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September/October
2001
Relationship
Marketing: A Key to Success and Survival
by Kathleen A. Bergeron
These
days, it seems that we, American consumers, make more and more of
our purchases from stores, companies, or services with whom we've
developed long-term relationships. Whether it's the person we've gone
to for haircuts for more than 20 years or the car dealership we rely
on for new cars and service, we keep going back to people and places
we trust.
Why? Not only because we can rely on their products or services, but
also because they know us and our needs. We have clear, two-way communication
between us. And, perhaps more noteworthy, we often have personal relationships
with these people; we know each other's children and go to one another's
parties.
Logically, the flip side is also true: more and more organizations
are finding that a growing percentage of their profits come as a result
of long-term customer relationships, rather than individual "sales"
transactions. And they're finding that moving from simply knowing
customers to having customer relationships and managing those relationships
appropriately can increase both profits and efficiency.
So, while "relationship marketing" or "relationship
management" may seem to be more a skill to be cultivated by marriage
partners or contestants on TV's "Survivor," it has become
an invaluable tool for many business organizations.
What
Is Relationship Marketing?
Relationship marketing has been defined as "the ongoing process
of identifying and creating new value with individual customers and
then sharing the benefits from this over a lifetime of association.
It involves understanding, focusing, and managing ongoing collaboration
between suppliers and selected customers for mutual value creation
and sharing through interdependence and organizational alignment."1
To understand the difference between relationship marketing and the
more traditional approach — what we might call "transactional
marketing" — one might use the comparison of a romantic
alliance. The usual marketing scenario is focused on a single purchase
decision, much like a couple on a date might focus on a single evening's
encounter. Relationship marketing is more like a long-term romance
or marriage, in which the qualities of mutual respect, communication,
and watching out for one another's interests are much more important.
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| Relationship
marketing is the basis for developing repeat customers.
(Photo creidt: Dawn Vanlandingham; Photo courtesy of Koons Chevrolet,
Vienna, Va.) |
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As in other fields, relationship marketing is proving effective in the
highway industry. Just like anyone else, people who work with multibillion-dollar
roadway systems, which effect hundreds of thousands of motorists each
day, also want to get their products and services from people whom they
know they can trust and who will look out for their interests. This
can be seen in the many multibillion-dollar highway and transit construction
projects across the nation that have a single contractor managing the
entire process from the selection of subcontractors to design to construction
to inspection. These projects take years to complete, and the ability
of the contractor to build and maintain a healthy relationship with
his client agency is critical to the project's success. Also, unlike
the typical highway project, these complex mega-projects typically involve
several governmental agencies, and the ability of all parties to work
in partnership demands maintaining healthy relationships.
Bill Jones, the administrator of the Colorado Division of the Federal
Highway Administration (FHWA), noted that the $1.2 billion highway-transit
rail project in Denver, which is nicknamed T-REX (Transportation Expansion
Project), is a case study of relationships. Not only are four governmental
agencies — the Colorado Department of Transportation, the Regional
Transportation District, the Federal Transit Administration, and FHWA
— involved as "customers," the design-build contractor
is actually a consortium of firms led by Peter Kiewit Sons Inc. and
the Parsons Transportation Group. In addition, the local media have
been brought in as partners in the process to keep the driving/commuting
public informed of the developments and progress of the project.
"We've learned lessons from other areas of the country that bringing
the public and the media into something like this is so very important.
And these are relationships that we'll need to be maintaining for years
to come," said Jones.
Knowing how to manage relationships well can be the difference between
success and failure in another area — ensuring the acceptance of
new highway technology and innovations. Many years and huge sums of
money often go into developing new approaches to highway practices.
Yet, once they are ready for implementation, how do their developers
gain acceptance for them and help make them part of standard policy
or practice within the highway industry? This challenge is not small;
it involves convincing the people entrusted with managing this country's
highway system — typically engineers and planners — to look
beyond the old tried-and-true methods and to try something new. So,
why should they change?
People involved in transferring technology — getting others to
accept and apply it — have found that it is helpful to use the
basic principles of marketing. Rather than relying on persuasive sales
techniques and personal charisma, they focus on the needs of the customer.
They don't just describe the new technology in a way that appeals to
the customer; they go beyond that to make sure that the innovation responds
to a real need of the customer in the first place.
But often, such "transactional marketing" is simply not enough.
