Marketing by retailers can go too far; this claim should be no surprise. That this has been so even when the marketing comes at the expense of existing customers may be less well-known and thus be in need of some elaboration. The underlying culprit, I submit, is psychological: difficulty with keeping within even societal and even self-imposed constraints. Put simply, the difficulty is with limits. The mentality is thus at the child-stage of development.
Service to the customer is a business mantra. In fact, an increasing number of retailers refer to their respective customers as guests. Target was among the first to do so. Then restaurants followed and even some of the services. One hair salon in Scottsdale, Arizona, even has guest parking, but the signs are technically lies; the slots are actually for customers, who have been conveniently renamed guests. It might be concluded that American business has been trying to outdo itself in how the customer is treated.
Some indications, however, suggest that existing customers may have been increasingly overlooked, at least as of 2019, in favor of gaining additional customers. In some fast-food restaurants in the U.S., for example, promotional signs on the large windows adjacent to the tables obstructed the ability of sitting customers to look outside the building. After spending money for a meal, who wants to look at giant promotions geared to prospective customers approaching or passing by the restaurant?
On an increasing number of city buses, advertisements covering the side windows made it more difficult for existing customers to see outside the bus, whether to enjoy the ride or determine where to get off the bus. In effect, all this says to the existing customers: the people outside are more important than you so regrettably we have to disrupt or detract your experience with us in some small ways. The regret is a lie, as is the lack of choice in the matter, and the impact on customer experience can be large.
When the value given to existing customers is lessened while the price held constant or even increased, the gain goes to the business and the loss to the existing customers. Even in being hampered in trying to see outside a bus, the passenger suffers a loss because he or she would otherwise get the benefits of being able to see clearly through the windows. In fact, why even have windows if they are to be covered in various colors? Even the feeling of having been passively slighted in some way is part of the loss. From the standpoint of the business, existing customers are a given; the aim is to "grow" the business by attracting new customers even if at the expense of the current ones.
The practice of taking away from the value that customers receive implies an unwillingness to be constrained even by the value-exchange set up by the companies. Perhaps the hope is that few passengers would notice the change and eventually it would be regarded as part of the status quo. The expectation of being able to see clearly through a bus window is replaced.
Even in terms of cultural norms regarding the American holidays, retailers have gradually pushed up Christmas displays to September. You know something is wrong when you see Christmas trees and decorations then in front of the Halloween decorations and costumes. This shows that some manager did not even feel constrained to give each holiday its due. This can be viewed as an extension of not feeling constrained (by the existing value-exchange) to give existing customers their due.
At another Lowes, the Christmas displays completely blocked the Halloween pumkins from being visible from the front aisle.