5 How can you create packages or offers based on combining offers from two or more
affinity partners?
6 What price, delivery, financing or incentives can you afford to offer to friends (or col-
leagues) that your current customers recommend?
7 What types of incentives or rewards can you afford to provide customers who recom-
mend friends (or colleagues) who make a purchase?
8 How can you best track purchases resulting from word-of-mouth recommendations
from friends?
Customer experience – the missing element required for
customer loyalty
We have in this chapter shown how delivering relevant timely communications as part
of permission marketing is important to developing loyalty. However, even the most rel-
evant communications will fail if another key factor is not taken into account – this is
the customer experience. If a first-time or repeat customer experience is poor due to a
slow-to-download difficult-to-use site, then it is unlikely loyalty from the online cus-
tomer will develop. The relationship between the drivers of customer satisfaction and
loyalty is shown in Figure 6.16. In the next chapter we review techniques used to help
develop this experience.
CHAPTER 6· RELATIONSHIP MARKETING USING THE INTERNET
Figure 6.16The relationship between service quality, customer satisfaction
and loyalty
Online
service quality
Core and extended
product
offer
Offline
service quality
Expectations met
Customer
loyalty
Communications enhancing brand
and prompting repeat purchases
Service and offer
quality maintained
Customer
satisfaction
Customer
satisfaction
drivers
Customer
loyalty
drivers
Customer expectations of service
Customer experience of service
Quality of
customer
experience