Books

  1. Scoring Points: How Tesco Is Winning Customer Loyalty

    Scoring Points: How Tesco Is Winning Customer Loyalty


  2. When Customers Talk... Turn What They Tell You into Sales

    When Customers Talk... Turn What They Tell You into Sales


  3. Knock Your Socks Off Answers: Solving Customer Nightmares & Soothing Nightmare Customers (Knock Your Socks Off Series)

    Knock Your Socks Off Answers: Solving Customer Nightmares & Soothing Nightmare Customers (Knock Your Socks Off Series)


  4. Managing Knock Your Socks Off Service (Knock Your Socks Off Series)

    Managing Knock Your Socks Off Service (Knock Your Socks Off Series)


  5. Harvard Business Review on Customer Relationship Management

    Harvard Business Review on Customer Relationship Management


  6. Fabled Service : Ordinary Acts, Extraordinary Outcomes (Warren Bennis Executive Briefing Series)

    Fabled Service : Ordinary Acts, Extraordinary Outcomes (Warren Bennis Executive Briefing Series)


  7. Ring-bound

    Ring-bound


  8. The Value Profit Chain : Treat Employees Like Customers and Customers Like Employees

    The Value Profit Chain : Treat Employees Like Customers and Customers Like Employees


  9. 50 Powerful Ideas You Can Use to Keep Your Customers

    50 Powerful Ideas You Can Use to Keep Your Customers


  10. The One to One Future (One to One)

    The One to One Future (One to One)


  11. Special Edition Using Microsoft CRM

    Special Edition Using Microsoft CRM


  12. Making Rain: The Secrets of Building Lifelong Client Loyalty

    Making Rain: The Secrets of Building Lifelong Client Loyalty


  13. The Innovator's Dilemma [ABRIDGED]

    The Innovator's Dilemma [ABRIDGED]


  14. Improving Your Measurement of Customer Satisfaction: A Guide to Creating, Conducting, Analyzing, and Reporting Customer Satisfaction Measurement Programs

    Improving Your Measurement of Customer Satisfaction: A Guide to Creating, Conducting, Analyzing, and Reporting Customer Satisfaction Measurement Programs


  15. The Cruising Multihull

    The Cruising Multihull


  16. The Ten Demandments: Rules to Live By in the Age of the Demanding Customer

    The Ten Demandments: Rules to Live By in the Age of the Demanding Customer


  17. Exceptional Customer Service: Going Beyond Your Good Service to Exceed the Customer's Expectation

    Exceptional Customer Service: Going Beyond Your Good Service to Exceed the Customer's Expectation


  18. DELIVERING QUALITY SERVICE

    DELIVERING QUALITY SERVICE


  19. Lessons from the Nordstrom Way: How Companies are Emulating the #1 Customer Service Company

    Lessons from the Nordstrom Way: How Companies are Emulating the #1 Customer Service Company


  20. Relationship Marketing: Successful Strategies for the Age of the Customer

    Relationship Marketing: Successful Strategies for the Age of the Customer


  21. The One to One B2B : Customer Relationship Management Strategies for the Real Economy (One to One)

    The One to One B2B : Customer Relationship Management Strategies for the Real Economy (One to One)


  22. The Market Driven Organization : Understanding, Attracting, and Keeping Valuable Customers

    The Market Driven Organization : Understanding, Attracting, and Keeping Valuable Customers


  23. Sustaining Knock Your Socks Off Service (Knock Your Socks Off Series)

    Sustaining Knock Your Socks Off Service (Knock Your Socks Off Series)


  24. Strategic Marketing Problems: Cases and Comments, 10th Edition

    Strategic Marketing Problems: Cases and Comments, 10th Edition


  25. Customer Service 101: Basic Lessons to Be Your Best

    Customer Service 101: Basic Lessons to Be Your Best


Scoring Points: How Tesco Is Winning Customer Loyalty
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • The next level of market segmentation
  • How Tesco is Winning Customer Loyalty
  • Simple concept ... too much book
  • Highly Recommended!
  • Sustaining a Relationship Marketing Idea: Insiders' story
Scoring Points: How Tesco Is Winning Customer Loyalty
Clive Humby , Terry Hunt , and Tim Phillips
Manufacturer: Kogan Page
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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Similar Items:
  1. Loyalty Marketing: The Second Act
  2. Scoring Points: How Tesco Continues to Win Customer Loyalty
  3. Customer Specific Marketing
  4. Customer Intelligence
  5. Data Mining Techniques: For Marketing, Sales, and Customer Relationship Management

ASIN: 074943578X

Book Description

* 10 million shoppers in Britain are active members of Tesco Clubcard, the world's most successful retail loyalty scheme

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The next level of market segmentation.......2005-10-23

very good read if you want to know your customers even better.

4 out of 5 stars How Tesco is Winning Customer Loyalty.......2005-09-01

Any insight you can get into arguably the most sophisticated retailer in the world today is worthwhile. This book provides a great insight into how Tesco has come to dominate UK retail and in the process fend off the competitive threat of Wal-Mart's UK business Asda.

1 out of 5 stars Simple concept ... too much book.......2005-08-13

I was quite disappointed when I read this book. It explores on too many pages what could have been told in very few. I don't think that it is worth the money.

