In this provocative yet practical book, Fred Reichheld argues that loyalty provides the acid test for leadership in today's volatile business environment, and that most leaders deserve failing grades. In fact, the author is quick to highlight that less than half of today's employees believe their company deserves their loyalty. Reichheld's 1996 international bestseller, The Loyalty Effect , set out his theory and convincingly established the link between loyalty and bottom-line profits. In Loyalty Rules! , he moves from theory to practice, using vivid stories from many of today's most successful companies to illustrate how superior leaders create networks of mutually beneficial, trust-inspiring partnerships between customers, employees, suppliers, and investors. Reichheld's research demonstrates that effective leaders build relationships upon six bedrock principles of loyalty: Play to win/win: profiting at the expense of partners is a short cut to a dead end; Be picky: membership is a privilege; Keep it simple: complexity is the enemy of speed and flexibility; Reward the right results: worthy partners deserve worthy goals; Listen hard and talk straight: long-term relationships require honest, two-way communication and learning; and Preach what you practice: actions often speak louder than words but together, they are unbeatable. It's trendy these days to decry a lack of loyalty among employers, employees, customers, and even investors, and blame it for everything from drops in business profitability to the decline of civilized society. But Frederick F. Reichheld, a Bain & Company director emeritus, insists that loyalty lives--and, in fact, remains a major reason for the success enjoyed by some of the leading names in both the Old and New Economies. Loyalty Rules , his follow-up to 1996's The Loyalty Effect , shows how practices that built such relationships in organizations like Harley-Davidson, Enterprise Rent-a-Car, Cisco Systems, and the U.S. Marine Corps help improve the atmosphere for all concerned and aid in producing better bottom-line results. The bulk of the book focuses on specific, real-world applications of Reichheld's Six Principles of Loyalty: in "Preach What You Practice," for example, he outlines various ways that "loyalty leaders" can articulate relevant concepts while clarifying "how these same philosophical foundations are ... not just feel-good platitudes." Reichheld also includes sample questionnaires from his Acid Test Survey, a critical part of the prescribed diagnosis-and-remedy program that is freely available on the author's Web site. -- Howard Rothman According to the U.S. Department of Labor, the average American will hold 10 to 12 jobs over a lifetime, each for an average of 3.5 years. At the same time, the Internet now allows consumers to seek out the best deal for any type of purchase whenever they choose to make it. It is no wonder then that the concept of loyalty seems to have faded away. Reichheld warns, though, that companies who ignore employee and customer loyalty pay a high price. He is a director emeritus at the management consulting firm Bain and Company and the author of The Loyalty Effect (1996), which demonstrated that a company that keeps from losing just 5 percent of its customers could see its profits rise by as much as 50 percent. Distilling research on businesses as diverse as Harley-Davidson, Chick-Fil-A, and Dell Computer, Reichheld now identifies six principles for building and maintaining loyalty. He also provides tools for measuring loyalty and a "Loyalty Acid Test" for benchmarking the loyalty effort. David Rouse Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved "Loyalty rules at every level. Loyal employees in any company create loyal customers, who in turn create happy shareholders. The task process sounds easy but it's not, and it has defeated some of the bigger organizations of the twentieth century. Fred Reichheld admirably-and correctly- argues that the art of loyalty and relationship building provides us with the keys to making a modern organization actually work." -Sir Richard Branson, Chairman, Virgin Group "Reichheld's previous work proved that people and profits needn't be at odds-they can, in fact, be mutually supportive. Now, Loyalty Rules! provides the tools for leaders to implement this simple yet revolutionary concept and help ensure long-term success. Through concrete actions and winning strategies, Reichheld shows how people at all levels of an organization can promote loyalty and, in turn, create greater outcomes for all stakeholders. A valuable message for both the public and the private sector." -Richard A. Gephardt, House Democratic Leader "Once again, Fred Reichheld clearly demonstrates the importance of building customer loyalty. He provides rigorous checklists and compelling real-life examples that prove loyalty building is not only good business, it's also good corporate citizenship. This is a philosop