There are price conscious customers and there are loyal customers. Either party must be treated differently. Right?
Wrong!
It is true, they behave differently, but they are not different. To believe they are different means you believe they were born that way. You believe people were born loyal and people were born price conscious and so we have to segregate them.
Think about your loyal customers for a minute. The first time you met did they say, 'hey, I am loyal, I don’t care what you charge me, have all of my business, here’s my cheque book, write the number in yourself' – I don’t think so!
There would’ve been a period of courting, of testing each other until a level of trust was developed. From here a relationship blossomed and loyalty became the dominant behaviour.
The only difference between a loyal customer and a price conscious customer is your time and effort.
It is true though, that some customers take longer to become loyal than others and sometimes the time and effort is just not worth it. However, that is a call you make when time and effort has been invested, not before.
When we put customers into buckets like ‘loyal’, ‘price conscious’ and of course the biggest bucket of all, the ‘dickhead’ bucket, we make our decisions based on this and our behaviour towards them reflects our belief.
So, why do we do this?
We do this because of our inability to get our customers to change or inability to transfer the trust. We don’t want to admit that we aren’t brilliant at what we do. “It can’t be my shortcomings, so it has to be the customer!”
We use these buckets as a ‘get out of jail free’ card, to deflect our responsibility and to distribute blame somewhere else. I am now safe - I don’t have to change my beliefs, I don’t have to see the world differently, I can go back to doing what I have always done.
The problem with this is one day you are going to run out of customers to contact. You will say to yourself, ‘I can’t get any more loyal customers, I have them all’.
All of the customers in your price conscious and dickhead buckets are likely to be someone else's potential loyal customers.
For us to progress, there is a key difference that we need to understand when it comes to building relationships with customers. The difference is…
a) Customers that don’t see and feel the value we offer and...
b) Those that do.
Your sales capability is and has always been measured by how many customers you get to move from a) to b). It’s a simple fundamental that goes out the window when we are too quick to give our customer a label.
Andrew Nisbet