Think about it! The customer is being asked to adopt an approach that
has undergone limited testing — an innovation or technology that,
if flawed, might cost millions of dollars in construction costs, not
to mention the potential loss of human life. It is quite understandable
if new innovations meet with a degree of skepticism. So, what is the
vital ingredient that convinces the customer to use the new approach?
That key factor is trust. Years of working with the customer and demonstrating
your expertise, capabilities, and reliability can make the difference
between someone turning down a new idea or trying it — in marketing
parlance, making a decision to buy the product.
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| For
a company like Hewlett Packard (HP), maintaining a high-trust
factor with its customers means that those customers will
be more likely to select HP products to meet their future
needs. (Photo credit: Dawn Vanlandingham) |
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Private industry is now realizing the big difference customers' trust
can have on their bottom line.
"Our customers' trust is like a family jewel," said one Hewlett
Packard executive. "Our obligation, as the current generation of
HP management, is never to waste the value of this precious asset."2
For a company like HP, maintaining a high-trust factor with its customers
means that those customers will be more likely to select HP products
to meet their future needs.
For the person promoting the use of a new highway technology, it means
an increased likelihood that the technology will be accepted by the
potential user. But how does one cultivate such trust? That's where
relationship marketing comes in.
Where
It Came From
"OK," you ask, "so is this the flavor of the month,
the latest in a string of management approaches? First, Total Quality
Management, then Quality Circles, and now this new thing?"
Surprisingly, relationship marketing is not new. The first mention
of the term in marketing trade journals dates back to the early 1980s.3
Of course, one could go back much further and think of the old style
"black book" in which a salesman kept the names and telephone
numbers of clients, and the notebook often included the names and
birthdays of the client's family members. Yet, it wasn't until much
more recently that the concept gained widespread publicity, largely
because that's when new computer software packages for applications
such as customer tracking and online customer surveys and when help
desks became available. And these tools proved to be invaluable for
keeping up with customers and their needs.
"Some of what has driven this [interest in relationship marketing]
has been the systems community looking for the next wave of investment
and wanting to put in place the capabilities to help companies better
manage their relationships with their customers. But, at the same
time, it's not like they made up these ideas. What's new is the continued
advance in information technology and the ability to apply that to
these tasks," said Steve Silver, a partner at Helios Consulting
Group in New York.
Many in the marketing industry agree, including Dave Rooney, director
of global CRM (customer relationship marketing) at DaimlerChrysler.
"Most of what's coming out in the software, the hardware, the
technology tools, are just that - tools. They're not answers. How
you use those tools is still the role of marketers," Rooney said.4
And it's the "how" that's important for a successful relationship
with the customer. So, how does one have a good client relationship
marketing program? As with anything, one must start with a plan.
The
Step-by-Step Approach
The first step of this plan is to write down exactly what you want
to accomplish — in other words, a statement of purpose. While
you may think that this step is simply understood, you still need
to go through the exercise. If you don't actually spell out what you
are trying to do, you may too easily slide off into areas that don't
relate directly to your area of focus.
Second, determine with whom you want to have a relationship. In Relationship
Marketing, Ian Gordon writes, "A meaningful relationship
starts ... when supplier and customer see that it is in their interests
to get together for the long term."1
Start by listing everyone with whom you have business dealings. Then
focus on just the people you consider customers or potential customers.
Supplement this list with other people whom you perhaps don't yet
know but need to. Where should this list be made? On index cards?
Your personal digital assistant (PDA)? It's up to you; whatever works
best.
The next step of the process is to record the key information you
have gathered pertaining to your customer. Key information may include
job-related information, such an explanation of specific assistance
you've provided in the past and areas of concern, and personal information,
such as favorite music and hobbies.
Many large firms, interested in the benefit of shared knowledge, have
computer databases of customers that can be accessed and annotated
by staff members throughout the organization. For example, if a customer
with whom you've been working asks a specialist from another part
of the organization for help, that specialist can quickly find what
help you've provided in the past and what the customer's "hot
buttons" are. (However, a word of caution: if you keep customer
records and if you are an employee of a government agency, be aware
that under the provisions of open records laws, you may be required
to provide your records, including the client's personal information,
to a third party, such as a newspaper editor.)
Next, establish routines and communication with your customers. As
with any interpersonal relationship, the key to good relationship
marketing in business is communication. You need to make sure that
you contact your customers regularly. Just as you should have your
car serviced at regular intervals to keep things running smoothly,
so your customers need to be seen on a periodic basis.
