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  • Can Product Returns Make You Money?

    Many companies see customers’ product returns as a major inconvenience and an eroder of profits. But recent studies have begun illuminating the potential benefits of allowing customers to return products with impunity. This research finds that when a company has a lenient product-return policy, which allows customers to return almost any product at any time, customers are more willing to make other purchases, thereby raising the company’s revenues from sales. The authors’ own research extended these studies by exploring the trade-offs between the costs of product returns–particularly when customers deem such experiences satisfactory–and their long-term benefits to the company. Analyzing six years of purchase, product-return and marketing-communications data from “Company 1?–a large national catalog retailer that sells apparel and accessories–they confirmed that ignoring product return behavior, or even trying to discourage it directly by not marketing to customers who return products (such as by not sending them catalogs), would be a mistake. In fact, managers should embrace customers’ product-return behavior and offer them a satisfactory experience. In a field experiment with a second catalog retailer, “Company 2,” which sells footwear, apparel and other accessories through the Internet and mail-order catalogs, the authors found that under a lenient product-return policy, customers’ purchases, induced profits and referrals were greater than under a strict policy (which discourages and limits product returns). These measures could be raised even further through a catalog-mailing strategy that takes into account the expected future profits from each customer and the relationship between purchases and product-return behavior–i.e., through an optimal allocation strategy.

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  • Giving Consumers License to Enjoy Luxury

    Research suggests that people will spend more freely if you first help them feel more virtuous.

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  • Is Your Company As Customer-Focused As You Think?

    Managers can gauge their company's customer focus by posing a set of five specific questions.

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  • The Compliant Customer

    Customer-centricity may sound like a good idea. But a new breed of companies focuses instead on getting the customer to comply with a company's systems.

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  • How Not to Market on the Web

    Ads that complement online content can be effective — but not if they rouse consumers' privacy concerns.

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  • Why the Highest Price Isn't the Best Price

    Organizations can pick price points that provide both profits and long-term value to suppliers.

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  • How Facts Change Everything (If You Let Them)

    Edward R. Tufte, author of The Visual Display of Quantitative Information and other classics of information visualization, says that businesses would think better, make better decisions and present themselves more powerfully if they would only learn to talk--both among themselves and externally--in facts. To present themselves and their products better and more honestly, Tufte recommends that companies concentrate on delivering facts (rather than pitches), deliver as many of those facts as they can, not count on the marketing department to make it happen, and look to news sites and scientific publications for models of success. In particular, he argues that Google Inc. is where most companies should turn for design inspiration, and Tufte continues his examination of the corrosive influence that he says presentation software has on thought. Following his big ideas about information presentation, he says, will help companies differentiate themselves.

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  • Morph the Web To Build Empathy, Trust and Sales

    "Web site morphing" means that communicating — and selling — will never be the same.

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  • Cracking the Code of Mass Customization

    Executives tend to think of mass customization as a fascinating but impractical idea, implemented in only a small number of extreme cases, such as Dell Inc. in the PC market. But over the past decade, the authors have studied mass customization at different organizations, including a survey of more than 200 manufacturing plants in eight countries. From that investigation, they found that mass customization is applicable to most businesses, provided that it is appropriately understood and deployed. The key is to view it fundamentally as a process for aligning an organization with its customers' needs through the development of a set of three organizational capabilities. Those three fundamental capabilities are: (1) the ability to identify the product attributes along which customer needs diverge, (2) the ability to reuse or recombine existing organizational and value chain resources, and (3) the ability to help customers identify or build solutions to their own needs. Admittedly, the development of these capabilities requires organizational changes that are often difficult because of powerful inertial forces in a company, but many obstacles can be overcome by using a variety of tools and approaches, and even small improvements can reap substantial benefits. The trick is to remember that there is no one best way to mass customize: Managers need to tailor their approach in ways that make the most sense for their specific business.

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