I don't know that I agree totally with a recent article called the "Five Rules For Retailing In A Recession" as it relates to taking care of your most loyal customers, I don't think you can neglect them but I also agree that looking for "switchers" makes sense....
"Your most loyal customers are not your best source of revenue growth in a recession. Because you're already collecting most of the money they're spending, any drop in spending will come primarily out of your revenue. At the same time, it will be difficult to attract customers who are fiercely loyal to other retailers. So, what are retailers and marketers to do?
Your best opportunity lies with "switchers" -- the people who spend money both in your shops and elsewhere. If you can collect a higher share of spend from this group, you'll still realize a net gain even if their total spending is declining. And, you'll be well positioned to build on those gains when the recession eases.
Drawing on a study of more than 50 major U.S.-based retailers and over 20 years of global consulting experience, my colleagues Ken Favaro, Tim Romberger [of Marakon] and I have identified five operating rules to help retail executives determine where to direct recession-squeezed resources for the biggest return.
These rules boil down to:
(1) Identify the people who are shopping both in your stores and in others'.
(2) Discover what they're buying elsewhere (or want and can't find) and adjust your offer to provide it to them.
(3) Analyze which of your costs contribute to producing the benefits the switchers want, then spend more on those activities and less on the ones that don't matter to them.
(4) Organize your efforts efficiently by grouping your stores into clusters, based on different populations of switchers.
(5) Focus your customer research, merchandise-planning, performance management and strategic-planning processes on the switchers.
By following these rules, struggling retailers will discover that they have a larger universe of growth opportunities than they might think."