There are several good examples of people who have established their
own systems of managing their relationships with customers. Paul Olson,
a specialist in the area of intelligent transportation systems (ITS),
is a good example. Paul works in FHWA's Western Resource Center in
San Francisco. His job requires him to work closely with other ITS
engineers throughout the country — but particularly with those
in the 14 Western states that are the primary coverage area of his
resource center. These engineers include ITS specialists who work
for state and local agencies as well as FHWA employees. Indeed, Paul
has been called upon to provide consulting services throughout the
country and beyond. In 2000, he was invited to visit the Japanese
ITS industry and compare that country's activities to ours. And with
all of these many contacts, Paul focuses on managing relationships.
"Typically, I'll call my contacts periodically and just ask them,
'What's going on?' I let them know about any new developments I've
gotten wind of, and they tell me what's happening in their area,"
Paul said. "When I'm perusing trade publications, I keep my customers
in mind. Often, I'll tear out an article and send it to one of them
with a note. It's a good way of keeping in touch with them. That way,
when something comes up in their locale, I'm the one they think of
to call."
Likewise, the FHWA division in Phoenix has a technique for regular
communication with their "customers" or "partners"
at the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT). The management
staffs of the two groups meet each month at ADOT's employee cafeteria
for breakfast. At that gathering, each staff shares agency news, technology
innovations, and progress reports on major highway projects. The cafeteria
remains open to ADOT employees during the meeting because it was agreed
that it was good for employees to see the two agencies working and
communicating with one another and sharing ideas, according to FHWA's
Arizona Division administrator Bob Hollis.
"It is not surprising that in professional partnerships, such
as law, medicine, architecture, consulting, investment banking, and
advertising, individuals are rated and rewarded by the client relationships
they control," said Theodore Levitt in The Marketing Imagination.5
In the future, more and more reliance will be placed on relationships.
In some cases, these are termed "partnerships," and that
is truly what they are because each party relies on the other's help
to be successful. Each partner has a vested interest in cultivating
and maintaining the relationship even if the other doesn't seem to
be sharing in the effort.
For in the end, as Ian Gordon states, "Relationships are the
only real asset of the enterprise — not the machines that make
the products, the products themselves, or even the intellectual capital
inherent in the people, patents, or know-how, important though all
these might be. Traditionally, an 'asset' has been seen as that which
affects the short-term, revenue-generating potential of a company.
A relationship, in contrast, provides the company with long-term,
lower risk revenues and the opportunity to grow both revenue and profit
in many ways."1
References
1. Ian Gordon. Relationship Marketing, John Wiley & Sons
Canada Ltd., Toronto, 1998.
2. Christopher W. Hart and Michael D. Johnson. "Growing the Trust
Relationship," Marketing Management, American Marketing
Association Publishing Group, Chicago, Ill., Spring 1999.
3. Relationship Marketing: Gaining Competitive Advantage Through
Customer Satisfaction and Customer Retention, edited by Thorsten
Hennig-Thurau and Ursula Hansen, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 2000.
4. Cara Beardi. "CRM," Advertising Age, Vol. 72,
Issue 16, April 16, 2001.
5. Theodore Levitt. The Marketing Imagination, The Free Press,
a division of Macmillan Inc., New York, 1986.
Kathleen
A. Bergeron is the marketing specialist in FHWA's Western Resource
Center in San Francisco. She has 27 years of experience in all aspects
of marketing, including market research, public relations, and advertising.
She is accredited in public relations (APR) by the Public Relations
Society of America (PRSA). Her experience includes working for major
consumer-products corporations, a market research company, consulting
engineering firms, and state and federal transportation agencies. She
has taught classes on marketing at community colleges and major universities,
and she has received awards from PRSA, the International Association
of Business Communicators, the Texas Public Relations Association, the
WorldFest Charleston International Film and Video Festival, the National
Association of Government Communicators, and the American Association
of State Highway and Transportation Officials. She is a member of PRSA
and the American Marketing Association.
Other
Articles in this Issue:
Low-Altitude
Laser Surveys Provide Flexibility and Savings
The
Marriage of Safety and Land-Use Planning: A Fresh Look at Local Roadways
Strengthening
the Connection Between Transportation and Land Use
Iron
and Asphalt: The Evolution of the Spiral Curve in Railroads and Parkways
New
Life for Old Transmitters: Converting GWEN to NDGPS
Colossal
Partnership: Denver's $1.67 Billion T-REX Project
One-of-a-Kind
Bridge Project Protects National Bird
Partnership
Protects Pristine Estuary and Wetlands
Relationship
Marketing: A Key to Success and Survival
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