How to Follow Small Business Insights for Massive Growth

Do you understand the basics to follow small business insights? The end state quality of what the customer received is what counts. And the better you know the customer and what drives his decisions; the better off you’ll be to winning his business. It is that simple.

The customer never buys what you think you sell.
-Peter Drucker

Check out our thoughts on customer focus.

Consider: “Saying no saves you time in the future. Saying yes costs you time in the future. No is like a time credit. You can spend that block of time in the future. Yes is like a time debt. You have to repay that commitment at some point. No is a decision. Yes is a responsibility.”

With the advent of the Internet, the number of marketing options available to both budding and experienced entrepreneurs has become staggering.

valuable customers
Valuable customers.

Most valuable customers

We categorize customers into four basic groups: prospects, customers, advocates, and former customers. The most important group is the advocates.

You should be paying special attention to them and those in the customer group that you believe could become advocates. So their insights are most important, by far.

What are customer insights?

Customer insights are associations between objects, actions, and communications that solve or help solve new customer problems.

The ultimate goal of all the points I list below is this: eliminate the fluff from your marketing strategy and focus only on the things that work.

Follow small business insights … customer reluctance

There are 3 key reasons customers are reluctant to give inputs to business: business makes it difficult and inconvenient; there is no mutual equitable exchange of value for the input, and employees act like they don’t care.

Your job is to eliminate this reluctance by fixing these issues as soon as you can.

Let me give you an example,

Would only the understanding of customer needs have led Marc Tarpenning and Martin Eberhard to come up with the idea for the Tesla Roadster? Three key insights were the basis for their idea to start their electric car company

Battery technology doubled in performance roughly every 10 years and delivered that performance at a quarter of the cost

Car companies outsource much of their design and manufacturing to focus on sales, marketing and financing and thereby created a whole network of suppliers that new entrants could tap into

While an electric car may be an environmentally responsible choice it still needs to look good and offer a great driving experience in order to appeal to a broader audience

Ways to achieve smashing customer insights

Listen, observe, and draw conclusions

Not rocket science here. Pay attention to what customers are saying and what they are doing. You will then be in a good position to draw good insight conclusions.

Follow small business insights … customer collaboration

Instead of asking customers to watch and just passively consume, try getting them to actively participate, create and collaborate in activities related to your business. For example, ask them to define what would make shopping easier for them.

Share expertise freely

Relevant and helpful expertise is usually always welcome. This domain information helps build trust.

Broaden your thinking:

Understanding the world around you

  • Customers/consumers – identifying the deeper needs that drive their behaviors
  • Discontinuities – uncovering how combinations of trends lead to “discontinuities” or dramatic changes that can impact our industry
  • Analogies – we apply existing knowledge from other industries to our business context and situation to generate new ideas.
  • Industry mapping – visualization of the dimensions of competition from direct and indirect competitors uncover potential blind spots and alternative ways to compete

Follow small business insights … build relationships

Be more personable and social. Create and nurture customer relationships. Build friends who will share feedback more easily.

Show you listen

Listen to good ideas. Pick the best ones and act quickly to implement them. Show customers you are listening by publicizing the change with the simple recognition of the basis of change.

Two-way dialog on decisions

Ultimately focus customer conversation on helping them with purchase decisions. Listen and learn from what the customer has to say.

Connect more and different information

Connect the dots on all the bits and pieces of information you are gathering. The more connections you can make, the more insights you can find.

Related post: Complaints Are Sources of Remarkable Customer Retention Strategies

Integrate social media monitoring

More and more business is moving online. And customer communication as well. Pick some tools to help you monitor customer feedback (both intended and casual) on social media channels.

communicate
Must communicate well.

Communicate in new ways

Lots of new communication channels exist today, particularly online. Put more of these channels to work. Do some experimenting to find which ones work best for you.

The bottom line

Make collecting customer inputs and converting them to insights everyone’s responsibility. Get the employee staff together every few weeks to exchange information.

Here’s the thing, social isn’t just a new way of marketing, it’s really a new way of running a business. Many small businesses certainly have figured this out and are using social marketing and improved customer insights to rapidly grow their business.

easy

So what’s the conclusion? The conclusion is there is no conclusion. There is only the next step. And that next step is completely up to you. But believe in the effectiveness of customer insights. And put it to good use.

It’s up to you to keep improving your creative, social marketing and customer insight efforts. Lessons are all around you. In this case, your competitor may be providing ideas and or inspiration. But the key is in knowing that it is within you already.

All you get is what you bring to the fight. And that fight gets better every day you learn and apply new lessons.

When things go wrong, what’s most important is your next step.

Try. Learn. Improve. Repeat.

Are you devoting enough energy to improving your customer insights?

Do you have a lesson about making your customer insights better you can share with this community? Have any questions or comments to add in the section below?

Mike Schoultz is the founder of Digital Spark Marketing, a digital marketing and customer service agency. With 40 years of business experience, he blogs on topics that relate to improving the performance of your business. Find him on Twitter, and LinkedIn.  

Digital Spark Marketing will stretch your thinking and your ability to adapt to change.  We also provide some fun and inspiration along the way.

More reading on customer insights from Digital Spark Marketing’s Library:

Should a Business Send Customers to Competitors?

An Actionable Approach to Target Market Segmentation

Complaints Are Sources of Remarkable Customer Retention Strategies