Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Non-traditional revenue sources could work wonders for newspapers

By Bob Davis

There I was, sitting in a customer retention call center for a major phone company listening to a top-performing customer retention rep talking to customers who wanted to cancel their service. The phone company was interested in my observations because of all the customer retention work I have done in the newspaper industry, but I was learning more from them on this day then they were learning from me.

Call after call would come in with the customer saying, “I want to cancel my phone line. I just have too many bills, I don’t use my land line that much, and I will just make my calls using my cell phone.”

This particular phone company is losing two million phone lines per quarter!

The top-performing rep I was observing was a joy to watch. He would take a call from a subscriber wanting to cancel land line service, and he would start asking questions.

“What cell phone provider do you use?”

“How do you access the internet?”

“How about TV service—who provides that for your household?”

Finally, he would say, “You know, if you let us provide all those services, you could save a lot more than the price of dropping your land line.”

Caller after caller would come in wanting to cancel their land line and they would leave with a bundle of services they’d had with competitors before the call. In fact, this 200-seat call center sells $28 million worth of extra services to canceling customers each year.

Now how does this apply to the newspaper industry? Right now, your average customer calls you three times a year. For a major metro, that adds up to a million calls per year or more. Right now, newspapers look at these calls as an expense and they try to get these calls done as cheaply as possible.

What if we changed our mind set? What if we took notice that we are getting a million opportunities to sell more services every year? Certainly if a phone company can sell a new TV service to customers who intend to cancel, we should be able to sell something to someone calling in with a vacation hold!

What if we formed a partnership with an insurance agency who is an advertising customer? What if we made a deal with that insurance agency that they would pay us $5 for every customer we transferred to them when they call in with a vacation hold? We could say something like, “Mr. Subscriber, we have a partnership with the Wonderful Insurance Agency. They are giving all of our traveling customers 50 percent off on their travel insurance. If you will just hold the line one moment, I will transfer your call so they can tell you all about it!”

Now a call that used to cost you $1 to take just made you $5 in revenue. Multiply that by your 100,000 vacation stops in a year and it starts to add up.

The opportunities for these partnerships are only limited by your imagination. For example, we could sell subscriptions for our delivery partners. Who better to buy another paper than current newspaper customers? We could do seasonal promotions with our advertisers, offering special prices for our subscribers for each gift-giving holiday. If we have an advertiser who sells snow tires, we could offer our subscribers seasonal discounts. Given recent weather patterns, my friends at the Washington Post might want to jump on this right away!

So the goal for 2010 is to find some non-traditional sources of revenue. Here they are. What are you waiting for?

Bob Davis is the president of Robert C. Davis and Associates (www.robertcdavis.net). He specializes in creating custom programs that deliver measurable results for the newspaper industry. Bob is also co-founder of Surpass (www.surpasscalls.com), an outsource call center serving the needs of newspapers across the country.

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