Consumer Research: Efficient Deregulated Marketing - Dispelling the Myths. Source: Dr. Philip E. Lewis, Director, VaasaEmg (www.vaasaemg.com)
It is not necessary to have the cheapest prices in order to win new customers in deregulated household electricity markets. Furthermore, the most expensive companies can keep most if not nearly all of their customers in the medium-long term. Nor is it necessary to offer great satisfaction in order to either acquire or retain customers. What’s more, most additional products and services are irrelevant to the building of relationship value with customers. 5 years ago, as a marketing research manager in the deregulating UK energy market, it became obvious to me that deregulated energy customers, whilst predictable, often appear irrational. All the hype about exceeding expectations, brand building, early adopters and young innovators suddenly seemed to appear so ridiculous and theoretical in this market. Considering the focus of my recently completed PhD. in marketing had been consumer psychology and behaviour, I was intrigued to understand these strange findings. Five years later, a lot has been learned about deregulated energy customers and in particular electricity customers, their psychology, behaviour and the marketing methods most apt at influencing them. By looking at various markets including the UK, USA, Finland, Sweden, Norway and Germany, a common understanding is now possible, and it appears that whilst market situations differ, customers are remarkably similar. Through this understanding it is possible to guide deregulated energy marketers towards far greater efficiency. Firstly there is the issue of satisfaction. Based on various evidence, as well as on various VaasaEmg researches into a total of over 25,000 customers, it appears that satisfaction has only a small impact on customer loyalty. Of course, customers who are very dissatisfied are more likely to leave and those with excellent experiences are likely to remain, but such extremes are very rare in all markets and even then many customers behave in a contradictory way. In fact it appears that dissatisfied customers tend to remain loyal to their electricity supplier if they perceive that the cost of remaining loyal is less than the cost of changing. Conversely, satisfied customers tend to become disloyal only if they perceive that the benefit from changing supplier is clearly greater than the cost of changing. These costs and benefits are of course many and complex, but they are now known and so we can understand the paradox whereby dissatisfied customers often remain loyal and more satisfied customers often change. Secondly there is the issue of prices. Many electricity companies have made the mistake of offering unnecessarily low prices. It appears that customers’ response to price discounts is not greatly determined by their income level or indeed other demographics. Wealthy people may be careful with their money and poorer people may be loose with theirs, flat owners may be yuppies and large house owners may have big mortgages and so on. Consequently, as a whole 100 pounds is 100 pounds is 100 pounds. Also concerning prices, the amount of saving is what matters, not the percentage, and unless the savings are clearly greater than the costs (effort and risks of changing) then customers will mostly stay