|
Does Loyalty
Count?
By Michael Alan Hamlin
July 29, 2002
If contemporary wisdom can be conventional,
the conventional wisdom is that successful companies compete for
share of profitable customers, rather than market share. The idea
is that market dominance can mean that a company is spending valuable
resources serving customers that aren't, and never will be, profitable.
Those customers should be jettisoned from the corporation's field
of vision.
Instead, marketing executives and
strategists are told to concentrate on building relationships with
profitable customers for the purpose of making them loyal customers.
If that's done properly, loyal customers are assumed to be a source
of consistently profitable transactions. Now, a couple of marketing
professors are pretending this contemporary but conventional wisdom
is a new thing.
In an article titled "The Mismanagement
of Customer Loyalty," Professors Werner Reinartz and V. Kumar
argue in the July 2002 issue of Harvard Business Review that "the
relationship between loyalty and profitability is much weaker -
and subtler - than the proponents of loyalty programs claim."
Their research showed "little or no evidence to suggest that
customers who purchase steadily from a company over time are necessarily
cheaper to serve, less price sensitive, or particularly effective
at bringing in new business."
Reinartz and Kumar are saying nothing
we don't already know. As I've pointed out, loyalty programs are
supposed to focus on profitable customers, not just all consistent
customers. So what we have here is an effort by Reinartz and Kumar
to appear to be challenging conventional wisdom, when in fact they
quickly wind up affirming it. "Instead of focusing on loyalty
alone, companies will have to find ways to measure the relationship
between loyalty and profitability so that they can better identify
which customers to focus on and which to ignore," they say.
But there are lots of people who
have been saying this for years. They include both marketing consultants
like one-to-one marketing gurus Don Peppers and Martha Rogers and
Philip Kotler and competitive strategists like Adrian Slywotzky,
Gary Hamel, and Michael Porter. And Reinartz and Kumar introduce
their argument with painfully simplistic assumptions, such as "it
costs less to serve loyal customers," and shoot them down.
Let's consider that assumption for
a second, which is about all it deserves. Indeed, it does cost less
to serve loyal customers, whether they are profitable loyal customers
or unprofitable loyal customers. While efficiently serving unprofitable
but loyal customers is preferable to inefficiently serving unprofitable
but loyal customers, no executive wants to serve unprofitable customers
at all.
The same sort of kindergarten logic
frames the authors' other claims of loyalty mismanagement. They
include the assumption that loyal customers pay higher prices and
help market the company. Even profitable customers aren't going
to pay a higher price for the same bundle of goods that they could
buy elsewhere more cheaply unless there are attractive reasons to
do so, such as convenience, credit arrangements, or an intimate
understanding by the seller of the customer, the customer's business,
or perhaps even the customer's clients.
And you probably don't want unprofitable
customers talking you up to their equally unprofitable friends,
either. So is their any merit in the work of Reinartz and Kumar?
Is there a good reason that the normally rigorous Review published
this piece?
Sadly, mostly no. The authors present
a certifiably laughable quadrant, for instance, that purports to
demonstrate that unprofitable customers come from just about every
customer classification, such as corporate service provider, grocery
retail, mail-order, and direct brokerage. The quadrant and the research
that went into developing it appear to suggest that unthinking companies
target one of these segments because they vary in degree of profitability.
It's really no surprise that both
loyal profitable and unprofitable customers can be found in each
of these categories. The trick is in finding and developing profitable
customers in these categories that a company can turn into loyal
customers. Despite all the time the authors spend getting to that
point, they finally - and briefly - do offer some insights into
making profitable customers long-term friends.
Using a second quadrant, customers are classified into four categories:
True Friends (High Profitability, Long-Term), Butterflies (High
Profitability, Short-Term), Strangers (Low Profitability, Short-Term),
and Barnacles (Low Profitability, Long-Term). True friends are customers
that that provide a good fit between the company's products and
services and the customer's needs. Fit has to do with the issues
that make a customer willing to pay more for a bundle of products
and value-added services.
Reinartz and Kumar tell us a little
about how to keep these customers. First, communicate consistently,
but not too often. Second, build both attitudinal and behavioral
loyalty, and third, delight these customers to nurture, defend,
and retain them. Unfortunately, they offer few insights into how
to do these things. But that's okay, too, because loads of other
people do that.
The Review is now published monthly,
instead of every two months. Perhaps that explains how a paper as
empty as this one got published. But if it's so worthless, why am
I spending all this time on it? The reason is that I do agree with
Reinartz and Kumar. Most customer loyalty programs fail because
they are about as mindless and simplistic as this their article
is.
(Michael Alan Hamlin is the managing
director of consultancy TeamAsia and the author of three books on
Asian economies and companies. His latest book is Marketing Asian
Places, of which he is a co-author (Wiley, 2001). He can be reached
at mahamlin@teamasia.com.ph.).
Copyright © 2001 Michael Alan
Hamlin. All Rights Reserved.

|