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Atricle Dump - Creating Brand Loyalty
How To Get Sales Leads At Trade Shows nore a customer's expectations, a "terrorist" is often created. Typically, an angry customer spreads "the bad word" to over 20 people. This negative reputation quickly multiplies. No advertising budget can begin to offset this damage to the Brand.Getting sales leads is vital to every business. Every business has to have customers; and prospective clients are what they identify as sales leads. Even the teenage girl who is eyeing some fashionable clothes in a magazine can be considered a sales lead. The typical sales leads, however, are those that have the potential to be customers whom sales people get in touch with in many ways, several times before they jump into conclusions in buying and procuring the company’s product or service. For many years now, sales peopl Such damage is easily avoided. There is a line-of-sight connection between the way the management treats its frontline employees and the way the employees treat the customers. When the employees feel acknowledged and appreciated, their customers also feel acknowledged and appreciated. When the employees believe what their managers and supervisors say to them, then the customers will believe what the employees tell 5 Steps to Preventing Workplace Violence Every business has a Brand whether they realize it or not. Having a brand is an unavoidable consequence of being in business. A positive Brand creates Brand Loyalty. If properly managed, Brand Loyalty is a powerful source of sustained profitability. However, very few business leaders understand how to sustain Brand Loyalty in their customers. They direct their attention to the "appearance" of the brand- the marketing and advertising aspects of brand identification. They strive for a unique, recognizable "look" such as McDonald's arches or Nike's swoosh. The emphasis is on appearance of the Brand, not what the brand looks like in action.According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics 95% of the 7.1 million U.S. employers reported at least one act of some type of workplace violence in 2006. These acts may include anything from assault, armed robbery to even homicide. With the recent bloodbath at Virginia Tech, where two professors died, and another homicide at Delphi in Michigan many managers and business owners wonder what they can do to reduce the chance of violence in their workplace.The reasons why a business owner or manager may desire to change t However, neither advertising, nor appearance, ever created one moment of Brand Loyalty. The primary factor that influences Brand Loyalty is how employees respond to customer expectations. Regardless of the business, every customer is purchasing the same thing: "A Satisfying Emotional Experience." Whether the business delivers a cake or a car, a house or a horse, it must deliver a Satisfying Emotional Experience if it is to create Brand Loyalty among customers! It is the fully engaged employee's enthusiastic effort to understand and exceed the customer's expectations that creates the customer's Satisfying Emotional Experience. Such experiences are habit forming; they build feelings of reliability and trust in the integrity of the Brand. A satisfying emotional experience builds a positive relationship with your customer. The importance of this relationship is especially true when things go wrong. It is when something goes wrong that engaged employees have the greatest opportunity to create "loyal apostles." Outspoken Brand Loyalty is created when a customer's disappointed expectations are acknowledged and promptly met. As apostles, these customers spread "the good word" which multiplies and attracts more customers to the Brand. Conversely, when the employees do not really care about the customer, when they are indifferent to exceeding the customer's expectations, the customer finds it easy to go elsewhere next time. These employees mechanically perform their tasks and say "have a nice day" as the customer passively completes the transaction and leaves. Both the employee and the customer are indifferent about ever doing business together again. When something goes wrong, these disengaged employees are indifferent and resistant to meeting the customer's expectations. They either politely state that it is just not possible to meet the customer's expectations or, worse, refuse to answer phone calls, letters or emails in response to the issue. When a company's employees resist or ignore a customer's expectations, a "terrorist" is often created. Typically, an angry customer spreads "the bad word" to over 20 people. This negative reputation quickly multiplies. No advertising budget can begin to offset this damage to the Brand. Such damage is easily avoided. There is a line-of-sight connection between the way the management treats its frontline employees and the way the employees treat the customers. When the employees feel acknowledged and appreciated, their customers also feel acknowledged and appreciated. When the employees believe what their managers and supervisors say to them, then the customers will believe what the employees tell Interim Management - Increasingly Part Of The Plan ertising, nor appearance, ever created one moment of Brand Loyalty. The primary factor that influences Brand Loyalty is how employees respond to customer expectations. Regardless of the business, every customer is purchasing the same thing: "A Satisfying Emotional Experience." Whether the business delivers a cake or a car, a house or a horse, it must deliver a Satisfying Emotional Experience if it is to create Brand Loyalty among customers!Interim management has traditionally been seen as a reactive response to organisational failure. Increasingly, a new breed of interims are emerging – people who regard interim management as a career and have transferable leadership skills to work across sectors. Building in organisational capacity to accommodate career interims ‘as part of the solution’ is discussed.Interim management saw rapid growth in the private sector in the 1990s. It experienced a decline as the downturn bit in 2000 but has shown signs of pic It is the fully engaged employee's enthusiastic effort to understand and exceed the customer's expectations that creates the customer's Satisfying Emotional Experience. Such experiences are habit forming; they build feelings of reliability and trust in the integrity of the Brand. A satisfying emotional experience builds a positive relationship with your customer. The importance of this relationship is especially true when things go wrong. It is when something goes wrong that engaged employees have the greatest opportunity to create "loyal apostles." Outspoken Brand Loyalty is created when a customer's disappointed expectations are acknowledged and promptly met. As apostles, these customers spread "the good word" which multiplies and attracts more customers to the Brand. Conversely, when the employees do not really care about the customer, when they are indifferent to exceeding the customer's expectations, the customer finds it easy to go elsewhere next time. These employees mechanically perform their tasks and say "have a nice day" as the customer passively completes the transaction and leaves. Both the employee and the customer are indifferent about ever doing business together again. When something