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Managing Your Relationship With Your Guest. Presented By: Paul Herman, Tom Leddy And Gordon Jones. What Is “CRM”. Customer Relationship Management Becoming a common and important concept in many industries Beyond mere ‘Contact Management’
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Managing Your Relationship With Your Guest Presented By: Paul Herman, Tom Leddy And Gordon Jones
What Is “CRM” • Customer Relationship Management • Becoming a common and important concept in many industries • Beyond mere ‘Contact Management’ • Many industries have CRM software to help sales process, on-going service, and even accounting
Value of CRM • Gain more control in interaction with customers • Manage expectations better • Understand what customers really want • Provide products that better serve customers • Increase trust • Competitive advantage
A Working Definition… • “The Plan and Practice of managing the lifetime relationship with your customer.” • “The Plan”: Every successful endeavor requires proper planning. Successful CRM rarely happens by chance. Many organizations jump to implementation w/o proper planning.
“The Plan and Practice of managing the lifetime relationship with your customer.” • “The Practice”: Systematic implementation of your plans. Should produce measurable results. Should be evaluated and refined over time.
A Few Basic CRM Concepts… • Touch Points • Each time your company interacts with a customer is a touch point. • Can we name a few? • Are they planned? Managed? Documented? • Are all “touchers” properly trained? Enroll your complete staff in the vision. • Any way to increase the effectiveness of the touch? • Any way to increase the number of touches?
Touch Points:Opportunities for Building Life Long Relationships • Lease. • Six months pre-arrival. • One week pre- arrival. • Post stay thank you. • Newsletters.
A Few Basic CRM Concepts… • Market Segmentation • Do you treat all of your customers the same? • Are they? • Consider the difference between a guest that stays once ever in a 2 bedroom cottage and a guest that has stayed each of the last 10 years in a 6 bedroom home • We shouldn’t treat the one-timer badly, they may come back many more times • We should realize that the higher value guest deserves the best that we can offer.
Market Segmentation Examples • Saks Fifth Avenue • High value customers ($2000/yr) are routed to special CSR’s. • The calls are routed such that a high value customer is connected to a CSR in one second or less. • Could we coin a new acronym here: • HVG – High Value Guest?
Segmentation • Can you use your database to see: • Your most valuable repeat guests? • Those who tend to rent last minute? • Those who look for a deal? • Those who like packages? • Those who rent early? • Those who like new construction? • Do you have a way to monitor preferences?
Define Relationship • Relationship: • The state of being related by kindred, affinity, or other alliance. • Webster’s revised unabridged dictionary.
How Does CRM Fit in the Vacation Home Rental World • Our industry actually has 2 major customers • Both owners and guests • We some quantity of both to thrive • Customers can choose to go elsewhere • The happier our customers are, the more likely they are to stay or come back
How Do You Rank Your Customers? • Is your owner your primary customer • Or • Is your guest your primary customer • You can’t have 2 primary customers
Today We’re Talking About Guests • Whether the guest is your primary or secondary customer, he is still you customer and you can manage your relationship with him or her!
What Does Your Guest Relationship Include • You manage his vacation experience. • You collect his money. • You are his source for information about the area. • The more you know about him the better he feels about the relationship.
Important Relationship Items • Good communication • Regular out-going communication • Easy access to correct people in-coming • Recognition • More is better, not easy for newer staff • Respect • VIP treatment in some fashion • Reasonable deference from all staff • Consistency of actions • Good follow-through on problems or research
Why Did He Choose You in the First Place • Most established company • Oldest company • Start-up company with lowest fee structure • Personal relationship or referral • Yellow pages • Saw your sign driving by • Bought the home from you
Be a Guerrilla • Strive for and savor long term relationships. • Know the myriad of benefits of long lasting connections. • Do all in your power to establish and nourish them. • Know that it costs you 6 times more to sell to a new customer. • Know how to listen and ask questions about what customers want. • Know their individual likes and dislikes.
What Is a Vacation • An experience. • A state of mind. • A chance to exhale. • A time to reconnect. • A break from life. • Little touch of heaven. • Rest of life just in anticipation of next vacation.
Manage the Dream • Prior to the vacation • Build the Dream
Manage the Dream • Prior to the vacation • Build the Dream • During the vacation • Fulfill the Dream
Manage the Dream • Prior to the vacation • Build the Dream • During the vacation • Fulfill the Dream • After the vacation • Relive the Dream
Guest Services • Basic maintenance. • Cleaning. • Handling details of reservation. • Activities.
All Guests Want • To trust you with his or her vacation. • To receive timely communication. • To call your office, be recognized and treated with respect. • To get quick, accurate answers to his questions. • To arrive for his or her vacation and have it perfect.
Remember Horst Shultz from the Ritz? • All customers want: • No defects. • Prompt resolution. • Someone who cares.
Ritz-Carlton “The Ritz-Carlton experience enlivens the senses, instills well-being, and fulfills even the unexpressed wishes and needs of our guests.” from the Ritz-Carlton Credo
Many Guests Want • To be self-sufficient- left alone. • Have more control. • Recommendations. • Contact throughout the stay. • Planned activities.
Tools to Help Manage the Relationship • Property management system. • Current address and contact information. • Current and past guest history. • Take full advantage of capabilities. • Newsletters. • Email or regular mail. • Guest surveys. • Do them, and publish the results. • Web site. • General site containing items of owner interest. • Access to reservation information. • Guest 800 number.
Guest Retention • You want to keep your guests returning. • It is always less expensive to do more business with existing customers than to get new customers • You invest in each guest through your web site, photographs, brochures, etc.
Do They Really Know Who You Are? • “Who’d you stay with?” • “Uh, I wasn’t the one who made the reservation.”
The Other Side of CRM • Some guests should be let go • They are too demanding • Take up too much time and provide too little profit • You can only know this if you measure it
Competitive Advantage • The closer your customers feel to you, the better customers they will be. • Better customers spend more money. • Better customers complain less often. • Better customers are more understanding when things go wrong.
How to Do It. • Ask your guests. • Differentiate yourself. • Simple and sustainable. • Make it apart of your system. • Monitor and measure.
Have Fun!! • Need to take the fear out of it!
What Do You Do to Set Yourself Apart? • It’s your turn to talk……