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The study of customer satisfaction, or customer experience, or whatever the latest moniker is, does not occur in a vacuum; typically, it takes place in the context of the large corporation. Large organizations have tendencies, or peculiarities, that often complicate the process of measuring, understanding, and using customer satisfaction or customer experience data. Let’s look at some of these corporate complications.
Corporate Fantasyland. The typical corporate headquarters for a Fortune 500 company is a fantasy world where senior executives muse about their customers and about marketing to the distant masses. So the first great complication, or barrier, to understanding customers is boardroom fantasy. Many senior executives live in la-la land, far removed from the hustle and bustle of the marketplace. It’s difficult to provide great customer service, and develop sound marketing strategies, if you live in fantasyland.
Overpaid Executives. These high-level company executives often live in fancy houses, in gated communities, in protected enclaves, far from the “madding crowd.” The pay of senior executives in Corporate America has soared into the stratosphere over the past 30 years, creating a vast separation or divide between senior management and their customers. It’s increasingly difficult for these overpaid and pampered senior executives to understand and relate to their customers.
Popular Books. Many senior executives are vulnerable to popular management and marketing theories because they don’t really know what to do; they are “out of touch,” so they are more likely to grab on to popular theories or managerial fads—and create chaos within their organizations. CEOs read the latest popular books on business, such as The Ultimate Question with its Net Promoter® Score (NPS®), and often rain confusion and disorder down on their organizations. Senior executives should not be reading books; they should be out talking to their customers.
Complexity. Corporate executives attended the best colleges and universities, where they were taught the value of complexity and complex thinking. One’s ability to sound complex and complicated is often the currency of advancement in large corporate cultures. Consultants and gurus get hired because they, too, are selling complexity. All of this complexity leads to diffusion and confusion. Complexity is a barrier to successful execution and, hence, a barrier to serving one’s customers.
Youth Focus. If we were to read the marketing plans of Corporate America, we might well think that the average person in the U.S. died at the age of 35, or certainly by 45. It seems that marketing and advertising are biased toward the very young. It’s as though the rest of the population did not exist. There are 5,000 people turning 65 every day now, and will be every day for the next 20 years. We are approaching the point where 25% of the adult population in the U.S. will be over the age of 65. This focus on the young overlooks many marketing and business opportunities, and often reduces customer satisfaction, because corporations are ignoring a large part of their customer base.
Re-Org. Many of our largest clients (all Fortune 500 companies) rarely accomplish anything because they are in a constant state of upheaval, with re-org after re-org. The fact that we have this new word in our vocabulary (re-org) is testimony to its pervasiveness in practice. It’s not uncommon for our largest clients to reorganize every 12 to 18 months. During these episodes of turmoil, everything grinds to a halt. Projects are delayed. Decisions are deferred. Opportunities are lost. Customers are neglected.
Copycat. If there is one thing business people believe, it’s that major competitors “know what they are doing.” That’s why they want to copy the competitors’ new products as quickly as possible, or copy their advertising, or copy their managerial fads. Go to an auto show and you will be shocked at how similar most new cars look, as though made from the same general mold. In product category after product category, you see the pattern of copycat similarity. These companies are looking at each other, studying each other, and ignoring the needs, wants, hopes, and dreams of their customers.
Trend Watching. Tracking trends via social media, surveys, and media hype is often sold as the way to be on the leading edge, to be innovative. By the time a trend is clearly visible, you are already too late and will seldom be able to catch up. If you are doing your research homework and talking to your customers, you can create trends rather than chase trends. If you do your research homework and really understand your customers you will know what is possible before everyone else knows. Let your competitors chase the fads and trends your company creates.
Tribal Tyranny. The tyranny of group pressure and group-think limits corporate creativity and effectiveness. Every company has its own culture, its own mythologies, its own distortions of reality. To be a member of the corporation’s tribe, you must accept and believe—you must “drink the Kool-Aid.” The need to belong, to be a member of the tribe, is so strong that it can blind us to original thinking, blind us to our customers’ needs and issues. Tribal tyranny reduces corporate possibilities.
