Are your customers raving fans or fairweather fans?
Given that it's the start of the baseball season, it was timely (albeit, intentionally so) that I received details about Brand Keys ' 23rd annual Sports Fan Loyalty survey results a few days ago.
Brand Keys interviewed 250 self-declared fans in each baseball team's area; insights from the interviews were designed to enable league and team management to identify improvement areas.
The top five and bottom five teams are as follows, with last year's ranking in parentheses:
Top 5 Teams - 2015 Rankings
1. St. Louis Cardinals (#1)
2. San Francisco Giants (#5)
3. Los Angeles Dodgers (#6)
4. Detroit Tigers (#6)
5. Washington Nationals (#8)
Bottom 5 Teams - 2015 Rankings
30. Houston Astros (#30)
29. Arizona Diamondbacks (#21)
28. Colorado Rockies (#26)
27. New York Mets (#22)
26. Texas Rangers (#19)
Their research gives teams an apples-to-apples comparison of the emotional intensity with which fans support their home team versus corresponding fans of other teams in that market. They note that team win/loss ratios only drive about 20% of fan loyalty. The final score isn't the only thing that matters to fans; there are four other factors that come into play when they calculate their loyalty score:
That's all really interesting. But it got me thinking about raving fans vs. fairweather fans . If you've been reading my blog for a while, you know the things I've said repeatedly about raving fans (think about the Seahawks' 12th Man ), with some new additions; they...
But what about fairweather fans? What's their deal? Do brands have fairweather fans, too? Well, let's start with a definition, as I like to do. According to wiseGEEK , a fairweather fan is...
...someone who is only interested in a sports team when it is doing well. ... A fairweather fan tends to root for the team that is doing well, ignoring that team if it starts to fail and sometimes switching loyalties, even to an opponent.
When it comes to the customer experience, how does that translate? Fairweather fans...
Brands do have fairweather fans, much more so than raving fans. How do companies feel about them? Sadly, and quite honestly, they love them. If they can re-engage a customer - any customer - by offering coupons and discounts or by gimmicky advertising , then they can perpetuate the focus on acquisition over retention. And we all know that this is the focus of too many companies today - to simply make a buck, regardless of how they achieve it. But eventually, fairweather customers will leave , as all fairweather fans do.
Is there a spectrum of fans, where raving is the extreme? What other fan types are there? Which would you prefer?
Lots of people want to ride with you in the limo, but what you want is someone who will take the bus with you when the limo breaks down. -Oprah Winfrey