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Smith’s
Roland Rust makes the argument for moving customer relationship management
into the top spot on any company’s to-do list.
nformation
technology has irrevocably changed the shape of the business world. Take the
frequent shopper card at your favorite grocery store as an example. Swipe
your card and a computer tracks your purchases, not just that day but every
time you come in, so the managers know whether you like to purchase
pesticide-free organic vegetables or whether you tend more toward
disgustingly decadent desserts. That information is like
gold to managers, who want to know how many people are purchasing apple
juice and which brand they prefer.
Using the information gathered about you, the store managers can craft an
individual offer based directly on your preferences, even printing out
coupons at the register for goods you purchase frequently, or goods you
might like based on the things you already purchase. This highly
personalized form of marketing is part of your grocery store’s strategy to
secure your loyalty and retain you as a customer. Grocery A and Grocery B
may have equal market share, but the store which does a better job
attracting and retaining customers will be the market winner in the long
run.
Almost every industry is undergoing a shift from a goods economy and
product-based thinking to a service economy and customer-based thinking.
Customers are part of a company’s assets (equity), and effective business
leaders understand how important it is to hear and understand what their
customers are saying. It’s not enough just to make a good product, price it
fairly and sell it with flair. In a service-based economy, the ability to
keep customers for the long term will determine which companies succeed and
which companies fail.
In his book “Driving Customer Equity,” Roland Rust, David Bruce
Smith Chair of Marketing at the Smith School, chair of the marketing
department and executive director of the Center for Excellence in Service,
with co-authors Valarie Zeithaml (a Smith doctoral alumna) and Katherine
Lemon, shows how companies can make savvy decisions about their customer
equity by determining which of three key factors—value, brand or
relationship equity—are most important to driving customer equity in their
industry and their firm. The customer equity framework is effective because
it bases marketing strategies and tactics on what is important to the
customer.
“The biggest mistake firms make is not thinking about customer equity. A
lot of firms have a brand focus or a product focus that effectively makes
the customer second,” says Rust.
Three Keys to Customer Equity
Customer
equity is driven by three key factors: value equity, brand equity and
relationship equity. Value equity is the customer’s objective perception of
the worth of a company’s products and offerings, and includes such things as
quality, price, and convenience. Brand equity is the customer’s subjective
and emotional perception about the brand, above and beyond the value of the
products and offerings of the company. Relationship equity is the tendency
of customers to stick with a brand and a company above and beyond its value
equity and brand equity; it focuses on the customer’s relationship with the
firm based on the actions taken by the firm and by the customer to build and
maintain that relationship.
The customer equity framework lets you put a dollar value to the measures
companies take to retain customers, making marketing financially accountable
in a way that was almost impossible in the past. “One of the big problems
with marketing was how very difficult it was to figure out what return on
investment companies were getting from their expenditures. In other areas
there is a clear relationship between investment and profit—if you build
this plant, or cut these costs, the company knows what sort of return will
result,” says Rust. “In marketing, we spend some money over here and
eventually see some sales over there, but too often the linkage is unclear.”
Rust’s
customer equity model involves a statistical linkage of marketing
expenditures to changes in perception, to changes in brand switching, to
customer lifetime value and customer equity. “Then you begin to get a handle
on return on investment, because you have a chain of effects from the
expenditure to the behavioral result and the profitability that comes from
it,” says Rust. “We can project the return on investment before the company
spends, and we can then measure the effectiveness of the expenditure after
the fact.”
The customer equity model is used to measure the effects of marketing
efforts and maximize the ROI on marketing initiatives. Survey instruments
are used to discover what customer perceptions are, which are combined with
the evidence of their purchasing behavior; these data are then fed into the
model, which uses complex statistical calculations to give companies an
accurate assessment of which marketing efforts really affect customer
behavior in a profitable manner.
At least three of the top 10 Fortune 500 companies (and several more
Fortune 500 companies that are not in the top 10) rely on the customer
equity model to assess their marketing efforts. Rust and his co-authors work
directly with companies through their consulting firm, but they are not the
only ones applying this academic work in the business world. If imitation is
the sincerest form of flattery, Rust should be deeply flattered: a number of
other consulting groups around the world also use the model based on
information available in Rust’s academic papers. “Though they don’t always
apply it in the way I would,” Rust comments wryly.
Playing
the High-Service Game
Perhaps the biggest impact the customer equity model has is that it
allows companies a way to justify the costs of increasing and improving
service to customers by linking those costs and resulting revenues to
customer equity. Most CEOs try to cut costs to improve profits because that
is where they are able to see a financial return. “There are tremendous
opportunities for companies that look at it from the other direction,” says
Rust. “Companies that decide to increase service and go out of their way to
provide better service to their customers will do really well, because
chances are that their competitors are just cutting cost, and you can only
cut costs so far.” The customer equity model provides business leaders with
a way to quantify the results of their marketing efforts, and thus justify
the service increase in terms of improved profits.
The ability to see the financial impact of increased services on value
perception, brand perception and relationships will allow firms to play what
Rust describes as the “high-service game,” as opposed to the cost-cutting
game. Hotels are already in the high-service game, attempting to woo and win
consumers with frequency clubs which provide special services and perks to
those who stay often.
