You Need to Make an Important Distinction for Your Small BusinessA problem that many small businesses face is they don't understand the difference between a transactional business and a relationship-based business.

ByJeffrey Shaw

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Ultimately, the best customer service any business can offer is to be accommodating. The best customer service is often the result of observing how society is changing and adapting to meet the current lifestyle needs.

Let's consider the distinction between transactional and relationship-based visually for a moment. At transactional businesses, the cash registers are lined up at the front of the store. The emphasis is on the transaction and checking out.

在高端零售商店,另一方面,either no cash registers will be in view or there is a register for each department. Could you imagine seeing a lineup of registers like a cattle corral at a store like Neiman-Marcus? Similarly, you walk into your favorite local diner and there's likely to be a register with a bowl of mints. When you walk into a fine dining establishment, at most there's going to be a hostess stand but certainly not a register.

The important thing is to fully own whether you are a transactional or relationship-based business. Somewhere in between is the real problem. If customers feel transactional when your business needs to be based on building relationships, that won't bode well for a sustainable business.

Related:Can Small Businesses Mandate Employee Vaccinations?

This difference between transactional and relationship business is particularly important for small businesses to understand because most small businesses are built on relationships. It's the promise of a personal experience that draws a customer in. It's the relationship that keeps them coming back, and it's the experience that motivates them to refer. Without understanding the difference between a transactional business and a relationship-based business, it can be easy for a small business to fall into a transactional mode because that's what we tend to see modeled around us by much larger businesses than our own.

The most blatant example is when a transactional business, like a utility company or cell phone carrier, offers a special deal for new customers only. I'm sure you can imagine how customers of a relationship-based business feel when a deal is offered for new customers only. They, the loyal customer, don't get the same benefit. Rather, if you are a relationship-based business, there should be a customer loyalty program in place that honors their previous business that a new customer would never receive. That's how you build great customer relationships.

Related:Top 10 Hiring Platforms for Small Business

So often, modeling the big guys, small businesses get this backward. They end up catering to attract new customers at the detriment of their relationship with existing customers.

The good news is small businesses that are relationship-based are now given a huge opportunity to shine on their core strengths of personalization and relationship building. As transactional businesses become less personal, albeit perhaps more accommodating, the more businesses that are relationship-based are going to stand out. Where consumers are lacking that personal touch in some business interactions they are going to crave it in others. The division between transaction-based business and relationship-based business seems to be widening and this can be to the advantage of higher-touch businesses. Both types of businesses can win. The important thing is to know where you stand. As a small business, it's likely to be relationship-based. So, let those transaction businesses have at it. It's only going to make your business shine brighter and play into your core strength of relationship building.

Related:5 Things Not to Do When You're Running a Small Business

Wavy Line
Jeffrey Shaw

Small business coach

Small business coach, Jeffrey Shaw is the author ofThe Self-Employed LifeandLINGO, as well as an in-demand keynote speaker. He's the host of the top-rated podcast,The Self-Employed Lifeand a LinkedIn Learning instructor. Shaw's TEDxLincolnSquare talk is featured on TED.com.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

'This Is My Life Now': Man Hysterically Documents Elon Musk's 'X' Sign Blaring Flashing Lights Into His Bedroom Window

The sign, reportedly put up without a permit, is shining bright at X HQ in San Francisco.

Business News

'Awful Advice': Barbara Corcoran Slammed For 'Tone Deaf' Business Advice to Interns

The "Shark Tank" star shared tips on social media about how interns can increase their chances of getting hired full-time, but the public reaction didn't go as planned.

Leadership

These Outdated Habits Are Leading to Workplace Inefficiencies And Taking a Toll on Your Productivity

No wonder companies are having trouble collaborating effectively digitally.

Growing a Business

3 Ways Leaders Can Use Data to Grow in Shrinking Economies

Business leaders need to find a way to make sense of this dynamic environment and use it to their advantage — and they can do so with data. Here's how.

Money & Finance

Want to Become a Millionaire? Follow Warren Buffett's 4 Rules.

企业家是不能过度指狗万官方望太多a company exit for their eventual 'win.' Do this instead.

Business News

An 81-Year-Old Florida CEO Just Indicted for a $250 Million Ponzi Scheme Ran a Sprawling Senior Citizen Crime Ring

Carl Ruderman is the fifth senior citizen in the Miami-Fort-Lauderdale-Palm Beach metropolitan area to face charges in connection with the scam.