Fashion. Often invisible, fashion pervades all aspects of human culture. Fashion changes are highly visible in some industries (like women’s clothing, for instance), but difficult to recognize in most industries, because the pace of fashion change is slow and/or we simply don’t recognize it as a fashion. Every industry and every human activity is shaped and influenced by fashion and fashion trends, and many of these fashion trends are outside of our awareness. Corporations are hotbeds of fashion—managerial fashions, marketing fashions, accounting fashions, advertising fashions, presentation fashions, analytic fashions, etc. (Remember the corporate fantasyland). It’s key to understand the role of fashion in your industry and your business if you hope to keep your customers happy.
These complications are partial barriers to improving customer service and improving the customers’ experience. Let’s zero in on the world of customer satisfaction or customer loyalty or customer experience, whichever term you prefer (these terms overlap in meaning and use, but all recognize the importance of understanding and relating positively to customers). The many “truisms” of customer satisfaction and customer experience lore are mostly a set of mythologies to deceive the gullible and exploit the innocent. Let us explore these mythologies and then talk about best practices for customer satisfaction and customer experience research.
Extremely Likely |
Extremely Unlikely |
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---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
Okay, so it’s easy to poke holes in the rhetoric surrounding customer satisfaction and customer experience measurement, but what are the serious questions to think about as you contemplate a customer satisfaction monitoring program?
Let’s assume you have done your homework and answered the above questions honestly, and you feel that a customer satisfaction and loyalty program makes marketing and economic sense for your company. You have clearly defined the objectives for the program. What are the best practices to help ensure that your company gets the most out of its customer satisfaction and customer loyalty programs?
Qualitative Explorations. Always begin with some type of qualitative research (focus groups, depth interviews, online forums, ethnography) to better understand your customers, their perceptions, their experiences, their language, their fears, and their issues and concerns. If you don’t really understand your customers’ feelings, knowledge levels, and perceptions, and don’t understand how customers interact with your company (at all the touchpoints), it’s almost impossible to design a good customer satisfaction or customer experience monitoring program. The qualitative research will make it possible to design a relevant and valid survey questionnaire. In fact, the qualitative research should be repeated every two or three years as a safety check to ensure that your satisfaction monitoring program remains relevant and on track. Another “best practice” is to have qualitative research be an ongoing part of the customer experience program. The goal is to investigate each touchpoint through qualitative research, so that over a two- or three-year cycle all of the touchpoints are examined to identify improvement opportunities.
Sampling. Who should you survey? If you only talk to your current customers, you may be overlooking a sea of dissatisfied former customers. Generally, a best practice is to focus your surveys on your current customers, but include cells of infrequent customers and lapsed or former customers. If you conduct your surveys as visits or transactions occur, your sample will tend to be biased toward heavy users. This can be a good thing, since heavy users account for a large share of your business, but it can overstate your customer satisfaction scores because you are conducting a high share of surveys among your most loyal customers. It’s like “preaching to the choir.”
In most cases your employees, dealers, and agents should be surveyed as well. They represent your company and your brands. If they are unhappy or misinformed, they can quickly undermine any customer satisfaction program. Sampling must be carefully conceived and controlled to achieve optimum results.
Questionnaire Design. The first rule is “do no harm.” That is, your attempts to measure customer satisfaction should not lower your customers’ satisfaction. This means that questionnaires should be simple, concise, and relevant. Use very simple rating scales (2-point, 3-point, 4-point scales). Short word-defined scales (e.g., excellent, good, fair, poor) are easy for customers to answer, and the results are easy to explain to executives and employees. Moreover, short scales work well on PCs, tablet computers, and smartphones. Long, complicated scales should be avoided. The questionnaire should almost always begin with an open-ended question, to give the customer a chance to tell his/her story. An opening question might be:
Please tell us about your recent experience of buying a new Lexus from our dealer in north Denver.
The open-ended question gives the customer the opportunity to explain and complain; it communicates that you are really interested in the customer and his or her experiences; it conveys that your company is really listening. Then you can ask rating questions about various aspects of the customer’s experience, but keep these few in number. Most satisfaction questionnaires are much too long. If you want to include a recommendation question, we would recommend something similar to the following (a restaurant example, but remember the exact wording must be tailored to your industry, company, and situation):
Based on your last visit to the Burger Jubilee store at 105 North Avenue in Phoenix, how likely are you to recommend this Burger Jubilee store to your friends and acquaintances?
