By JOHN KAGECHE, lendmeyourears@consultant.com
Who is a customer? Whenever I ask delegates in my session that question, I almost always get one or both of these responses.
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“A customer is the end user of a product or service” or, “A
customer is the one who trades his money for the product or service.”
Whereas both have elements of truth in them, they are also narrow and
misleading.
Understandably, the responses are borne of a mind filled with academic theory of who a customer is.
The business world, however, is a bit more
complicated; therefore businesses must be clear who their customer is as
this will determine the most effective way of selling to him.
And so to the latter response, I ask, “Do you all
have a free e-mail address?” “Of course!” the class responds
indignantly. “And do you consider yourselves customers of Yahoo! and
Gmail?” I prod. Pin drop silence follows.
I can almost hear the minds creaking for what seems
an eternity, but is only a few seconds, before insightful understanding
spreads across their faces and a bust of laughter follows. “Yes, we
are.”
As for the former response, it’s even more
intriguing. If the business model of a company is distributor dependent,
for instance, it follows therefore that the distributor becomes a key
customer.
Most fast-moving-consumer-goods (FMCG) companies
fall in this category. What about the end user then? Well he’s also a
customer, only different from the distributor.
And there-in lies a world of difference that will
either profitably propel the sales activities of an institution or
rapidly repel the institution from the customer – clearly defining who
its customer is and consequently, selling to that customer in his
language and laying business emphasis and resources in commensurate
manner.
In today’s world, many business models are
different from the traditional one. In the former example of e-mail
addresses, Yahoo! and Google have invested massive resources to get the
full attention of (read, sell to) a non-paying customer (you and I), so
that they can have a leg to stand on when selling to the paying customer
(advertiser).
In similar fashion, this paper you are reading
costs much more than the Sh60 you bought it at and most probably Sh60 is
the unit cost of printing it; much as you are the target market, what
keeps the media house that prints it afloat isn’t your Sh60, but the
advertisers who will pay to appear in it, for you to read about them.
In this case, both are paying customers and each serves a different, but complementary purpose.
In the case of the FMCG, the distributor is an
intrinsic part of the business model and for this reason many businesses
invest heavily in their distributors.
This distributor will, of course, further sell to
the retailer and then she to the end user who buys from her local kiosk.
That’s the theory-in practice however, having sold to the distributor,
the FMCG cannot sit on its laurels. The end user is still a customer it
must reach out to (sell to).
This it does via advertising, promotions, and
merchandisers (that’s the aisle attendant who attempts to get you to try
the new sausage). In fact the merchandiser is a classic example of
selling to both customers.
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