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Soulati-'TUDE!

Customer Loyalty, Dollars Drive Airlines To Court Elite For Lounge Business

10/11/2019 By Jayme Soulati

ALT="Asian woman and Asian man eating food in airport lounge showing how airlines engaging in customer loyalty"
Customer loyalty for airlines begins in the airport lounge.

Customer loyalty is always top of mind, and that’s no different when it comes to air travel elite. Air travel, as an aside, is always a topic of exasperation. Many now sit in ever-increasingly smaller seats, pay for extra amenities like leg room and suffer crying children. Don’t get me wrong: I’m a mom of a former toddler who cried during entire flights many times.

There’s a first time for everything! Recently, I spent the night in the Philadelphia airport, an experience that I never wish to repeat!

[Read more...]

Filed Under: Customer Service, Marketing Tagged With: customer engagement, customer experience, customer loyalty, customer service, elite air travel, elite traveler

Is Customer Experience Being Exploited By Brands?

03/09/2017 By Jayme Soulati

ALT="Authenticity in customer experience, Soulati.com"

credit: Modern 8

Customer experience is quite the buzz right now. I have been thinking about this customer experience stuff for quite some time. Everywhere you look a company or brand is attempting to create some extraordinary customer experience.

Just like when the recession hit in 2008 companies heavily discounted everything and consumers became spoiled by deeply discounted products. Coupons were all the rage; still are. JC Penney comes to mind — it had a CEO migration, and the new guy wanted better profit margin so coupons went away. Well, so, too, did the customers! [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Heart Of Marketing Podcast Tagged With: authenticity, Branding, Casper, customer experience, experiential marketing, heart cor, heart of marketing, heartful, heartfulness., Jayme Soulati, John Gregory Olson, marketing, marketing podcast, Warby Parker

The PPC Ad Fail; A Click That Generates No Customers

08/24/2016 By Jayme Soulati

ALT="PPC Ad, Shower, Soulati.com"Your PPC ad via Google that costs you a fortune? Yep, that one; it’s failing. I have a customer experience to prove it, too, and I bet you can cookie cutter my experience into your business.

My bathroom is under construction; has been for three months for various reasons (my contractor being the primary issue). The last major purchase I will make is the shower door.

One evening, equipped with iPad, I launched a Google search for ‘shower door, Dayton’ and was met with an entire first page of local search PPC ads. This is what Google has done to local search marketing — put all the paid ads in a row on the first page, relegating organic content to the second and third pages.

While it’s maddening for owners of owned content, it is a boondoggle for buyers of a PPC ad campaign, or it’s supposed to be. Here’s what happened and why your PPC ad is failing.

Your PPC Ad Fail

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Mobile Marketing, Planning & Strategy Tagged With: buying a shower door, click, customer experience, Google PPC campaign, mobile friendly, organic content, PPC Ad, SEO, visual branding, visual marketing

My Customer Experience Shopping For Bathroom Tile

04/11/2016 By Jayme Soulati

ALT="customer experience, Soulati Media"Ever have a customer experience shopping for bathroom tile? It’s not something you purchase lightly or soon forget. In fact, if you don’t have an interior designer, you’ll select everything alone. It’s quite a heady customer experience and it’s one many a marketer is grappling with now.

There’s a retail/online shopping conundrum these days, and you can see the bubble bursting with this news:

  • Macy’s is closing 100 stores.
  • Wal-Mart bought Jet.com for $3 billion.
  • Nordstrom and Neiman Marcus are vying for luxury shopping in Manhattan
  • Home Depot is stocking less on its shelves and sinking more into its online experience

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Customer Service, Marketing Tagged With: customer experience, Lowes, Macys, Nordstroms, shopping experience, shopping for bathroom tile, Wal-Mart, Walagreens

Home Depot Customer Experience Fail

03/23/2016 By Jayme Soulati

ALT="Soulati Media, customer experience fail"What is happening to big box retailers with customer experience? I toured the aisles of Home Depot over a weekend expecting to find product for my master bath remodel. Alas, the lowest-end vanities, four commodes, maybe six shower fixtures and NO tile I could even remotely consider were featured. As I walked faster through each department, I realized that the brick and mortar business is failing customer experience.

Home Depot Customer Experience Failure

I went to customer service and asked about the selections in the store and mentioned I would need to order online. The CSR immediately told me the online store was not the same as the retail, in-person store. She wanted me to come in with my list and sit with a sales associate and order my vanity direct from the manufacturer or make custom furniture.

