Relationship marketing focuses on developing long-term relationships with customers rather than individual transactions. It aims to provide an excellent customer experience to attract new customers and retain existing ones through repeat purchases and referrals. While relationship marketing can increase customer loyalty and lifetime value, it also takes more time and effort to build relationships. Companies must balance relationship-building with attracting new customers to continue growing.
2. What is relationship marketing and how
does it work?
- Transactional marketing tries to earn the next sale through advertisements
and solicitations. Companies invest extensive resources and money to get
customers' attention, make a sales pitch, and then facilitate a sale.
Therefore, they use different strategies for transactional sales versus
growing relationships. Many marketing departments split resources to focus
on one or the other.
- Relationship marketing is a tactic to form long-term relationships with
prospects and customers. Relationship marketing focuses on overall
experience with the brand rather than sales alone. A brand experience helps
attract new customers and retain them for a long time, earning repeat sales.
- Businesses must foster customer loyalty and provide products that those
customers deem exemplary. In turn, customers stay with the company
longer and make unsolicited referrals. Companies that invest in relationship
marketing have the potential to achieve a much greater ROI than with
transactional marketing.
3. Pros and cons of relationship
marketing
Pro:
1. Returning customers purchase more
than first-time customers.
- Relationship marketing increases the likelihood of
retaining customers. These customers turn into repeat
buyers, from cross-selling or upselling. Customer lifetime
value (CLV) refers to what a customer spends over time
with a brand. The more they buy, the higher their CLV.
4. 2. Free word-of-mouth marketing.
- Customers who have a positive experience with a brand
because of the relationship or the value the product
provides are likely to tell others. These customers create a
positive, viral, one-on-one marketing experience.
5. 3. Personal connections.
- Whether a business sells directly to customers or sells a
service to businesses, they always reach a person who
makes the purchase decisions. Personal connections with
the buyers create meaningful individual interactions.
Customers want the following:
• to be heard;
• to have problems and challenges addressed; and
• to receive regular communication, follow-through and
support.
6. Con:
1. It takes time
- A business needs to take the time to build customer
relationships. Spend more time with each customer, for
example. Or give customers room to make a purchase
decision. Many sales do not happen on the first
engagement point. It takes many interactions to establish
the trust and relationship needed to garner results.
7. 2. Negative feedback.
- Word of mouth, if negative, can ruin a relationship marketing
campaign. Consumers often expect immediate gratification. One
negative experience shared with others has the power to derail a
campaign. Consumers share experiences fast. If they don't get what
they want, in the timeframe they expect, they will tell others about their
bad experience. Balance strong relationships with the ability to capture
buyers at the right time.
8. 3. New customers are no longer a
priority.
- A strong relationship marketing strategy aims for customer
retention and growth. But a business cannot succeed
without new customers. Don't neglect opportunities to
foster new relationships. No matter how much an
organization prioritizes retention, some customers leave,
and growth calls for repeat and new purchases.