Richard Branson is the founder of Virgin Group, which consists of more than 400 companies around the world including Virgin Atlantic, Virgin America and Virgin Mobile.
He shares some practical branding advice on building a customer focused business. The Virgin Group has started many businesses with the goal of prioritizing people, the planet and profit equally, and they thrive despite occasional economic dips and competition from much bigger companies that were specifically built to bring in cash.
If you win people over, the profits will follow.
The first step in building a customer-focused business is to ask yourself: What can we can offer customers that others aren’t, or won’t, because they are so narrowly focused on profit? If you base your new business on this premise, it will be much easier to find an edge over your competitors.
Unfortunately, this means that you will probably face a lot of opposition and second-guessing from others in the industry when you launch your startup. Back in the 1980s, when people were wondering whether Virgin Atlantic, our other airline, would survive, some critics said that few people would fly across the Atlantic on an airline called Virgin. We responded that since we only had one 747 plane, we’d be just fine with only a small number of passengers!
As it turned out, those customers loved our airline and were very loyal, and we were soon competing with the major airlines.
Build on your employees’ ideas.
The second step involves encouraging your staff to think like and empathize with customers, and then tell you about any ideas that they may have for innovations to your product or service. Find a way to empower your people to follow up on their ideas.
At the Virgin Group, we put a lot of effort into this: One example that comes to mind is that everyone at Virgin America – the CEO, the pilots, the accountants, everyone – attends an annual training program called Refresh to celebrate their achievements, build team spirit and encourage creativity. We run sessions where teammates brainstorm new ideas.
Many of the best ideas are free — it doesn’t cost much to make someone happy.
Increase profits by being nice.
In some American classrooms I recently visited, there were signs posted that read: “Work hard, be nice.” That sign should probably be hung in boardrooms too. There is no better way to improve the bottom line than to go the extra mile for your customers.
The other day I heard about an entrepreneur who arrived at our terminal in Portland, Ore. He was frantic: He’d been preparing for his new company’s launch the night before, and then he woke up 20 minutes before the departure of his flight from Portland to San Francisco. His flight had departed, and there weren’t any other flights to San Francisco. He was alone and out of options – have you ever been in a situation like that?
Our team rallied and got him on a flight to Los Angeles with a connection to San Francisco. It would be tight because the connection departed the same time as the flight to Los Angeles arrived, but they were rooting for him. They assigned him a seat at the front of the plane and told him about the quickest route to his connection. A crew member told the pilots about the rush, and they managed to get the plane to Los Angeles seven minutes early.
When the entrepreneur reached his connecting gate on time, the pilot and crew on that flight congratulated him.
He wrote on his blog: “They had gone above and beyond that day. Each and every one of them had a hand in making my experience not only successful, but enjoyable — and the best part, I didn’t once feel as if I was inconveniencing any one of them.” Such effort and kindness can earn you a customer for life.
Once you’ve completed these steps — you’ve created an innovative, unequaled product or service, and through the kindness and helpfulness of your employees, you are winning new loyal customers every day – stop and take a look around: You just built a thriving business.
Source Entrepreneur