Telecom companies are now offering one paise per second billing. ARPU (Average Revenue per User) is falling while competition is increasing. With the ‘number portability’ regime, I wonder what shape would ‘pricing’ take?
Why are brands still trying to differentiate on pricing? It can never be a differentiator. It’s an oft repeated research that customers do not mind paying more for what they perceive to be a better experience than competitors. Therefore price is not the first criteria. It may help in acquiring customers but can never be a variable in retaining customers. A competitor will come, offer a better price and take him away. However, if you have provided him with enough positive experiences then he will not go to your competitor.
Try understanding your customer and what he wants. What are the triggers which make your brand a pleasurable experience for him? Those triggers are the differentiator. Those triggers are the reason that your customer will stay with you irrespective of discounts offered by any number of competitors. Your customer will stay with you and get you many more.
How do you recognise these triggers? By logging in all the transactions that your customer has had with your brand. And then by understanding those transactions in the context of the consumer. This has to happen over a period of time across all points of customer contact.
Or you could identify your top 20% customers and ask them for feedback. This won’t happen in a day and it shouldn’t even be a one-off activity. It has to be a sustained effort. Customers should also realise your sincerity in this exercise. It should be made easy to them to give their feedback. The feedback should be collated well to create actionable marketing and service plans.
You may need to get your database management systems right... but before that you will definitely need to get your strategy right. After all, you need customers while they may not need you!
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