Shipserv Problem: Shipserv, An E-Marketplace For The Marine Industry, Connects More Than
Shipserv Problem: Shipserv, An E-Marketplace For The Marine Industry, Connects More Than
Problem: ShipServ, an e-marketplace for the marine industry, connects more than
8,000 ships, 200 ship owners, managers, and yards with upwards of 45,000 marine
suppliers. In 2008, they realized their brand image was in trouble: their customers, who
weren’t very tech-savvy, deemed them too impersonal and opaque.
Solution: To help shake this perception, ShipServ dedicated the entirety of their small
marketing budget toward customer-focused content. They revamped their website,
launched a blog, published a series of whitepapers, created a LinkedIn group to build
community, and worked on search engine optimization.
Results:
As competition has become more global and more intense, many companies have
found that they cannot succeed on their own. It is in these markets where several
businesses have developed a strategy to provide superior customer satisfaction in order
to distinguish their goods and services.
Most service organizations’ customer bases consists of those people who use products
or services on a more or less frequent basis. Some customers for example may only
have a relationship once with the company at one extreme; customers will use the
organization’s products or services on a regular basis.
Customer focus values enable an organization to calculate the net present value of the
profit, the business will realize on a customer over a period of time. It is an immensely
powerful tool because it allows companies to work out how many transaction will it take
to recoup the initial investment in attracting and servicing each new customer and
generate a worthwile return. When companies invest in programmes to strengthen
customer focus they can therefore do so knowing whether the resulting changes in
behavior will increase the profit derived from each customer.