The Key to Building a Profitable Business

2009 July 15
by Scott Jeffrey

What drives your business? Most executives and entrepreneurs would say sales or revenue.

But where do those sales come from? Customers, right?

Now, are all customers created equal? Of course not. Most customers will remain indifferent to your brand. They will buy from you on occasion—when it’s most convenient—and shop elsewhere when it’s not.

Amazingly, most businesses cater to these nomadic customers. Most executives think mass appeal and believe an untargeted marketing plan that casts the widest net will generate the most sales.

In the short run, they might be right. The fickle, nomadic customer might jump at a great promotion. But they will jump at your competitor’s great promotion just as quickly.

If you try to build your business around these fickle customers, the only way you can show increased profits on your balance sheet is to increase your growth curve. For retailers, this means continually opening more stores. Ultimately, this is not a sustainable model and profits erode over time as your market gets saturated.

The key to growing a profitable business is to build it around the needs and wants of your best customers. We call this special breed of customers Brand Lovers. Focus on serving your Brand Lovers and you’ll naturally attract more of them.

All great businesses—big and small—have Brand Lovers. All great brands learn to cater to and serve their Brand Lovers better than anyone else.

If your Brand Lovers represent your most profitable customers, why would you try to serve anyone else?

Focus on your Brand Lovers as the core of your business. Talk to them. Listen to them. Learn from them. Try to understand them. Co-create your business around their needs. The rewards for doing so will translate to the bottom line. Guaranteed.


Related posts:

  1. The Danger of No Brand Land
  2. The Ultimate Business Lens
  3. Ten Reasons to Focus on Your Best Customers
  4. The Purpose of Business
  5. The Business Metric That Matters Most
One Response leave one →
  1. 2009 July 15
    Todd Alexander permalink

    My son tried to use my frequent flyer miles on a major national airline carrier with great difficulty. His first comment to me on the telephone yesterday before even saying hello was; “Dad, I was reminded today why I always fly Southwest Airlines.”

Leave a Reply

Note: You can use basic XHTML in your comments. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to this comment feed via RSS

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree