Media
Centre
Echelon
Learning
Master
List
PRESS INFORMATION ISSUED ON BEHALF OF:
Echelon Publishing
Darwin House, 236 South Ealing Road, LONDON W5 4RP
tel 020 8568 1500; fax 020 8560 6612; web http://learningmatters.com
5th January 2009
Echelon focuses on the secrets of keeping - and gaining - customers
in an economic downturn
In an attempt to provide practical advice and guidance to organisations
in the current economic climate, the organisation development
consultancy, Echelon, is offering its customers free access to a paper
on 'retaining customers in an economic downturn'.
The paper - authored by sales performance specialists Huthwaite
International - is one of the 'action lists' on the 'Learningmatters'
website. This website is Echelon's 'virtual warehouse' of over 2,000
downloadable bite-size performance solutions including 300 action lists
for everyday business problems; 650 self-development solutions to help
build a skill; 200 best practice essays/interviews with top business
thinkers; 100 diagnostic and audit solutions to check out current
performance; 250 digest articles on business giants and management
books, and 600 training solutions to help build skills in others.
Among the paper's eight key points are:
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Dissatisfaction is the
first step to losing business, so the best way of keeping your existing
business is to ensure that any existing client dissatisfaction, no
matter how small, is detected and addressed at the earliest possible
opportunity. So check user satisfaction regularly and respond quickly.
-
Develop perceptions of
value, so document all the good news. If clients have no understanding
of the value your business is bringing to their business it's not
surprising that they see little problem in changing suppliers.
-
Maintain and extend
your network of contacts, rather than maintain links with an ageing and
shrinking pool of business contacts. In a downturn companies shed
people - and losing your key contact can leave you vulnerable to
change.
-
Develop accounts,
don't just maintain them. Explore what changes the customer plans to
make to cope with the slow-down and consider the extent to which such
change can provide opportunities for your business as well as threats.
-
Expect price pressure
but take time to check the full cost of any concessions you are being
asked to make. Make sure customers fully understand the value of what
they are getting and plan how you will negotiate if price becomes an
issue.
If you have to give
ground on price, try to trade it for other things of value such as
better payment terms, or more business. Don't be fooled by promises of
'jam tomorrow' in return for concessions today: make concessions
conditional on getting that extra business now.
-
Watch your own cost of
the sale and don't chase business where your chances of success are
low. We can fool ourselves that we are making progress when, in fact,
we are wasting time and money on a client where nothing is going to
happen.
-
Review your marketing
strategy. Building brand is fine but good leads now could be more
important.
-
Offer clients low risk
solutions.
"The paper stresses
the importance of looking for ways to enable your organisation to
become an active part of your customers' activities," commented
Echelon's chairman, David Hill.
"Following this advice should enable businesses to improve their
relationships with their customers - making it more difficult for them
to sever business links. In the current economic climate, that could
mean the difference between retaining business and losing it to a
competitor.
"This paper is one of many on the Learningmatters website," he added.
"Each of these offer sound advice and, increasingly, this website -
with its ease of access, allowing users to study as and when they wish
rather than being restricted to 'set learning times' by a formal course
of study - is being used by executives as a source of job support and
for their continuous professional development (CPD)."
For the free sample action list - Retaining customers in an economic
downturn - visit
http://learningmatters.com/dwn/25270/index.html
ENDS
For further
information please contact
Media contact: Bob Little Tel + 44 (0)1727 860405; Email:
bob.little@boblittlepr.com
Sales contact: Hugh
Garai Tel + 44 (0)20 8568 1500; Email:
hugh@echelonlearning.co.uk
About Echelon Publishing
Echelon technologies help organisations place solutions at people's
fingertips, whether solving everyday business and work-related problems
or helping gain qualifications and continued professional development.
Echelon:
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Has a content management system
enabling informational or learning material to be developed or
converted into XML so that it can be published and distributed in text
and/or via the web.
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Has a learning management system
to provide ready access via the web to highly structured information,
which is easily searched and retrieved, and whose usage can be tracked
and learning logged.
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Publishes and/or reformats
content for professional bodies and commercial organisations to help
students and employees maintain or develop requisite skills throughout
their careers.
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Supports people from the outset
of their careers in working with professional bodies to develop and
deliver the learning content required by students in preparing for
examination.
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Frees up the knowledge and
learning contained within a business so that people have ready access
to these resources in helping them to solve problems or develop their
careers.
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Works with a number of blue chip
organisations and professional bodies, including:
COMMERCIAL
BUPA
Coventry Building Society
Lincoln Financial
Moat House Hotels
Modernisation Agency (NHS)
Novartis Pharmaceuticals
NHS Logistics
Vodafone
INSTITUTIONAL
Chartered Institute of Personnel & Development
Chartered Institute of Public Finance Accountants
Chartered Institute of Purchasing & Supply
Construction Industry Training Board
Institute of Chartered Secretaries & Administrators
Institute of Chartered Accountants in E & W
Institute of Civil Engineers
Royal Town Planning Institute