Factors affecting member loyalty

Last Updated: August 19, 2010By Tags: ,
Factors affecting member loyalty

Factors affecting member loyalty

Member loyalty is a strategic objective for most institutions. Managers around the world agree that new member acquisition alone will not ensure long-term success. Acquisition must be balanced with member retention and member development to optimize performance in the long run.

There are many different terms used to describe the process of keeping members longer and becoming a greater share of each member’s lifestyle. It has been called many things, including the following:

  • relationship design;
  • relationship management;
  • relationship optimization;
  • frequency marketing;
  • one-to-one marketing;
  • relationship marketing; and
  • retention marketing

Benefits of loyalty
The benefits of loyalty include:

Cost savings. Members who are loyal are familiar with your institution. They know how to engage with you. The assistance they need is specific. They are more efficient in terms of the way they use your resources.

Referrals. Members who become more familiar with your institution mention it to their friends and acquaintances. People like to feel smart and “in the know”. They like to have an opinion. Loyal members won’t hesitate to make recommendations to friends and neighbours..

Complain rather than defect. This is a subtle one, but it is a benefit (from various experiences with a variety of retail marketers). Members who are loyal feel like they are stakeholders (for institutions they are stakeholders). When they have a bad experience they complain. They make a phone call, they ask for the appropriate divisional managers or they do something else to make sure their issue is addressed. They believe in the brand. They feel that it is their brand. They want to fix it. They complain rather than quietly defecting. This “second chance” opportunity is very important in today’s institution environment in which loyal members are so fickle.

Unaided awareness. Loyal members are much more likely to have their institution top of mind in their category. This manifests itself in terms of an increase in share of members and an improvement in retention. But it also helps with referrals and it helps with “bring along” in which loyal members actually bring other prospects (friends, relatives) to the institution.

Turn left rather than turn right. People in marketing use this to describe the subtle impact of a loyalty strategy. The subtle, psychological reluctance to defect created by a loyalty strategy often makes the difference.

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To achieve better sales and profits, most companies could be doing more to cultivate business from their existing customers. However, enthusiasm for customer-retaining strategies must not endanger sound customer-getting efforts. How companies balance the two is the big question. To intensify reaching old customers while still seeking new ones, for many firms, will mean changes in market analysis, planning systems, management incentives, and marketing and/or operations organization. In the rush toward growth, consumer marketers have tended to regard success as stemming from obtaining new customers while unwittingly minimizing the importance of satisfying old ones. It is time for more companies to distinguish between their getting and retaining functions, to assess the balance between them, and to remedy any deficiencies in customer retention. This process requires management to value the potential of current customers and to treat them in special ways to get them to keep coming back. Several major elements should be part of the new marketing mix for customer retention: Product extras Keeping customers frequently requires giving them more than the basic product that initially attracted them. Product extras for individual customers over time can play a sales-expansive role. Reinforcing promotions Product promotion works better when aimed at existing customers. If a marketer knows who these customers are, benefits can be obtained by giving them reinforcing communications. Sales force connections The sales force can play a decisive role in the customer-retention function. At a retail or service counter the salesperson is the focal point of the company's strategy and is the firm to the customer. Post-purchase communication A company must anticipate that some customers will encounter either minor or serious problems after purchasing. If the firm is not ready to hear and correct these difficulties, the customer may not repurchase  or may cancel the the relationship. Whether company or customer is at fault, standby post-purchase activities can be instrumental in saving these customers.

4 Comments

  1. Maria Ganis February 28, 2010 at 9:16 am

    Great article just in time as i am about to set up a subscrition base for Women’s Forums I run. Do you have any handy hints/guidelines i should take into consideration.
    Kind regards Maria- Monash Uni Alumni

    • Chintan Bharwada March 8, 2010 at 10:53 pm

      Hi Maria,
      Sorry for the delay… we just had a baby boy few weeks back and its has been a more than two full time jobs…

      Thanks for the comment. Its good to know about your women’s forum. i will certainly post handy guidelines in the next few days for you.

      Thanks,
      chintan

  2. Chintan Bharwada August 19, 2010 at 9:31 pm

    Blog post: Factors affecting member loyalty http://lnkd.in/pZ25Js

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