Happy birthday? Wow…
Wednesday, November 11th, 2009
We have a saying that we share with our clients when talking about service design: “Add value and money will follow.”
What this means is that you should look at your business – your expertise – and find small, inexpensive ways to leverage that expertise for the benefit of either your existing customers,or prospective customers. Often, the net effect is huge.
Why? Because, supposedly, you are the expert in whatever you do. And consumers these days don’t have time to be experts in all things. So they are looking for what we call “editorial filters,” the companies or individuals who know something they don’t, that can point them in the right direction, make their lives easier, safer, richer, more convenient, etc. These are the “trusted advisors” in our lives. You would think that the those vendors who make the most money from us (think lifetime value) would be most incented to actually be a trusted advisor, and not just a provider of a commodity service. (Think bankers, lawyers, insurance companies, mortgage companies, auto dealers, airlines, etc.)
So imagine my dismay the other day when Allstate Insurance – who I have been with for over 20 years and in that time have probably given them over $35,000 of my hard earned cash – sent me a “Happy Birthday” email. Really? A birthday email? Does someone at Allstate marketing really consider this a best practice of “customer relationship management?” Come on folks. This is 2009!
There a plenty of ways for Allstate to add value to our relationship beyond paying a claim I might submit on average, once per decade. How about using that same email to direct me to that online video about the horrors of texting and driving that I could then send to my teenage daughter? (You know I have teenage daughter – she’s on the policy!) Or how about links to defensive driving classes and offering me a 5% discount for taking it? Maybe you could send me the annual list of the top 10 safest cars, as rated by an independent agency? Tips on how to make my car last longer? Anything… except a gratuitous birthday email!
And these are ideas I am coming up with off the top of my head. This is YOUR business – cars, safety, driving, technology, best practices, statistics, data. You have thousands of employees and massive investments in collecting and analyzing all this information. So why don’t you share a bit of it with me – your customer – to make me a better driver, a safer driver – and ultimately a better customer for YOU?
But you better hurry, because statistically speaking I only have about 40 more years of driving (and insurance payments) left!
Need some help figuring this out? Call us – you’ll be in good hands…

Last week the Wall Street Journal ran an article about Wi-Fi services available on airlines. Bottomline: people love it, but really aren’t willing to pay for it. Why not?