Did you know that it costs about six times more to store new customers than to keep existing customers happy and that a customer's lifetime value to your club can be worth over 0,000? Based on this, isn't it worth committing to make each customer happy and instituting a customer-friendly culture?
Having a customer-friendly culture involves more than just offering quality food and service-it involves being an easy, loose, and accommodating place to visit. To understand the point of adopting a customer-friendly culture, it's foremost to understand the belief of the short-term and long-term, or lifetime value of a customer. Most often, operators are preoccupied with finding at the short-term worth of their customers, or one transaction during a singular point in time, instead of finding at the lifetime value. Calculating lifetime values allow you to place monetary values on a customers' yearly contributions so you can see the big picture.
To expound this point, think this example. Your business establishes 10Pm as the conclusion time for your restaurant and posts it on your front door, which customers depend on. Your loyal customers, Mr. And Mrs. Porter, visit your restaurant at 9:45Pm and your staff curtly tells them the kitchen is closed. This one-time transaction may have appeared as if your carrying out incurred only a loss (a singular lost sale), the estimated evening meal tab from a party of two people. Your staff may think, "So what...fifty dollars isn't worth taking one more table and staying late-no big deal." However, what your staff fails to think is Mr. And Mrs. Porter's lifetime value.
To imagine the lifetime value, you need to value the couple's long-term spending. Say the Porters spend an mean of 0 a month (0 each). Over time, that comes to ,400 a year, ,000 over five years...and a whopping ,000 in ten years! To take it a step further, when Mr. And Ms. Porter both tell five friends about there safe bet contact at your restaurant (knowing that a happy customer tells approximately five people) then, a total of ten habitancy come to be lifetime customers, each valued at 12,000 also. Consequently, Mr. And Ms. Porter's 10-year value of ,000 (,000 each) soon becomes an estimated total value of 4,000, as they created 10 more life-time customers for your restaurant, each valued at ,000, plus their combined value of ,000.
Now that you know this, would you insist that your staff keeps your kitchen open and does all things in their power to win your customers back?
Since Mr. And Ms. Porter can together sway 10 habitancy and they are now worth 4,000 to your operation, take the time to survey your existing customer service philosophies, which shape your policies. Honestly, ask yourself if you have adopted winning philosophies such as recognizing the lifetime value of a customer and properly trained your team to cater to your customers' needs. Are you doing all you can to thrill your customers and encourage them to return and refer others? Or, are your restaurant policies too restrictive and encouraging only a one-time stop? Do your policies turn your customers on or off?
Cal Sheehy, Vice President and normal boss of London Bridge Resort, of Lake Havasu City, Az says, "We train our team with proven facts, numbers, and statistics, such as the lifetime value of a customer, so they will good understand our philosophies and buy into the essence of our training programs. Catering to our customers' needs and creating a friendly, hassle-free environment is what we are all about-it pays dividends to us".
In increasing to offering your customers quality food and service, report the list below of suggested customer-friendly standards. This list will help you resolve if your current policies and procedures were established for your customers' advantage or the convenience of your company.
Do you graciously...
• Allow substitutions?
• Permit customers to modify an entree and/or make extra requests (knowing you have all the ingredients in house)?
• Give extra toppings or bread at no charge?
• Offer free soft drink refills?
• Honor an old menu price? (as a one-time exception)
• Graciously cope separate checks?
• Omit plate charges?
• Dismiss automatic gratuities at your customer's request?
• Let a customer use an expired coupon/promotion?
• Take several forms of payment?
• Allow customers to be seated in a fulfilled, station?
• Place late-arriving customers at the top of the list instead of penalizing them?
• Seat customers slightly after conclusion hours?
• Permit partial parties to be seated?
• Upon request, seat a party of two at a four-top? Or, seat a party of four at a six top?
• Let a customer change a table?
• Allow customers to add their bar tab to their evening meal tab?
• Allow two-for-one cocktails to be shared or split and delivered one at a time instead of both together?
• cope complaint situations in favor of the customer without having a mindset that all customers are finding for something for free?
If you answered "yes" to a large percentage of the list above, that's great...and you're probably enjoying repeat business. If you answered "no," you may be losing customers-and since all policies are meant to be broken, you can beyond doubt change them and start winning over your customers today.
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