Top                      10 Ways to Build Trust with Customers
                     By                      Bruce Kasanoff 
                     
                     1.                      Remember information for people, not about them. Each                      person should benefit from the information you remember for                      them, and they must approve in advance what you intend to                      do. 
                     
                     2. Don't confuse a relationship with advertising. If                      you are advertising, you don't have a relationship. Personal                      information should not be used for advertising. 
                     
                     3. Don't blab about your relationships to others. If                      your friends tell you personal information, you wouldn't give                      it to others. So don't sell, rent or share information about                      your customers. 
                     
                     4. Assume the answer is no. Advertisers like to brag                      that they allow people to "opt-out." That's like                      assuming a person will marry you unless they "opt-out."                      Unless a customer gives explicit permission, don't include                      them. 
                     
                     5. Serve instead of sell. Personalization is about                      service, not selling. Service is what wins, keeps and grow                      customers. Selling is useless without service. 
                     
                     6. People can't approve what they don't understand.                      Most people have no idea what technology now allows. Don't                      believe surveys that say people "aren't worried"                      about privacy. 
                     
                     7. Find products for customers, not customers for products.                      Most companies already have customers. Serve them better,                      and work harder to satisfy a broader range of their needs.                      
                     
                     8. If you have permission, use personal information to                      deliver the four major benefits of personalization: save                      me time, save me money, provide me better (often less) information,                      or treat me special. 
                     
                     9. Feedback must change behavior. If you want a strong                      relationship with individual customers, respond immediately                      and meaningfully when they interact with you. 
                     
                     10. Good intentions aren't enough. Be sure your security                      systems are first-rate and your people practice what you preach.                      Respect for privacy isn't a statement; it's a way of life.
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