After I expressed confusion, I then realized and said, “Oh, I get it. Home Depot corporate is the same but the retail outlet competes with the online outlet for revenue.” The customer service rep said yes.

No wonder people are buying more online, eh? With that kind of customer experience, who wants to go into the brick and mortar store any more? And, I can get delivery to my front door of the 30 lb. sheets of Hardie Backer board for the shower instead of attempting to lift 25 of them through check out myself (because there are no cashiers) and into my vehicle.

After Home Depot took away cashiers at check out several years ago, I stopped going there. I thought I would give it another chance over Lowe’s, but you know what? Lowe’s is beating Home Depot hands down. I even found some tile in the store at Lowe’s and a vanity I could purchase there, too. Guess which retailer is highly likely to get my bathroom remodel business?

Tory Burch And Customer Experience

In the Wall Street Journal, March 23, 2016, I was delighted to see a brand I absolutely love featured in a story about marketing and customer experience. Turns out, Tory Burch has decided to build its ‘first permanent retail outpost for a fledgling brand in the world of athleisure, the fast-growing, still confusing mode of dressing that has overtaken the apparel industry.”

This is a reverse of what most companies do — first they build a brick and mortar business, attract customers and sell, sell, sell. Then, they get an online business to attract a wider audience beyond geographic boundaries.

Tory Burch is disrupting e-commerce + retailing and making a case for the customer experience. Here’s my absolute favorite part of this article in the Wall Street Journal, extracted directly:

“Stores are changing, Ms. Burch says. Their purpose is to engage customers and to build a community. They also can be a place where the online and offline worlds merge. A big cube in the middle of the Tory Sport store has an interactive tabletop where customers can view projected images from the Tory Sport look book.”

What Tory Burch is doing with her new designer store (where only 1-2 sizes are available on the shelf), is to “immerse and entertain shoppers in the fictitious, tightly controlled world the brand creates. It’s a chance to show and explain all that a brand stands for — and to seduce a shopper into buying something.”

Home Depot Meet Tory Burch

Back to the concrete and metal fabricated warehouse that stocks whatever a homeowner or builder needs to maintain a residential or commercial structure. The two experiences are related yet don’t compare.

I had no customer experience at Home Depot. There was no one on the floor to help me; there was no good feeling as I perused the aisles of product stacked to the ceiling. No one cared, no one was engaged, and I was extremely disappointed. The Tory Burch brand and shopping experience, on the other hand, is made to delight. Shoppers are put into a setting of sports leisure with travel destinations and tennis (my absolute fave pasttime). You’re invited to sit, have a beverage, engage interactively, and chat with the designers floating around the store.

Hey, Home Depot, can you take a lesson from Tory Burch?

How I See A Home Depot Customer Experience

Here’s what I want when I walk into a Home Depot or Lowe’s:

  • Remember the K-mart blue-light special? An announcer belted out the aisle number for the blue light special and customers in the store raced over to grab something. We had to; we didn’t want to miss a deal. How about that? Put an announcer over the intercom and get a deal going on lighting, paint or other slow movers. Engage the shopper so they feel positive about the brand.
  • How about some training demos in the store? Want to show how to tile a shower wall or how to put tile together to design something more exciting than laminate? (Funny, just found a list of DIY workshops on its website, but how are customers made aware of these? I had no idea my store offer these at all.)
  • I’d like a gathering place in the store to sit and have a coffee. That way I can look at my list and think while taking a breather.
  • You know that garden center that pops up every spring? What an opportunity to have someone demoing shade plants, landscaping, and how to select perennials that bloom in all seasons.
  • There’s absolutely nothing appealing about Home Depot for me now; not after this most recent experience that has been a customer experience fail.

Retailers are going to need to get a clue how to re-attract the customer. The online experience, while convenient, is not always the first choice for shopping, but it permits comparison shopping. If you want my business, and I know you do, Home Depot, then act like you care and put people on the floors who are engaging, want to be there, and want to help me.

You can bet had someone approached me and asked if they could help, then you could have rescued my customer experience and made a huge sale on a master bath remodeling project. As it went, I walked out with nothing and my business is going down the street.

Filed Under: Customer Service Tagged With: big box branding, brand loyalty, customer experience, customer service, e-commerce, Home Depot, retail disruption, retailing and customer loyalty, Tory Burch

ALT="Jayme Soulati"

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