14 min

Creating a Customer Top Secrets of Marketing & Sales

    • Marketing

David:                   Management Guru Peter Drucker once said, “The purpose of business is to create a customer.” Does that mean just selling stuff or is there more to it than that? Is it really about creating a customer?



Chris:                     (Laughs) Oh, it's just selling stuff.



David                     Yeah, it’s just selling stuff… that's it.







David                     Hi, and welcome to the podcast today co-host Chris Templeton and I will be talking about the idea of creating customers. Welcome back, Chris.



Chris:                     Hey David, thank you for having me. It's a pleasure to be here. You know, in a way it seems obvious that business owners and salespeople need to be creating customers, but that doesn't always appear to be the focus does it?



David:                   No, it really doesn't. I think we lose sight of this and that's why I think it's an important topic to talk about because this idea of creating customers is just so critical to business owners, to salespeople, to anyone who is in the profession or anyone who is required to grow a business, that it really can't be overstated.  When we think in terms of creating customers, there's just such a distinction. If I make a sale to someone, then technically that person has become a customer of mine. But again, if the goal at that point is simply to sell them something and that's happened, well now it moves into the past. And so from my standpoint, the idea of creating a customer means you're finding someone who is likely to come back to you again and again and again and is essentially going to serve as an annuity to grow your business, because you're going to know that over a period of weeks, months, years, that this person is going to help to contribute to what you're looking to build and you are certainly going to look to contribute to what they're looking to accomplish.



Chris:                     It seems to me, and I can speak from experience; that one of the hardest things to do is to create that repeat sale, to create that business relationship. And I think it's so easy for businesses to say, ah, let's just move on to the next one. And then they start feeling guilty about not staying in touch with the customer. What's the secret sauce of creating customers versus just making a sale?









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David:                   Well, if you start with what it is that you want to accomplish, and you go into each relationship with the idea of creating a customer, then a lot of your actions will naturally follow. But if you're just going in with the idea of "I need to make this sale today", you tend to think more in terms of product. You tend to think more in terms of the things that you have to say and the responses you have to get, as opposed to thinking about the person and how can I help this person to achieve their objectives? Because when your focus is on them and identifying their needs and how you can help them with their needs, you become far more valuable to them.  And as a result, you're going to become a far more likely to create the value they need, where they're going to want to come back to you again and again and again. You can't force people to do it. The only way they're going to come back is if they were happy with what you did the first time. So in a lot of cases when we're initiating contact with someone for the first time and we're giving them an idea of what we're going to be able to do for them, they're having to take us on blind faith. They can look at testimonials if we have those on our website or whatever. They can hear what other people have said about us in the past, but until they've actually placed that first order with us, it's all just kind of hearsay to them.

David:                   Management Guru Peter Drucker once said, “The purpose of business is to create a customer.” Does that mean just selling stuff or is there more to it than that? Is it really about creating a customer?



Chris:                     (Laughs) Oh, it's just selling stuff.



David                     Yeah, it’s just selling stuff… that's it.







David                     Hi, and welcome to the podcast today co-host Chris Templeton and I will be talking about the idea of creating customers. Welcome back, Chris.



Chris:                     Hey David, thank you for having me. It's a pleasure to be here. You know, in a way it seems obvious that business owners and salespeople need to be creating customers, but that doesn't always appear to be the focus does it?



David:                   No, it really doesn't. I think we lose sight of this and that's why I think it's an important topic to talk about because this idea of creating customers is just so critical to business owners, to salespeople, to anyone who is in the profession or anyone who is required to grow a business, that it really can't be overstated.  When we think in terms of creating customers, there's just such a distinction. If I make a sale to someone, then technically that person has become a customer of mine. But again, if the goal at that point is simply to sell them something and that's happened, well now it moves into the past. And so from my standpoint, the idea of creating a customer means you're finding someone who is likely to come back to you again and again and again and is essentially going to serve as an annuity to grow your business, because you're going to know that over a period of weeks, months, years, that this person is going to help to contribute to what you're looking to build and you are certainly going to look to contribute to what they're looking to accomplish.



Chris:                     It seems to me, and I can speak from experience; that one of the hardest things to do is to create that repeat sale, to create that business relationship. And I think it's so easy for businesses to say, ah, let's just move on to the next one. And then they start feeling guilty about not staying in touch with the customer. What's the secret sauce of creating customers versus just making a sale?









Schedule a Strategy Session





Click Here







David:                   Well, if you start with what it is that you want to accomplish, and you go into each relationship with the idea of creating a customer, then a lot of your actions will naturally follow. But if you're just going in with the idea of "I need to make this sale today", you tend to think more in terms of product. You tend to think more in terms of the things that you have to say and the responses you have to get, as opposed to thinking about the person and how can I help this person to achieve their objectives? Because when your focus is on them and identifying their needs and how you can help them with their needs, you become far more valuable to them.  And as a result, you're going to become a far more likely to create the value they need, where they're going to want to come back to you again and again and again. You can't force people to do it. The only way they're going to come back is if they were happy with what you did the first time. So in a lot of cases when we're initiating contact with someone for the first time and we're giving them an idea of what we're going to be able to do for them, they're having to take us on blind faith. They can look at testimonials if we have those on our website or whatever. They can hear what other people have said about us in the past, but until they've actually placed that first order with us, it's all just kind of hearsay to them.

14 min