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We: The Ideal Customer Relationship | 
enlarge | Author: Steve Yastrow Publisher: Select Books (NY) Category: Book
List Price: $21.95 Buy New: $9.01 You Save: $12.94 (59%)
New (22) Used (12) from $9.01
Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 421995
Media: Hardcover Pages: 216 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.4
ISBN: 1590791215 Dewey Decimal Number: 658.812 EAN: 9781590791219 ASIN: 1590791215
Publication Date: October 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description In this fresh, original book, Steve Yastrow turns conventional sales and marketing on its head by showing what really motivates your customers: A strong relationship with your business. Both a manifesto and how-to guide, We: The Ideal Customer Relationship will change the way you interact with customers...and change the way your customers think about you.
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Will get you rethinking about your customers! October 23, 2008 Blaine Greenfield (Belle Meade, NJ) Think about the last time you ate out in a restaurant . . . if you can't remember what the waiter looks like five minutes later, you weren't engaged--something that needs to happen in order for businesses to connect with their customers. That is one of the many ideas I gained from reading Steve Yastrow's excellent book, WE: THE IDEAL CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP . . . what's needed is for customers to think in terms of "we," as opposed to "us and them." This needs to be done by creating: * Encounters: interactions that improve your relationships [as opposed to] Transactions: interactions that often damage your relationship and, at best, have no effect on your relationship. Yastrow proceeds to give many real examples of ways to accomplishment this . . . one of my favorites involved the firm that cleans his clothes: * I have used the same dry cleaners for years. Jim Dandy Cleaners shows up, without fail, every Tuesday and Friday morning to drop off clean clothes and pick up a new load that needs cleaning. One Thursday night last summer I returned from a three-week trip out of the country, and I had to leave again Sunday night for the West Coast. On Friday morning, I stuck the dirty clothes in the blue Jim Dandy bag, and put the bag on the front porch. Later in the day I realized I'd want some of that clothing for my trip, but they weren't scheduled to be returned until Tuesday. I called Jim Dandy, and the owner's daughter answered the phone. I told her I needed some of the pieces of clothing they had for an upcoming business trip, and asked if it was possible for me to get them by Saturday afternoon. "I'll run in the back right now and see if I can find your clothes. They're in the group to be cleaned on Monday, but I'll bet I can find them. Let me know if you can't get here by five tomorrow when we close, because I can leave them at the store next door for you." Relief, I'll have my clothes. The next morning at about 8:30 I got a call from Jim Dandy. We're delivering your clothes in about an hour." Wow. Was this good customer service? Of course. But calling it "good customer service" sells it short. It was way beyond customer service. I truly believe that the people at Jim Dandy sincerely wanted me to have my clothes for my business trip. Wow! Wouldn't it be great if all businesses provided that type service? To start, consider this simple-sounding recommendation from the author: * As you initiate encounters with customers over the next week, choose to opt for the more immediate way to communicate. If you start to email a customer, stop and pick up the phone. In another situation, instead of calling a customer, go see her in person. If you read WE, you'll get many more such ideas that you can immediately implement to help your business grow.
Sales Revolution August 13, 2008 Buckley Brinkman (Chicago, IL) We: The Ideal Customer Relationship by Steve Yastrow The Failure of Marketing by Jack Trytten The Sales profession is going through another major transition. Forty years ago, salespeople were professional visitors. They followed a pre-determined route, collecting orders from customers. Sales main responsibility was to make sure customers knew what products were available. At some point, the concept of features and benefits was introduced. The salesperson's job changed to that of educator: educating customers about features and benefits so that they could make decisions about the best products for them. Aggressive application of the features and benefits concept pushed the salesperson into the role of "Trusted Advisor". In this role, the salesperson probed to discover unmet needs the customer may have. "What keeps you up at night?" became a standard question; with the theory that once a need is discovered and matched with a benefit, a sale is made. Now, sales is transitioning again. This time the salesperson fills the role of "Co-Conspirator", requiring a broader approach to the selling relationship. In this evolution, the salesperson and customer engage in a relationship where the objective is to align as many shared goals as possible in order to make the salesperson and the customer both more effective. Yastrow and Trytten do an excellent job of describing this phenomenon from unique and complimentary perspectives. Both are descriptive and effective in their approaches. Yastrow hits the relationship issue head-on. He sells the idea that we should be changing our financial transactions with our customers into ongoing partner encounters. Yastrow tells us that the objective is for our customers to think of these as "We encounters", where we addressed the issue, rather than they or me. Steve systematically shows the reader how to initiate and create these relationships. He does an excellent job outlining a process to align with your customers' goals and execute based on that alignment. If you aspire to be a top salesperson or drive your organization to an effective, differentiated market position, you will understand and appreciate Steve's guidance. Trytten takes a different tac, tracking the evolution of marketing, from Peter Drucker's definition in 1954 ("There is only one valid definition of business purpose: to create a customer."), through the classic definitions and objectives (4Ps anyone?), to the dismal record of today's marketers (80% product failure). He details in practical terms how the profession veered off-track and became trapped in outdated paradigms. Jack defines the real objective as discovering the "something else" that causes your customers to buy from you. (We used to call that the "need behind the need".) He walks through several examples that show how the failure to recognize "something else" dooms the organization to a commodity competition, based on price. Trytten then shows how to overcome that trap to create a relationship with your customers that opens new markets and profit opportunities. Both of these are outstanding business books. We: The Ideal Customer RelationshipThe Failure of Marketing: Why Your Company Isn't A Growth Machine
There is no you or me, only We. March 16, 2008 Judith Ellis 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
What a beautiful premise upon which to write a book that builds customer relations: "Man's will to profit and to be powerful have their natural and proper effect so long as they are linked with and upheld by his will to enter in relation." The above quote by philosopher Martin Buber in I and Thou wonderfully aligns with the relational process developed in We that goes from encounters, to relationships, to complementary goals, actions, and outcomes that creates mutual success for both the customer (small or large) and the client. This process "focuses on engagement, not experience." Steve Yastrow's writing style is easy, adaptable and thoroughly cognizant. It's a book for everyone, not just marketing professionals. The way in which he redefines widely used business constructs such as "the customer" and "teamwork" makes them wholly understandable and applicable. There is no you or me, only We. Yastrow takes business constructs out of the realm of mere mental images and buzz words to actionable goals and results that benefit the customer and client. The "Try This" sections include accessible attainable actions that can make a difference in results if applied. And the stories are gems, ones that we can all naturally relate to. The stories and the relational process developed here evolve out of a very natural place, a place that is familiar to all, that place of necessary relations with others. Yastrow frames the relational process by addressing both the individual and the group, giving the engagement process profound purpose in life and business. I highly recommend this book.
Another practical gem February 2, 2008 Neil T. Witmer (Chicago, IL USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Steve's first book, Brand Harmony, made a simple idea compelling. Although everyone "knows" that an organization's brand or a product's brand must be communicated consistently, this book helps employees "want" to be on the same page as their CEO. His second book, We, has the same simple and compelling impact. If we can motivate our employees to see customers as essential partners, they are more engaged and productive. These are books you can give to a shop floor supervisor, or a VP Marketing, and strike a chord.
A thoroughly 'user friendly' guide that is solid, practical, accessible, exceptionally well written January 7, 2008 Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
In "We: The Ideal Customer Relationship", marketing and branding consultant Steve Yastrow (who through his consulting firm Yastrow Marketing has services such clients as the McDonald's Corporation, the Cayman islands Department of Tourism, Wyndham Hotels & Resorts, and Jenny Craig International) lays out a persuasive case for the necessity of a business (regardless of their product or service) differentiating themselves from their competition in the eyes of their targeted consumer demographics. Yastrow maintains that the best way to do that is to build strong relationships based on having the customer consider the business in terms of 'we' rather than 'us and them'. Backing up his argument with practical, 'how to' information and instruction, Yastrow has written a thoroughly 'user friendly' guide that is solid, practical, accessible, exceptionally well written and organized, and very highly recommended (and profitable) reading for entrepreneurs, company executives, and corporate managers.
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