Serving the customer: a race to the bottom.

AuthorHall, Robert
PositionMarketing Solutions

The year is 1997. Imagine an audience composed of CEOs and executive teams from companies who comprise 15 leading industries in the United States. The question for them: How many believe their industry will be rated lower by customers when the year 2003 rolls around?

Surely none thought so. After all, 1997 was the heyday of the customer-focused company.

We don't actually know how they would have voted back then. What we do know is how their customers have voted since, thanks to the Harris Poll: Each of the industries for which there' is a historical comparison (13 industries) experienced a drop in the percentage of customers who said the industry was serving its customers better. That is hard to fathom.

For some industries, the decline over those six busy years is drastic. Pharmaceutical/ drugs, from 79 to 49 percent. Telephone, from 80 to 57 percent. Health insurance, from 55 to 40 percent.

For banking, the decline is slight--from 75 to 72 percent.

This should get your attention

But whether they dropped a little or a lot, they all dropped. It's not that customer satisfaction is the perfect predictor of customer behavior or future value, but surely it stands for something, Imagine all those executives at their off-site retreats in the spring of 1997 working on their strategies. Did any of them say, "Let's invest in technology, better processes, and better products so that we can show our customers we can serve them worse"?

Something systemic is happening here, despite occasional breakthroughs from individual companies. When the collective companies that comprise 13 major industries lock arms and head south, it should get our attention. It should matter.

When a company is in a battle to the death for organic, profitable revenue growth, the opposite trend--the loss of revenue to erosion or defection or tepid customer commitment--is deadly. Moreover, when customers move promiscuously from one provider to another, the cost of sales, service and marketing goes up, while revenue does not. According to The...

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