Tutorial MGM4187 CH 14 17
Tutorial MGM4187 CH 14 17
Tutorial MGM4187 CH 14 17
ANSWER: Today, retaining and maintaining current customers is more important than
spending money to find new customers. It has been reported that 65 percent of a
company's business comes from current customers and of those customers, 20
percent will be the source of most of the business's profits. Because it costs five to
ten times more to go after a new customer than to serve an existing one, getting
the right customers is critical. Furthermore, with good customer profiles, a
company can match demographic information about current customers with
demographic data in the geographic area of interest to find prospects more
effectively. Information contained in the database can be used in advertising, sales
promotion, public relations, direct mail, and personal selling.
One huge benefit to building relationships with customers is that if a problem
occurs, a customer who has a relationship with the company won't automatically
shift their loyalty to a competitor. Often their loyalty is actually strengthened
when a problem-solving session with the company results in a satisfying
conclusion. Perhaps the most important benefit of establishing lifelong customer
relationships is that over time, the full value of customers is revealed. Customers
are no longer viewed as a series of transactions but as bona fide, contributing
members of the team who bring value to the bottom line. The more a company
learns from its customers, the better it will become, and the more difficult it will
be for a competitor to attract these customers.
List some various ways to attract customers to a website.
ANSWER: There are many effective ways to attract customers to a website, including the
following:
Chapter 17
Briefly describe how franchising works. What risks are associated with franchising?
ANSWER: Franchising enables a business to grow quickly into several geographic markets at
once. The franchiser sells to the franchisee the right to do business under a
particular name; the right to a product, process, or service; training and assistance
in setting up the business; and ongoing marketing and quality control support once
the business is established. The franchisee pays a fee and a royalty on sales,
typically 3–8 percent. For this fee, the franchisee may get: