LendingTree and the Tale of Two Crises

Last week LendingTree had two crises.

Crisis 1

The first, was relatively small. A few former employees used their access to customer inquiries (leads), most likely for personal gain, to give unauthorized lenders access to LendingTree’s Lenders Network. Sure, I and a lot of other people can think of the worst possible ramifications of this incident. However, the true facts probably will reveal something far less dramatic–a couple of ex-employees trying to stick it to their old company and make a quick greed inspired buck. And, a few unscrupulous lenders willing to comprise their integrity and their business for free leads.

Crisis 2

The second, is possibly the more unfortunate and potentially damaging. They lacked a community of vocal and fanatical customers. This is certainly not unique to LendingTree, but rather is quite endemic of the lead generation, mortgage, and to a lesser degree real estate industry. Those of us within this business ecosystem should take note and endeavor to fix this before we inevitably encounter our own crisis.

The Solution

This is more a open thought and discussion piece since I won’t be so arrogant as to believe I have the answer, or could have in the heat of the incident performed better. However, I will be critical in the hopes of beginning a useful discussion. A discussion on building a community that will passionately assist a business they believe in, even during bad news.

Here are a few things that LendingTree has done very well, and has differentiated their business, but didn’t help in the current crisis:

  • Been dogmatic about creating the highest quality customer (borrower) experience
  • Building an “elite” cadre of lenders who actively collaborate to improve the lead network, customer experience, and lender experience
  • Creating a top-shelf consumer brand that remains etched in every homeowner in America

Here are a few things that LendingTree did not do well in adjusting to a new social marketplace:

  • Did not build a community of customer evangelist from their loyal customer base
  • Did not build a community of lender evangelist from their loyal lender base
  • Create, develop a community evangelist at LendingTree

Turning Customers into a Community

I think if LendingTree had evolved their “network” into a “social media community” this recent incident would have barely registered. Instead it would have, in a natural way, triggered the vocal opinions of an established loyal customer and lender community. Here are a couple of examples from one of these loyal lenders:

Imagine if LendingTree’s thousands of customers and hundreds of lenders had all been engaged. What would have happened if LendingTree began the communication with the community and the affected customers together. The doom and gloomers would have been a faint whisper and the media would have tracked a very different meme.

Community Building Resources

If you think this is important to your company here are a few of my favorite resources:

Is this important? How would you build and maintain a community?

1 Comment(s)

  1. Justin Rees | May 27, 2008 | Reply

    I think this post brings up some wider issues for lead generators and beyond.

    There is so much talk about “how to monetise” social networking/new media tools that companies often forget that just by using them and engaging their customers they in fact are monetising them!

    It is not all about the fast buck. Using tools such as twitter and blogs to create a discussion about your company and your industry will help foster the evangelical type of customer base mentioned in this post. These loyal customers will stick with you and help you when things go bad. They will spend their money with you and tell their friends and colleagues to do the same.

    Companies need to take a longer term view and start using all these tools now as it takes time and effort to make them work for you.

    At LeadPoint UK we have a blog (www.leadpointuk.typepad.com) we have a twitter account (www.twitter.com/leadpointuk) and all our staff have LinkedIn profiles etc. After only a few months we are seeing a benefit from all of the above - making new connections and finding out the things our customers care about the most!

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