Advocacy: The Lifeblood of Successful Organizations

Shep Hyken
advocacy lifeblood organizations
advocacy lifeblood organizations
Advocacy is one of my favorite business concepts. When customers move beyond simply liking your brand to actively promoting it to others, something magical happens. This transition represents a crucial distinction that many organizations overlook or fail to capitalize on. In my book “Creating Super Fans,” I describe what I call the “ladder to super fandom.” Most companies are satisfied when customers reach the “affinity” rung—when people like their brand and become repeat customers. But there’s a higher level that truly exceptional companies achieve: advocacy. Advocacy occurs when customers don’t just return to you; they bring others with them. They become an extension of your marketing team, voluntarily spreading the word about your products or services. This difference between affinity and advocacy isn’t subtle—it’s transformative.

Why Advocacy Matters More Than Loyalty

Customer loyalty is valuable, but advocacy delivers exponential returns. When your customers become advocates, they’re essentially saying, “I like you so much that I’m telling other people about you.” This amplification effect can dramatically reduce your customer acquisition costs while simultaneously validating your brand in ways paid advertising never could.

Think about your own business for a moment. How many of your current customers are creating more customers for you? The answer to this question reveals whether you’ve built a merely sustainable business or a truly thriving one.

Advocacy is the lifeblood of every successful organization.

Creating Something Worth Talking About

The path to advocacy begins with a simple question: Is what you’re doing worth talking about? Worth sharing? If customers enjoy their experience but never mention it to others, you haven’t given them enough motivation to become advocates.

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Here are some ways to create experiences that inspire advocacy:

  • Deliver surprising moments that exceed expectations
  • Solve problems in memorable ways
  • Create emotional connections that go beyond transactions
  • Make your customers feel like insiders or VIPs
  • Provide genuine value that makes customers look good when they recommend you

The goal isn’t just to satisfy customers but to create experiences they can’t help but share with others. When someone recommends your business, they’re putting their personal reputation on the line. Your job is to make that recommendation a risk-free proposition.

Measuring the Advocacy Effect

How do you know if you’re successfully creating advocates? Look beyond traditional metrics like customer satisfaction and retention. While those are important, they don’t necessarily indicate advocacy. Instead, track:

  1. Referral sources for new customers
  2. Social media mentions and shares
  3. Reviews and testimonials
  4. Word-of-mouth inquiries

The percentage of new business coming from existing customer referrals is perhaps the clearest indicator of advocacy at work. If this number is low, you’re likely stopping at affinity rather than pushing toward true advocacy.

Moving From Affinity to Advocacy

I’ve observed that many businesses assume customer satisfaction automatically leads to advocacy. It doesn’t. Satisfaction may lead to repeat business, but it rarely inspires someone to recommend you to others. The leap from a satisfied customer to an advocate requires intentional effort.

To bridge this gap, focus on creating moments that are story-worthy. People share stories, not features or benefits. When a customer has an experience they can’t wait to share with others, you’ve created an advocate.

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This month, I challenge you to examine your business through the lens of advocacy. Are you getting repeat business but few referrals? That’s a sign you’re stuck at affinity. Are your customers creating more customers? That’s the power of advocacy at work.

Remember, in today’s connected world, giving customers something worth talking about isn’t just nice—it’s necessary for sustainable growth. Advocacy truly is the lifeblood of every successful organization.

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Shep Hyken has been at the forefront of the CS/CX Revolution for decades. His experience runs the gamut from helping notable companies like Disney and FedEx to improve their already outstanding customer service, to helping small and mid-sized organizations transform poor customer experience into a highlight of the organization.