5 out of 5 stars Highly Recommended!.......2005-03-31

Marketing experts Clive Humby and Terry Hunt and journalist Tim Phillips explain how British grocer Tesco collected, analyzed and used customer data to become a retail giant. Tesco paired its Clubcard loyalty scheme with jazzy information technology (IT) to set a new standard for knowing your customer. Humby and Hunt, as the collaborators behind Tesco's data-driven transformation, focus on praise, but they don't hide Tesco's early mistakes or skimp on its strategic hand-wringing. Though somewhat dryly written, the book compellingly discusses aspects of loyalty programs that don't get much ink outside the retail trade press. For example, it covers the way Tesco's accumulation of rich customer data forced some painful changes in its corporate culture. The authors also serve a sampling of delicious anecdotes and share Tesco's early difficulty with getting some customers - chiefly students - to join Clubcard. Tesco once gave students at a Q&A focus group some complimentary wine and cheese only to find that they "swiftly drank so much wine that they made little sense to anyone still sober." The book shines when discussing such early efforts by Tesco to micro-segment customers by lifestyle habits, including trying to glean individual personality traits from the contents of each grocery cart. We recommend this case study both as the story of Tesco's gutsy, groundbreaking experiment with IT and as a textbook example of how the Digital Age keeps making it possible for smart, daring businesspeople to rewrite the rules of commerce.

5 out of 5 stars Sustaining a Relationship Marketing Idea: Insiders' story.......2004-10-08

It's very seldom that you get to hear the real story behind a relationship-marketing programme. This book provides a brilliant insight into the real world of a successful loyalty programme at Tesco. It is a success story told by insiders (primarily the subcontractors).

The focus is on the Clubcard, but it also contains an interesting chapter on their online shopping success that is created on the basis of many of the same competences that the loyalty card required.

I'd like to put the book into perspective by playing devil's advocate. So what's the downside of a loyalty programme? Three problems usually hinder the success: big investment, internal culture clash, and privacy issues.

1) BIG INVESTMENT. It's expensive to develop the database - and even more expensive to maintain it. Especially the latter point is usually forgotten, while most people haven't yet tried to sustain a loyalty programme. The fact is namely that it eventually always risk running out of steam after the first breathtaking love affair for both the customer and the company.
"Scoring points" has devoted some attention to the development phase, where the Clubcard was "skunk work" without much prestige in the big British retail operation. But I like the second part of maintaining the magic of the relationship even better (because this story is so rarely told). They explain how to keep the loyalty programme alive and kicking for the customers by micro-segmentation, adding financial services, creating multi-channel retailing including the web, and so on to keep the concept fresh. The book also spends a lot of time explaining how the customer data can be used to see trends and also get new understanding of the customers' behaviours that we haven't been able to before.

2) INTERNAL CULTURE CLASH. It's not easy to get everyone in the firm to be oriented towards relationship marketing and make use of the available information. Transaction marketing is usually much easier and less demanding of the organization than real relationship building. "Scoring points" also covers these issues where the competition for resources from the top management is one issue and the relationship to the shop managers and shop assistants is another area. And it doesn't happen overnight - it usually takes several years with constant focus and commitment. The programme had testing phases, and needed many quick wins in several stores to obtain interest from other shop managers. Tesco's lesson in taking the time to make relationship marketing a part of an organization's culture is very valuable - and replicates my experience from other industries.

3) PRIVACY ISSUES. Maybe your customers don't want close relationships. Perhaps your customers even resent knowing that you have collected too much information about them.
In "Scoring points", they tell a story of a wife that complained about condoms that suddenly appeared on her personalized online shopping list, since her husband didn't use them. It turned out that he actually did, but not at home. His fault was that he bought the condoms in a Tesco shop with his loyalty card that was integrated to the web solution. That's how it was shown to his online-shopping wife. So much for privacy... That's an extreme - though real - example. And it's very illuminating for the sensitivity of data that we're dealing with - even when we think we're only selling groceries.

Tesco's story should be required reading for everybody that would like to understand a long-term relationship marketing concept in depth. I find that the real strength of the book is the chapters on how to preserve the programme. This story is often untold.

Peter Leerskov,
MSc in International Business (Marketing & Management) and Graduate Diploma in E-business

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  1. Thoughts Silenced Taught Secrets
  2. Super Service: Seven Keys to Delivering Great Customer Service...Even When You Don't Feel Like It!...Even When They Don't Deserve It!
  3. Scoring Points: How Tesco Is Winning Customer Loyalty
  4. The Call Center Handbook: The Complete Guide to Starting, Running, and Improving Your Call Center (Call Center Handbook)
  5. Customer Centered Six Sigma: Linking Customers, Process Improvement, and Financial Results
  6. Top Gun Prospecting for Financial Professionals
  7. High Powered Customer Service Training Activities: 26 Fast Moving Training Ideas for Customer Service Trainers and Managers
  8. Winning With the Customer from Hell: A Survival Guide (Winning With the . . . from Hell)
  9. Why Service Stinks...and Exactly What to Do About It!
  10. The Customer-Centered Enterprise: How IBM and Other World-Class Companies Achieve Extraordinary Results by Putting Customers First

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