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BUILDING CUSTOMER SATISFACTION, VALUE, AND RETENTION

BUILDING CUSTOMER SATISFACTION, VALUE, AND RETENTION. BY: AGUNG UTAMA. Defining Customer V alue and Satisfaction. Customer perceived value (CPV) : The difference between the prospective customer‘s evaluation of all benefits and all the cost of an offering and the perceived alternatives.

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BUILDING CUSTOMER SATISFACTION, VALUE, AND RETENTION

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  1. BUILDING CUSTOMER SATISFACTION, VALUE, AND RETENTION BY: AGUNG UTAMA

  2. Defining Customer Value and Satisfaction • Customer perceived value (CPV) : The difference between the prospective customer‘s evaluation of all benefits and all the cost of an offering and the perceived alternatives. • Customer perceived value (CPV) = Total Customer Value ( TCV)-Total Customer Cost (TCC) • Total Customer Value : the perceived monetary value of the bundle of economic, functional and psychological benefits customer expect from a given market offering. • Total Customer Cost : the bundle of costs customers expect to incur in evaluating, obtaining, using and disposing of the given market offering.

  3. Determinants of Customer Value

  4. Does the customer will always buy the product which delivering the greater customer value? Not Necessarily. • Why? • Because the customer also examines his total cost of transacting with the product and the alternative, which consists of more than the money before making the buying decision.

  5. Based on this decision making theory, there are three (3) ways to making success in selling to the buyer : • Increasing total customer value by improving product, services, personel, and/or image benefits. • Reducing the buyer’s non monetary cost by reducing the time, energy, and psychic cost. • Reducing it’s product monetary cost to the buyer.

  6. Total Customer Satisfaction • The customer satisfaction is depend on the offer’s performance in relation to the customer’s expectation. • Satisfaction : a person’s feelings of pleasure or dissappoinment resulting from comparing a product’s perceived performance (outcome) in relation to his or her expectations.

  7. Customer Satisfaction Formula: • If P < E Dissatisfied • If P = E Satisfied • If P > E Highly Satisfied/Delighted P=Performance E=Expectation

  8. Customer Expectations • How do customer form their expectations? • From past buying experience, friend’s and associates’s advice, and marketer’s and competitior’s information and promises • If marketers raise expectations too high, the buyer is likely to be dissappointed • If marketers set expectations too low, the buyer won’t attract the company’s offering.

  9. Delivering High Customer value • The important key to generating high customer loyalty is delivering high customer value. • A company must design a competitively superior value proposition aimed at a specific market segment (Michael Lanning). • The value proposition : consits of whole cluster of benefits the company promises to deliver ; it is more than the core positioning of the offering.

  10. In a hypercompetitive economy a company can only win the competition by creating and delivering superior values. • This involves 5 capabilities : • Understanding customer value • Creating customer value • Delivering customer value • Capturing customer value • Sustaining customer value • To succeed, a company needs to use the concepts of a value chain and a value delivery network.

  11. Value Chain • Value chain: a tool for identifying was to create more customer value (Porter,M). • Every firm is a synthesis of activities that are performed to design, produce, market, delivery and support its products. • The value chains identifies nine strategically relevant activities that create value and cost in a specific business. • These nine value creating activities consists of five primary activities and four support activities. • The primary activities represent the sequence of bringing materials into the business (inbound logistics), converting them into final products (operations), shipping out final products (outbond lohistics), marketing , and servicing them.

  12. The support activities: procurement, technology, human resource management, and firm infrastructure are handled in certain specialized departments, but not only there. For example: several departments may do some procurements and hiring of people. • The firm task is to examine its cost and performance in each value creating activity and to look for ways to improve it. • The firm should estimate its competitors cost and performance as benchmarks against which to compare its owns cost and performances. • The firm success depends not only on how well each departments performs its works, but also on how well the various departmental activities are coordinated. Too often, company departments act to maximize their interests. For example: a credit department may take a long time to check prospective customers’credit so as not to incur bad debts, mean while the customer waits and the sales person is frustrated.

  13. Value Chain Firm Infrastucture Human Resources Management Technology Development Procurement Primary Activities SAV Margin In bound logistics Operation Out bound logistics Marketing & Sales Service Margin

  14. The value delivery network • To be succesful a firm also needs to look for competitive advantages beyond its own operations, into value chains of its supliers, distributors and customers. • Many companies today have partnered with specific suppliers and distributors to create a superior value delivery network (supply chain) • For example: Levi Strauss & Company and connections with its suppliers and distributors. One of levi’s major retailers is Sears. Every nights levi’s learns the sizes and styles of its blue jeans sold through Sears and other major outlets. Levi’s then electronically orders more fabric for next day delivery from Miliken andCompany, its fabric suplier. Miliken, in turn , relays an order for more fiber to Dupont, its fibre supplier. In this way, the partners in the supply chain use the most current sales information to manufacture what is selling, rather than for a forecast that may not match current demand. In this system, the goods are pulled by demand rather than pushed by supply.

  15. Levi Strauss’s Value-Delivery Network DuPont (Fibers) • Competition is Between networks, not Companies. the winner is the company with the better network Miliken (Fabric) Levi’s (Apparel) Sears (Retail) Customer

  16. Attracting and Retaining Customers • Customer Relationship Management • The process of managing detailed information about individual customers and carefully managing all the customer “touch points” with the aim of maximizing customer loyalty. • The aim of CRM : is to produce high customer equity ( value equity, brand equity and relationship equity).

  17. Forming Strong Customer Bonds • Get cross-departmental participation in planning and managing the customer satisfaction and retention process. • Integrate the voice of customers in all business decisions. • Organize and make accesible a database of information on individual customer needs, preferences, contacts, purchase frequency and satisfaction. • Make it easy for customers to reach approriate company personel and express their needs, perceptions, and complaints. • Run award programs recognizing outstanding employees.

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