Customers Most Satisfied at This Company The Cult of the Customer: Turn Satisfied
Clients into Evangelists Satisfied Customers: Make Your Service Mission Critical
Now you know why traditional book giveaways don't work and how you can launch your own campaign to turn
contacts into evangelists so word of your book can spread like wildfire.
In his book, The Cult of the Customer, Shep Hyken takes a look at how companies turn customers
into evangelists of sorts and the elements of an amazing customer experience
Turn your workforce into advocates and your clients
into evangelists with a Motivational Keynote from a true Customer Service speaker and experts from BigSpeak.
As for the broad applicability, we're seeing it every day in the nonprofit world, as plenty of groups are learning to use their supporter lists for more than overnight fundraising and email advocacy — some are finding ways and providing tools to turn
supporters into evangelists in whatever communities they're a part of (whether local or not).
Campaigns are waking up to the promise of social media and other Web 2.0 technologies to turn casual site visitors into evangelists
You'll have to read through these materials to see what they recommend, but Herz concludes with a tip of his own to convert
clients into evangelists.
A new kind of giveaway turns
contacts into evangelists to sell more books Guest Expert: Penny C. Sansevieri We have marketed hundreds of books over the years, and many of our authors have launched their own book giveaways.
In your book, The Cult of the Customer (John Wiley & Sons, 2009), you take a look at how companies turn customers
into evangelists of sorts.
This turns customers
into evangelists.
New Orleans has a way of turning people — those who live in the city and those who just love it —
into evangelists, possessed by an urge to spread the gospel.
I'll teach you how to create powerful experiences for your fans, so you can transform people who know and like
you into evangelists who can't wait to tell the world about you and your work.
Sounds good, but how do you transform clients
into evangelists?