Client loyalty is the Holy Grail for lawyers. Not only do loyal clients continue to feed your coffers, they also bring you new clients by way of referral. You want them. You need them. But getting and keeping them is challenging in this era of ever-changing communications channels — the control of which is mostly in the hands of consumers.
A 2017 American Marketing Association study took data from an earlier study where 400 brands in 29 different business categories were rated on over 20 measures of brand relevance. The goal of the study was to determine what drives two different loyalty types:
The satisfied — continues to stick with a brand because they are satisfied with the brand’s performance over time. The brand is familiar and dependable, and delivers consistently good performance. The satisfied feel comfortable with the brand and see no reason to change.
The committed — this group has a more involved relationship with the brand and is more likely to have an emotional attachment. They tell others about the brand, becoming a de facto brand ambassador.
The goal of your law firm should be to develop a committed group of clients who have an emotional bond with your firm, tell others about it, and frankly feel like they couldn’t imagine being without you.
To achieve that goal, it is important for you to understand the five variables that this study uncovered that are the key drivers of client loyalty:
- Dependability— always delivers to expectations and can be trusted.
- Better— better than their competitors and is the “only brand that does what it does.”
- Social media— has interesting and engaging content online.
- Light emotional connection— categorized as “makes me happy.”
- Heavy emotional connection— connects with the client emotionally and has a purpose the client believes in.
The above graphic shows that the strongest links to the committed loyalty group are dependability, being better than competitors, and having a high emotional connection with the client. These are the areas your law firm should focus on in order to create and nurture this group, moving beyond “dependable” to “better” in both messaging and execution.
Client loyalty has many levels, and to develop and leverage this within your client base means you need to deliver beyond the basics and craft a marketing program for your law firm that builds your brand on the base of these loyalty drivers.
You can get a good start in 2019 by contacting Stephen Fairley, Founder and CEO of The Rainmaker Institute