their prospects or customers. This makes it difficult to engage them except in the most shallow way. If we could allow - and encourage - the tendrils of engagement to infiltrate every phase in our selling processes throughout each customer's life cycle from cradle to grave, we will sell more.
We would be served well if we would open ourselves to seek new and better strategies for customer engagement. Sometimes it doesn't even take much. To help get your C.E. creative juices flowing, here are some ideas:
Hotels: Engaging Your Customer
If you work at a front desk of a hotel and, upon a guest's arrival, ask him "From where are you arriving?" that's a good thing. But it's even a better thing if the hotel front desk representative builds upon the guest's answer to that question. What does the front desk associate say if the guest says he's from Portland or Charlotte or Kingston or Brussels or Minneapolis?
When I tell people I'm from Minneapolis, I often get silence in return. True, many who live on the coasts or the southern U.S. view Minnesota as flyover country, and have never been to Minneapolis-St.Paul. But if you want to engage me, you'll talk with me about the Minnesota Twins' new Target Field, or our two great full-time orchestras, or our healthy theater community, or the beautiful lakes in the City of Minneapolis, or hunting and fishing in the northland, or the massive and beautiful Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness bordering Canada. I'd even settle for a mention of the largest shopping mall in the United States, our Mall of America.
"What's one thing I should know about Minneapolis (or St. Paul) that I should know?" would be a great question for a hotel front desk associate to ask me as I'm checking in or out, even if they don't know anything at all about Minnesota. Knowing me, I would provide five or ten things about MSP that I think everyone should know. When the customer opts in the discussion, that's engagement.
After your visit to a Hyatt or Marriott or Hilton hotel in, say, Dallas, how about if your local Hyatt or Marriott or Hilton hotel contacted you in Minneapolis (or wherever you live) and provided you with a special weekend rate for a weekend getaway at a local hotel in your area? That would get you another opportunity to engage with the brand, and it would prevent you from visiting Priceline when you and your spouse do want a weekend getaway in the city. What's more, Priceline puts only one issue on the table (price) and consumers increasingly view Priceline hotels at each level as being mostly generic. Generic is bad for business.
> If you're a landscape contracting company working in the residential market, maybe you should provide training to do-it-yourselfers in the areas of design, paver installation, plantings of green material, etc. This is a non-traditional view of selling landscaping design services, but some people aren't going to spend $20,000 or $50,000 on a backyard redo, while they may spend $550 to have a designer visit the house and give a preliminary sketch and then go to several hours of classroom instruction on how the homeowner can begin to turn the plan into reality.
Engaging this group of customers might even lead to more traditional business as the do-it-yourselfer realizes he has bitten off more than he can chew, but getting them to interact with your designer or lead installer or manager in a classroom setting gets the prospect actively involved, which is worth it's weight in gold.
> Banking does not have the reputation for being a "fun" industry in the mind of the consumer. Money is serious business, but the consumer experience can still be (and I would argue it should be) fun. So how can banks make it fun for consumers?
As long as banking is only about money, it will likely be a staid and dour environment. But when banking sees its opportunity to be about people, the fun can enter the mix, and fun is engaging.
Banks hand out deposit receipts left and right. But why are these slips of paper so boring and non-engaging? Of course, the customer wants and needs all the vital information on their receipt. But couldn't they be colorful? Fun? Advertising or promoting something of civic importance on the back?
What about an invitation to play an online banking game that the bank has developed to engage gamers (a really fun, well-designed, cutting edge game where the player gets to make loan decisions maybe, or catch the counterfeiter)? Gamers aren't only young anymore. They're well into their thirties, if not beyond (a valuable market segment for banks I should think).
What about making your bank cool and brightly colored with stunning contemporary lighting and a huge tile or carpet dollar bill on the floor in the middle of the lobby so little Johnny can jump on George Washington's face or examine the details of the bill (or chase his little sister around it).
I'd play cool music in my bank. I'd serve chocolates to people waiting to speak to a loan officer or give kids a token to play a video game every time they make a deposit or accompany their parents who make a deposit.
But where is the fun in banking now? It's all but absent, but with some creativity and people-oriented employees driving the process, banks could be a community-oriented center that people want to visit.
> You manage a retail store that sells clothing to tweens and teens. What if every Monday night you picked a customer to play their specially-created iPod playlist over the music system for an hour? I know, there would be legal and rights issues, but there are lots of teenagers who would jump at the chance to put together a playlist just for the retail store, and would be enthralled to hear their playlist played at the cool clothing store at the mall. Then, offer ten friends of the iPod owner to come in and receive a discount if they purchase during the iPod hour.
Retail stores are more than POS systems and merchandise; they're opportunities for richer, deeper, broader engagement of their customer base.
What assets do you have that could be used to better engage your prospects and customers? What can you do to supercharge your customer engagement? What can you start doing differently than the same old same old?
If you like this
post (or don't) please leave a comment.Skip Anderson is the Founder and President of Selling to Consumers Sales Training.
He works with companies that sell to consumers in
all B2C sectors to increase sales by realizing the buying potential of
every prospect.
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