goes wrong, these disengaged employees are indifferent and resistant to meeting the customer's expectations. They either politely state that it is just not possible to meet the customer's expectations or, worse, refuse to answer phone calls, letters or emails in response to the issue. When a company's employees resist or ignore a customer's expectations, a "terrorist" is often created. Typically, an angry customer spreads "the bad word" to over 20 people. This negative reputation quickly multiplies. No advertising budget can begin to offset this damage to the Brand. Such damage is easily avoided. There is a line-of-sight connection between the way the management treats its frontline employees and the way the employees treat the customers. When the employees feel acknowledged and appreciated, their customers also feel acknowledged and appreciated. When the employees believe what their managers and supervisors say to them, then the customers will believe what the employees tell Setting Up A Business ings of reliability and trust in the integrity of the Brand. A satisfying emotional experience builds a positive relationship with your customer. The importance of this relationship is especially true when things go wrong.If you are thinking about setting up a business, it pays to be thorough in your preparations. Before you invest as little as a single dollar, it would be advisable to compile a business plan to verify the feasibility and sustainability of the business you have in mind.In other words, the very first step to take when setting up a business is building a comprehensive business plan. Inside this plan, you will need to specify the product or service you intend to sell, which market segment you intend selling to and wha It is when something goes wrong that engaged employees have the greatest opportunity to create "loyal apostles." Outspoken Brand Loyalty is created when a customer's disappointed expectations are acknowledged and promptly met. As apostles, these customers spread "the good word" which multiplies and attracts more customers to the Brand. Conversely, when the employees do not really care about the customer, when they are indifferent to exceeding the customer's expectations, the customer finds it easy to go elsewhere next time. These employees mechanically perform their tasks and say "have a nice day" as the customer passively completes the transaction and leaves. Both the employee and the customer are indifferent about ever doing business together again. When something goes wrong, these disengaged employees are indifferent and resistant to meeting the customer's expectations. They either politely state that it is just not possible to meet the customer's expectations or, worse, refuse to answer phone calls, letters or emails in response to the issue. When a company's employees resist or ignore a customer's expectations, a "terrorist" is often created. Typically, an angry customer spreads "the bad word" to over 20 people. This negative reputation quickly multiplies. No advertising budget can begin to offset this damage to the Brand. Such damage is easily avoided. There is a line-of-sight connection between the way the management treats its frontline employees and the way the employees treat the customers. When the employees feel acknowledged and appreciated, their customers also feel acknowledged and appreciated. When the employees believe what their managers and supervisors say to them, then the customers will believe what the employees tell What's the Measure of One Word? exceeding the customer's expectations, the customer finds it easy to go elsewhere next time. These employees mechanically perform their tasks and say "have a nice day" as the customer passively completes the transaction and leaves. Both the employee and the customer are indifferent about ever doing business together again.It's absolutely essential that you find a way to differentiate your business in a meaningful way. I know I talk about this all the time, but it's that important.What if you interviewed a handful of clients and asked them this question: "What's the ONE word you would use that best describes what we do well?" Is it fast, attentive, welcoming, creative, cheap, cool, techie, smart, caring? One word is tough, but you need to get there. One simple word that sums up how you are different. If you can do that, and it's a wo When something goes wrong, these disengaged employees are indifferent and resistant to meeting the customer's expectations. They either politely state that it is just not possible to meet the customer's expectations or, worse, refuse to answer phone calls, letters or emails in response to the issue. When a company's employees resist or ignore a customer's expectations, a "terrorist" is often created. Typically, an angry customer spreads "the bad word" to over 20 people. This negative reputation quickly multiplies. No advertising budget can begin to offset this damage to the Brand. Such damage is easily avoided. There is a line-of-sight connection between the way the management treats its frontline employees and the way the employees treat the customers. When the employees feel acknowledged and appreciated, their customers also feel acknowledged and appreciated. When the employees believe what their managers and supervisors say to them, then the customers will believe what the employees tell Conflict Resolution And Understanding The Cost Of Conflict nore a customer's expectations, a "terrorist" is often created. Typically, an angry customer spreads "the bad word" to over 20 people. This negative reputation quickly multiplies. No advertising budget can begin to offset this damage to the Brand.Understanding the cost of conflict is a major factor in persuading contesting parties to attempt conflict resolution and turn their conflict into collaboration.Stewart Levine in his excellent book "Getting to Resolution – Turning Conflict into Resolution" identifies four costs of conflict:Direct costsProductivity costsContinuity costsEmotional costsWhenever you get bogged down in an unresolved conflict, all four of these costs be Such damage is easily avoided. There is a line-of-sight connection between the way the management treats its frontline employees and the way the employees treat the customers. When the employees feel acknowledged and appreciated, their customers also feel acknowledged and appreciated. When the employees believe what their managers and supervisors say to them, then the customers will believe what the employees tell them. When the employees develop long-term emotional loyalty, the customers also develop long-term Brand Loyalty. In a back handed attempt to increase Brand Loyalty by improving the customer's experience, many companies invest in Customer Service Training. Often this money is totally wasted because management expects employees to treat customers with greater courtesy and consideration than management shows to the employees! Relationship-Leadership principles state "All leadership is example, anything else is coercion." This means that if management wants the customers to be treated "right," then they must treat the employees "right." Creating sustained Brand Loyalty is neither rocket science nor brain surgery! It is a matter of treating employees in ways that make them want to create an emotionally satisfying experience for the customer.
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