MTU Cork Library Catalogue

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Up the loyalty ladder : turning sometime customers into full-time advocates of your business / Murray Raphel and Neil Raphel.

By: Raphel, Murray, 1928-.
Contributor(s): Raphel, Neil.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: New York : HarperBusiness, 1995Description: xiv, 289 p. ; 25 cm. + hbk.ISBN: 0887307256.Subject(s): Customer relations | Advertising | Consumer satisfaction | Word-of-mouth advertising | Success in business | Businesspeople -- United StatesDDC classification: 658.812
Contents:
Part 1: The prospect -- Part 2: The shopper -- Part 3: The customer -- Part 4: The client -- Part 5: The advocate.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Lending MTU Bishopstown Library Lending 658.812 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00081021
Total holds: 0

Includes index.

Part 1: The prospect -- Part 2: The shopper -- Part 3: The customer -- Part 4: The client -- Part 5: The advocate.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

Marketing consultants and seminar leaders who have managed a retail business for over 40 years, the Raphels have written a guide to developing customer advocates: those customers "who tell anyone who will listen how great your business is." Customer advocates, the authors claim, are also responsible for most business sales. Recent books on customer loyalty-Jill Griffin's Customer Loyalty: How To Earn It, How To Keep It (Lexington Bks., 1995) and Joan K. Cannie's Turning Lost Customers into Gold and the Art of Achieving Zero Defections (AMACOM, 1993)-provide a slightly different treatment of the same topic. This book excels by being both chatty and informative. Focusing on retail businesses but equally applicable to service enterprises, it offers numerous case studies and practical guidelines for increasing profits, which will make it a favorite of small-business owners. Strongly recommended for public libraries.-Kathy Shimpock-Vieweg, O'Connor-Cavanagh Lib., Phoenix (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Publishers Weekly Review

The Raphels posit that customers are a company's lifeblood and existing customers are the best ones. Inextricably, the average firm annually loses about one-fifth of its consumer base, two-thirds leaving for no apparent reason. The authors argue that companies can negate this trend with ``loyalty ladders,'' their comprehensive customer service plan that converts prospects into shoppers and customers to clients and finally advocates of the firm's product. Augmented with case studies (Nordstrom; the GE Answer Center), interviews and media tips (telemarketing; radio), the Raphels develop pragmatic tactics in this effective assessment of product and company positioning, business growth, customer behavior patterns and product promotions. Murray self-published Tough Selling for Tough Times; Neil is a New Jersey attorney. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Booklist Review

The Raphels certainly aren't short on enthusiasm and energy. And although they seem to be an amalgam of Tom Peters, the Guerrilla Marketing authority, and almost any other customer-focused consultant who gets ideas published, they're long on common sense and good advice. The authors' framework is novel; each of the five "loyalty ladder" steps, from prospect to advocate, features case histories, interviews, promotion and advertising tips, and David Letterman-type lists, all in a short and snappy format bound to gain and maintain attention. Some of their more unusual stories, angles, and tips include using the back of business cards for messages; the observation that confidence is the number-one reason people buy when they buy; and the slogan, "Promise a lot and deliver more." The Raphels do just that, in a manner designed to take the mystery out of marketing. --Barbara Jacobs

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