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Customer retention at Hyundai Motor India Ltd

Rik Paul (Department of Marketing and Strategy, IBS Hyderabad, IFHE University, Hyderabad, India)
Debapratim Purkayastha (Department of Marketing and Strategy, IBS Hyderabad, IFHE University, Hyderabad, India)

Publication date: 28 June 2013

Issue publication date: 28 June 2013

Abstract

Subject area

Marketing management, services marketing, customer relationship management and strategic marketing management.

Study level/applicability

This case can be taught effectively to MBA/MS students.

Case overview

Hyundai Motor India Ltd (HMIL) commenced operations in India in 1996 and launched its first car in India – the Hyundai Santro – in 1998. Since then, there has been no looking back for the company. Its domestic and export sales figures have risen manifold each year and the car maker has gone on to become the second largest manufacturer in the Indian car market with a market share of 18.10 percent as of 2010-2011. By 2009-2010, most of the major international car makers were setting up production facilities in India. The market was set to become highly competitive and it became imperative for manufacturers like Maruti Suzuki India Ltd (MSIL) and HMIL to retain their customers in order to maintain their market share. Nalin Kapoor, General Manager (Sales & Marketing) was contemplating the marketing strategies he could use to counter the stiff competition. Customer retention was one of the major problems in the automobile industry as the purchase time span varied between three and five years and the cost of brand switching was nil. HMIL had been pursuing customer relationship management activities but its customer retention ratio was declining. Kapoor and his team decided to study the loyalty programs of some companies in the automobile industry to ascertain whether launching a loyalty card could solve their problem of retention. The marketing strategy department with the help of a management intern extensively studied the existing loyalty program of Hero Honda, MSIL, and Ford to identify how those programs were designed and promoted to the customer. The reports also indicated the shortcomings of each program and the features which were highly accepted by the customer. The loyalty program also had cost implications as there was a need for a strong technical support team to run it successfully. With the reports in hand, Kapoor was in a dilemma on whether launching a loyalty card would be feasible or not. If yes, then how should it be structured to motivate the customers to stay loyal to the company? Also, how could the cost in terms of promotion, training, and technical support be justified? If not a loyalty program, then what marketing strategies should the company pursue to retain customers effectively? The problem demanded immediate attention and action and Kapoor was well aware of the implications that a delay in decision making would have for the market share of the company in the growing and dynamic automobile industry in India.

Expected learning outcomes

These include: the concept of customer relationship management; relationship marketing; customer retention; customer loyalty; customer profitability segments; relationship bonds; and designing loyalty programs.

Supplementary materials

Teaching notes are available for educators only. Please contact your library to gain login details or email: support@emeraldinsight.com to request teaching notes.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Two final year MBA students (Batch of 2012 at IBS Hyderabad, IFHE University), Nikhil Gulati and Anil Pathak, were involved in preparing the first draft of the case. The authors would like to acknowledge their contribution in the published case.

Citation

Paul, R. and Purkayastha, D. (2013), "Customer retention at Hyundai Motor India Ltd", , Vol. 3 No. 3. https://doi.org/10.1108/EEMCS-06-2013-0078

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2013, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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