A) Would definitely recommend this Burger Jubilee store to friends and acquaintances
B) Would probably recommend this Burger Jubilee store to friends and acquaintances
C) Would probably not mention this Burger Jubilee store to friends and acquaintances
D) Would tell friends and acquaintances not to visit this Burger Jubilee store
And to calculate the Recommendation Score the following formula would be used:
(Percentage who answer A plus one-half of percentage who answer B) minus the percentage who answer D = Recommendation Score
This question, its well-defined answer choices, and the Recommendation Score formula will give you a much more precise measure of the net influence of customer recommendations than the Ultimate Question and the Net Promoter® Score.
The final customer satisfaction questionnaire should always be pretested with 20 to 30 depth interviews. It’s also best practice to do 500 or 1,000 surveys, as another type of pretest, and factor analyze the answers. Often this will allow you to shorten the questionnaire by eliminating redundant questions or attributes.
Survey Data Collection. The great challenge is to get customers to respond, since most are bombarded daily or weekly with poorly designed satisfaction surveys. Strive to avoid interviewing the same customers over and over again. Offering customers some type of discount or credit on future purchases or transactions (if they respond) is often sufficient to stimulate response. If the product or service category is a high-interest one (e.g., automobiles, smartphones, golfing equipment, etc.), you can often achieve high response rates without any incentives.
The method of data collection should be tailored to the customer base. Mail surveys work extremely well for automotive purchases, for instance. Telephone surveys are widely used because interviewers add a personal touch and can ensure that any problems are immediately addressed by the correct person or department. Online surveys are probably the most widely used survey method for customer satisfaction. It’s often the least expensive—if customers’ email addresses are systematically collected.
Smartphones and tablet computers increasingly offer new ways to survey customers. Complaint-tracking or problem-tracking (types of customer satisfaction research) can be conducted via QR codes, IVR (interactive voice response), or survey invitations on invoices, sales receipts, paper coffee cups, etc.
Other Data Streams. Survey-based customer satisfaction data is a solid, scientific foundation, but it’s not the only source of customer information. Companies have data flowing in from sales organizations, customer complaint letters, consumer affairs departments, CRM (customer relationship management) comments, social media chatter, etc. Think creatively about how all of these data sources can be tapped to create one integrated data set. Each stream of customer information is another “measuring stick” to evaluate customer experience and satisfaction. All of this data should be analyzed at the same time, side by side. If all of the data are telling the same story, we can be more confident in the conclusions. If different data streams are telling different stories, then we must dig deeper to understand the differences.
Analysis. This is where most customer satisfaction measurement systems fail. If you are comparing different stores, or different geographical areas, you should normalize the survey results to make the comparisons fair and accurate. If you are looking at results for a particular store or division over time, you must be wary of seasonal variations and economic-cycle variations. When the weather is very hot, or very cold, customers might tend to be more irritable. During the Christmas season everyone tends to be emotionally stressed, and satisfaction scores can go down. The use of advanced statistical methods is essential to level the playing field.
A best practice is to build relevant and useful mathematical models that compensate for data biases and distortions, link together important measurements in sophisticated ways, and derive simple composite results that everyone, even senior executives, can understand and use. Use the Recommendation Score rather than the Net Promoter® Score, if recommendations are important in your business.
Benchmarking is important. You should collect customer satisfaction data for your major competitors, if possible, so that you have a relevant measuring stick to analyze your own satisfaction data. This is not easy to do, since you rarely have equal access to your competitors’ customers. A best practice is to conduct a benchmarking study every two or three years (using identical methods for all companies), so that you really know how your services and your employees stack up against the competition.
Marketing Strategy and Positioning. Customer satisfaction and loyalty do not exist in a vacuum. A company’s marketing, positioning, and advertising can have powerful effects on customers’ perceptions, feelings, and satisfaction levels. For example, if your Lexus breaks down, you might think it’s a rare exception because of the Japanese manufacturer’s high-quality reputation; but if your Chevrolet breaks down, you could think it’s just another example of sloppy American manufacturing. It’s really important to align a company’s positioning and marketing strategy with customer satisfaction strategies, so that all these elements are working together synergistically.
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