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Archive for the ‘pricing policy’ Category

Reinforce your knowledge about payday loan

28 Jun

By using this practical cognitive technique, human beings have learned about life and survived on their own even in new and unfamiliar situations. A primitive example of this knowledge transference is the lesson most of us learned at a very young age about fire. We were told not to touch it because it was hot. Fire hurts! Most of us heeded that advice. Furthermore, if we happened to get burned inadvertently, the accident did something very important for us. It reinforced our knowledge that fire is hot and it will burn and hurt if we touch it. Since we don’t enjoy pain, we created a mental map about fire and avoided touching it. Now, as adults, we make decisions about fire based on our past orientation.

The “Mental Map Matrix,” illustrates how we use mental maps. While the human decision-making process includes an incalculable number of variables, this simple model shows how we continue to create new mental maps and reinforce old ones. It starts when something happens to us or we experience a new event (box 1). The first thing we do is instantaneously scan our memory for any similar experiences (box 2). Generally at a subconscious level, we ask, “Have I had an experience like this?” (box 3). In most cases, especially as we get older and have more life experiences behind us, we’ll identify some experience that resembles the current situation. If we do, we then try to remember the outcome: “Was it successful for me?” (box 4). This is an internal value judgment. We make this judgment based on our psychology and personality at that moment in our life. Most likely we judge “success” by whether the outcome got us what we needed. If we judge the previous outcome to have been successful, we’ll duplicate the behavior (box 5) to match our mental map and will expect a similar outcome. The aftermath of the experience reinforces our mental map (box 6) as the “right” reaction to that experience.

 

Have confidence to develop a credit

25 Oct

If these new products do not exist, you can have the confidence to develop them.

Another way in which customer loyalty drives profitability is through the ability to increase prices to loyal customers, because, of all the possible purchasers, they are the ones best placed to understand the value of your products. Loyal customers do not typically require discounts or product add-ons to stay with you. If they are happy with the product or service they are buying and if it is competitive, they will not normally be tempted away. Clearly, this depends on variables such as the nature of the market, but there is an element of inertia in most markets.

Loyal customers can also be used to help with market testing of new products. This not only saves money in testing through other means, but it is also often much more effective.

 

Developing a credit’s lifetime value

23 Oct

The concept of customer lifetime value is not new, but it is worth considering how customer loyalty and repeat business develop profitability.

Most obviously, the longer customers stay with the business the more they will spend over time. This is profitable because having sold once, there is likely to be less need to market or sell to them to attract them back; the only requirement is to focus on the quality of the value proposition. Loyal customers also provide a base on which to build market share, which in turn provides a platform from which to develop new commercial opportunities. For example, it can be used to attract advertisers or to entrench the business’s position in the market.

Repeat business often leads to referral revenue. If customers are pleased with the service they will tell others, and they can be offered incentives to do so. Satisfied customers may be receptive to new products as well as (or instead of) their original purchase. By clearly understanding what the customer wants, you can cross-sell other products.

 

Measuring the profitability of credit

20 Oct

This will help to determine the structure, resources, direction and development of the sales effort, enabling the business to develop its activities.

To achieve this, customer analysis should highlight profit per customer, identifying the best and least profitable customers. It is also important to understand the characteristics of the most profitable customers, both tocontinue to meet their needs and to support tailored marketing campaigns that will attract the right customers.

Customer profitability can be measured by analysing two things: customer revenue and customer costs, including defection and retention costs. Some of the most important are listed in Table 12.1. Identifying the most and least profitable customers enables current and future initiatives to be targeted at the most profitable customers. It may also allow the business to find ways of reducing the costs of doing business with the least profitable customers.

 

Building customer credit loyalty

13 Oct

One popular method of building repeat business is through customer loyalty schemes. Their inventiveness can be surprising, providing insights into the brand values of the company as well as the threat that they pose to competitors. Virgin Atlantic, for example, has an ingenious way of using such schemes: to reduce the time it takes to get new customers, it offers privileges to people involved in competitors’ loyalty schemes. For a while, Virgin offered a free companion ticket to any British Airways frequent flyer who had accumulated 10,000 miles. This had the added advantage of reinforcing perceptions of the Virgin brand as being dynamic and flexible, if somewhat bold and outrageous.

 
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