Relationship Marketing Strategy and implementation

(Nora) #1

Creating and implementing relationship marketing strategies 413


tailored solutions for their own specific buying ‘problems’. In other
words, the customer and the supplier recognize the advantage to be
gained through closer relationships.
In business-to-business marketing, this collaboration will often
extend to strategic alliances and joint ventures. There will be a
recognition of the mutual benefits of linking each other’s value
chains, in sharing resources, knowledge bases and capabilities to
achieve agreed strategic goals. By definition, a high level of cus-
tomization will be involved in this type of relationship.
In consumer marketing, the opportunities for customization may
seem more constrained. However, in this era of what is sometimes
called ‘mass-customization’,^7 where standard products are subse-


A few important
customers make a
disproportionate
contribution to
profit

Cumulative
percentage
of profit

100

100

Smaller customers still
grow profitability

Many lower-profit customers
at least cover their costs

Several customers produce
a loss, even on a variable
cost basis

Cumulative percentage of customers

At this level of customers, the same profit
is generated with considerably less effort

At this level of customers, total profit
would be much higher than it is now

Figure 6.3 Some customers erode profitability.
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