“The industry where that should be happening more, and isn’t, is the
airline industry,” says Rust. “The legacy airlines—Delta, United,
American—are trying to make themselves just like Southwest, but they don’t
have the cost structure of Southwest. They should be trying to compete on
quality rather than cost. That is a potentially winning strategy for
somebody. But for CEOs, it comes down to being able to quantify the
financial accountability for actually increasing services.”
The Future of Marketing
When Rust looks ahead, he sees a future of increasingly targeted brands
focused on increasingly narrow markets. Information technology has
fragmented the mass media market, making it impossible to really reach large
groups of people anymore (with the exception, he concedes, of Super Bowl
Sunday.) But what technology takes away with one hand, it gives back with
the other: the astonishing amount of data available about individual
consumers makes it more and more possible to customize and personalize
marketing efforts—and do it in real time. Ultimately, Rust believes that in
the future business world, all the value-added will be in services tailored
specifically for individual consumers.
Television is a good example of this evolution. Fifty years ago, everyone
watched the same three channels, providing a near-captive audience for
marketing efforts. Today hundreds of channels are available. In the future,
television may become an Internet-based pay-per-view experience. You may be
able to choose programs in real time over the Internet, allowing you to
select just the programs you want to watch, just when you want to watch
them, paying a little bit for every program you watch.
Technology would also allow you to construct programs tailored
specifically to your tastes. You could see the Nationals game from behind
home plate, or from right field. Your customized news program could include
the local news from Shanghai, the stock prices in Singapore, and the weather
report for Los Angeles.
Such a world is better and better for the consumer, but it will prove
more profitable for companies as well. Personalized services also allow for
personalized pricing, because each consumer is offered a product unique to
himself. “That will result in monopoly pricing,” says Rust. “And people will
be happy to pay it, because they are getting a better product. Monopoly
pricing is also higher than free-market competitive pricing, making it most
profitable for companies to try to offer the greatest personalization to
their customers. The key is to build the relationship over time, so the
customer will stay loyal to you.”

Training Tomorrow’s Leaders
Rust writes about customer equity both in sophisticated academic journals
as well as articles aimed toward the business practitioner, in magazines
like the Harvard Business Review.
“A professor can’t write important, influential work without having one
leg in the business world,” Rust says. “Business is an applied field; it’s
important that the work we produce has relevance to the real world. I want
to be able to talk to companies and affect what they do. And it’s a two way
street—I get ideas from the companies I work with. They make it clear what
the key issues are, and what they’re really worried about. Then I can bring
that into my writing and my teaching.”
Rust’s very modern view of marketing is folded throughout the marketing
curriculum, not just in the classes Rust teaches. The marketing core course
for MBA students, for example, presents a very modern take on the idea of
marketing exploiting the power of information technology. Smith students are
being exposed to these ideas in their formative years.
Rust’s potent combination of business acumen and teaching excellence will
influence the thinking of tomorrow’s business leaders for years to come.
Rust says, “Teachers can teach better if they know what is going on in the
business world. And if they can drive change in the business world, that’s
even better. Then you are on the forefront, and you can train your students
to be on the forefront.”
Marketing
Department Faculty
Gabriel Biehal
PhD Stanford University
Rosalina Ferraro
PhD Duke University
Natasha Zhang Foutz
PhD Cornell University
Rebecca Hamilton
PhD MIT Sloan School of Management
Sanjay Jain
PhD University of Arizona
P.K. Kannan
PhD Purdue University
Robert Krapfel
PhD Michigan State University
Wendy Moe
PhD Wharton School University of Pennsylvania
Brian Ratchford
PhD University of Rochester
Roland Rust
PhD University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Joydeep Srivastata
PhD University of Arizona
Janet Wagner
PhD Kansas State University |
Emeritus Professors
Thomas Greer
University of Texas, Austin
William Nickels
PhD Ohio State University
Visiting Professors
Rebecca Ratner
PhD Princeton University
R. Sukumar
PhD University of Pittsburgh
Tyser Teaching Fellows
Hank Boyd
PhD Duke University
Judy K. Frels
PhD University of Texas
Roxanne Lefkoff
PhD University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Diane Whitney
PhD University of Maryland |
The Smith School’s marketing department
is making a name for itself through cutting-edge research on some of the
most compelling issues in the digital economy. The department offers an
active PhD program as well as numerous classes at the MBA and undergraduate
levels. The MBA program in marketing has been named one of the nation’s top
13 programs by Business Week Online. Supporting the department’s customer
focus, the department sponsors the Center for Excellence in Service, the
annual AMA Frontiers in Services Conference, the Journal of Service
Research, and the first MBA course in e-service. The department also has a
global focus, as seen from the department's sponsorship of the Center for
Global Business.
In July 2006, the Smith School will have
the honor of hosting the American Marketing Association’s Doctoral
Consortium, at which distinguished faculty from around the world along with
the best and brightest doctoral students gather for an exchange of ideas. |