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Customer base

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The customer base is the group of customers and/or consumers that a business serves. In the most situations, a large part of this group is made up of repeat customers with a high ratio of purchase over time. These customers are the main source of consumer spending. In many cases, the customer base is considered the business's target market, where customer behaviors are well understood through market research or past experience. All actions the company takes would be through consideration of its customer base.[1]

Companies with a customer base consisting mainly of large companies may increase their customer base by pursuing small and mid-size companies.[2]

Businesses in war zones may temporarily expand their customer base to include military personnel, but ongoing violence can drive away a local customer base.[3]


Business Perspective

Building The Base

All businesses begin with no customers. Small businesses normally struggle in acquiring customers. Small businesses start the process of generating customer base with leads. Obtaining leads is a challenging and daunting process of sifting through prospects whom can be considered as buyers or "window shoppers." Powerful leads are often unearthed from sources of trade authority like alumni associations, brokers, professional organizations, and international merchant groups.[4]

These start-ups begin with an abstract idea that slowly evolves into something someone will buy. As these products evolve from abstract ideas into primitive objects that are then further refined, the business that created the product begins to gain customers. The satisfied customers become the repeat buyers and core customer of the company. This is the process that creates the customer base. The main buyers of a company are rarely set in stone. Most often, successful start-ups begin with low-end or downmarket customers with low income and low costs. As the products or services that are being bought are polished and remade, a company gains higher-end customers who gain interest in the product as it reaches higher levels of functionality, use, and/or value of some kind. As the shift to these higher priority customers continue, they begin to be a larger source of income for the company, and slowly become the main base whom the business lends the most importance. This process, of moving from low-end customers to more expensive and more profitable customers, is known as upstreaming, and is an integral part of the theory of disruptive innovation.[5]

Businesses work very competitively to keep their core market intact. The sellers will research their buyers to increase customer awareness. Keeping products customer oriented has become so huge a priority, in fact, that it has become a large focus of business schools to teach all types of business administrators, from manager to marketer, to keeping the customer in mind for the improvement and creation of sellable products.[6] It is very rare for an established company to lose its core customers to incumbents, and it has been stated that when an established company loses their consumer base via sudden and straightforward methods, it was not an ingenious move of the incumbent that allowed this to happen, but rather a result of the established company “dropping the ball.”[1]

Market Research

Throughout the lifespan of one company, the people that are being sold to are studied so that they can be provided with better products or services that they would buy. The main market doing the buying is, of course, that company’s consumer base. Analyzing and understanding such customers is the main method of keeping them, and is why most assets are poured into Research and Development (R&D).

R&D is the process by which old products and new ideas become refined into better, more sellable packages. It consists of a lot of customer data: interviews, observation, product testing, and plenty of questions. Innumerable details are dug up to gain an insight into who the core customers are, and what they want or need. This is where brand creation, market consideration, and market testing comes into play. Anything that the customer base will not buy will not be made.[1]

How a company listens to their customers is vital. Listening to what they say they want and providing that is a sure-fire means to failure. It turns out that it’s not as simple as just listening, because customers often do not know what they want or why they want it. Customers do not really understand the creation process, and should only be asked concise questions that a company's R&D team can make into something their customers would value.[7] It is through this careful insight into customer minds that a business improves their product and gains more buyers and more revenue.

Common Actions of the Customer

The Customer-Base Customer

As companies grow their customer base, and gain experience satisfying them, their customers grow accustomed to that business accomplishing a certain task for them. The company or product’s brand name may even correlate with the task the customer uses it for. Xerox, Klenex, and Band-Aid are some extreme cases of brand-names being used as the generic name of the product itself. In fact, as long as customers are continually satisfied with their purchases, the act of going to that company’s brand to accomplish a specific task becomes habitual.[8]

Repeat buyers and users are also useful for further reasons, as they are the source of “word of mouth” advertising. Studies have shown that customer satisfaction with a brand leads to more purchases, from both the same and new customers.[9] A satisfied customer expresses their enjoyment in the product, or even shows a friend the product and has them try it out, and a dissatisfied customer may speak against a product or not mention it at all.[9] Of course, the core consumer is the main spreader of the company’s brand name, and the more they use and like what they consume, the more those that surround them will gain interest and then potentially become customers themselves.

Shifting of Customer Priority

Content consumers eventually become fully saturated, and no longer desire the product to be upgraded as it had been before. This customer begins to lose interest, and stops becoming a regular buyer for the business. As a company tends to drift upmarket, many lower-end customers do not keep up. These customers then tend to turn to other companies for alternative products or services that have features they value over the original company's usual upgrades. The original company also allows these customers to leave, as they have shifted priority to higher-end customers.[5]

As old core customers lose priority, the company that sold to them does not fight very hard to keep them. Fighting for the old customers could risk losing the new, more profitable people. This allows new start-up businesses to start moving upstream by interesting and attaining these customers for themselves, as the start-up goes through the same cycles that the established company went through. By chasing after higher-end customers and letting less profitable customers lose priority and be taken away from rising incumbents, a business manages to shift its base to entirely new sets of people.[1]

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Christensen, Clayton, and Michael Raynor (Harvard Business School Publishing) (2003). Innovator's Solution: Creating and Sustaining Successful Growth. 
  2. Weier, Mary Hayes, "SAP Intends To Triple Customer Base In Four Years", InformationWeek, 2006 December 5. Retrieved 2007 June 25.
  3. Sabah, Zaid "Hardware stores struggle to rebuild customer base", USA Today 2007 April. Retrieved 2007 June 25.
  4. Krotz, Joanna L. "10 tips for Acquiring Customers", Microsoft for Small & Mid Size Companines, 2011 [[March 22]. Retrieved 2012 June 25.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Template:Cite article
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