As a promotional products distributor, you know the power of well-thought-out campaigns, and marketing yourself is no different. The first thing you need to do is refine your unique selling proposition and create a strategy around what makes your promotional products business stand out.
The common adage is that gaining new customers is five times more expensive than retaining existing ones, and in this research, the author gives an example of how a 5% increase in customer retention resulted in more than a 25% increase in profit. Understanding your customer churn is an important starting point. You can make it more complex, but we like to keep things simple:
Customer Churn = (# of customers you lost in a quarter) / (# of customers you had at the beginning of a quarter)
It is important to understand, monitor and establish goals for customer retention. Simply put, your current customers are valuable assets to your company. So you must focus your efforts on them to ensure they remain your customers. Whether it’s daily, weekly, or monthly, dedicate selling time to them regularly — they should be a priority. Consider hiring additional sales reps or administrative support to achieve this.
Reach out to your key customers and schedule business reviews with them on an annual, biannual, or even quarterly basis. This allows you to get in front of them on a regular cadence and learn what their needs are going forward. Ask what their goals are and then show them how you can assist them with meeting and exceeding those goals. Listen more than you speak, hear what their challenges are, and present solutions that help them overcome those.
Expanding sales within your current customers’ organizations is a path to increased sales, often with less resistance. Take a soft sales approach when looking to expand here. Here are a few ideas:
Your customers may not know what’s possible when it comes to promo products, but YOU do. Go beyond an order taker and be their idea person — the person who is proactive in product ideas and brings creative, fun ideas to the table. Leverage idea generators to help you — use idea centers, planning guides, and trade shows (even virtual ones). And don’t forget about your suppliers! AIA’s MVP suppliers, for example, have regular webinars to introduce new and exciting products and are more than willing to assist distributors with a project.
Focus on adding value with every customer interaction you have! Being a source of creativity and knowledge differentiates you and brings value to your customers that they may not be getting from other distributors (especially large, online ones).
This one is important because it drives your marketing and communication efforts. Knowing exactly who your target market is, what they need, and how you can best reach them allows you to better focus your efforts on the customers YOU want to do business with. In this instance, take into account the 80/20 rule where oftentimes in business 80 percent of your sales come from 20 percent of your customers. Who are those customers? What are the commonalities between them? These should be people you look to target. Also consider those customers that you prefer to avoid (e.g., the ones that haggle over price or take your ideas and go to a competitor).
Don’t forget about the company stores! They remove the burden of order processing and handling and are an easy gateway to more sales. Companies can use them for marketing programs, employee reward programs, onboarding, pop-up solutions, and more. Assisting your customer with an e-commerce solution for promo only adds to the relationship and increases your value as a vendor.
Your current customers are undoubtedly one of the biggest assets of your distributorship. Leveraging the relationships that you’ve already spent time and resources cultivating is important and when done well, results in more sales and increased profit.