Tenants, parents and passengers. Do you suppose those that sell
to them have ever seen them as customers? Those that sell to them are,
respectively, landlords, schools and the matatu crew. Do you suppose an
upside to this pandemic will be that the trio will rethink their buyers
and see them for who they are: customers? Not payers for the sale they
crave.
In the early days of Covid-19 Kenya was in thrall at the landlord in Naivasha that waived three months’ rent for his tenants.
It
might as well have been breaking news given the buzz it created,
because, ‘if you don’t pay, leave’ is what we are accustomed to.
It is anticipated that the real estate sector will be most affected by this pesky virus.
In the early days of Covid-19 Kenya was in
thrall at the landlord in Naivasha that waived three months’ rent for
his tenants. It might as well have been breaking news given the buzz it
created, because, ‘if you don’t pay, leave’ is what we are accustomed
to. It is anticipated that the real estate sector will be most affected
by this pesky virus.
As it is, there is a landlord I
know, whom, to stem the exodus of tenants from his apartments because
they no longer could afford the rent, appealed (in writing) to remaining
ones to stay, assuring them that he does not intend to evict them, and
in fact, has reduced rent by 10 percent, and is open to payment plans.
Should land lords start thinking of their tenants as customers and treat
them as such?
The buyer-seller relationship in schools is (was?) so intimate that customers aren’t referred to as such, but as parents.
Alas!
The intimacy (if at all it was there) was shattered when private
schools, rudely shaken by the financial earthquake wreaked by the virus,
panicked and went into survival mode. Suddenly parents became, ‘those
that must pay to meet our costs.’ The emotional connection, so
critically important to any sustainable customer growth and retention
plan, snapped like a twig, and the buyers (parents) took the seller
(school) to court over pricing. .Who would have imagined this happening
pre-pandemic? In fact, Parents Teachers Associations (PTAs) are intended
for resolving such challenges on the fly.
Had the schools seen parents as customers, do you suppose they would have responded differently?
This
third one is tough. Will the matatu crew treat passengers as customers
this time round or will they still need divine intervention to do so?
With their customers working from home, that the crew have suffered from
job losses is not news.
However, will they learn from
it, will be. How would it look like if they treated passengers as
customers? They would display the same affection to passengers from
start to end of a journey as they do when wooing them to board.
They
could also learn from the likes of Uber and SWVL. Do you realise that
exemplary customer experience was their entry point, remains their
biggest competitive edge and the reason for their growing popularity?
The
trio sellers demonstrate in graphic detail that, even when demand far
outstrips supply, sellers must always seek to make a customer, not a
sale.
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