Relationship Marketing
Relationship Marketing
Relationship Marketing
CHAPTER
Table 10.1
Comparing Transaction-Based Marketing and Relationship Marketing Strategies
INTERNAL MARKETING
Internal customersemployees or departments within the organization whose success depends on the work of other employees or departments.
Internal marketingmanagerial actions that enable all organizational members to understand, accept, and fulfill their respective roles in implementing a marketing strategy.
Effective internal marketing also increases employee satisfaction.
DATABASE MARKETING
Database marketing Use of software to analyze marketing information, identifying and targeting messages toward specific groups of potential customers. Help firms identify their most profitable customers and improve customer retention and referral rates while reducing marketing and promotion costs. Data comes from multiple sources, including credit applications, registrations, point-of-sale scans and other sources. New technologies are providing more data.
CUSTOMERS AS ADVOCATES
Grassroots marketingconnecting directly with existing and potential customers through nonmainstream channels. Viral marketingsatisfied customers get the word about products out to other consumers. Example: The Tell a friend link that appears on many Web pages. Buzz marketingrelies on volunteers to try products and then talk abut their experiences with friends and colleagues. Internet technology gives this word-of-mouth approach far more applications than in the past.
BENEFITS OF CRM
Software systems can make sense of huge amounts of data. Simplify complex business processes while keeping customers interests at heart.
TYPES OF PARTNERSHIPS
Buyer partnerships Internal partnerships Seller partnerships Lateral partnerships.
IMPROVING BUYER-SELLER RELATIONSHIPS IN BUSINESS-TO-BUSINESS MARKETS National Account Selling Business-to-Business Databases Electronic Data Interchange
Quick-response merchandising
Structuring Relationships