Customer Satisfaction Surveys
Customer Satisfaction Surveys
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MARKET RESEARCH WITH INTELLIGENCE
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B2B International
MARKET RESEARCH WITH INTELLIGENCE
B2B International (www.b2binternational.com) UK: +44 (0)161 440 6000 US: +1 914 761 1909
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It is at the more specific level of questioning that things become more difficult. Some issues are of obvious importance and every supplier is expected to perform to a minimum acceptable level on them. These are the hygiene factors. If a company fails on any of these issues they would quickly lose market share or go out of business. An airline must offer safety but the level of in-flight service is a variable. These variables such as in-flight service are often the issues that differentiate companies and create the satisfaction or dissatisfaction. Working out what questions to ask at a detailed level means seeing the world from the customers points of view. What do they consider important? These factors or attributes will differ from company to company and there could be a long list. They could include the following:
Attribute Area About the product Examples
Quality of the product Length of life of the product Design of the product Consistency of quality Range of products Processibility of the product Delivery on time Speed of delivery Courtesy from sales staff Representative's availability Representative's knowledge Reliability of returning calls Friendliness of the sales staff Complaint resolution Responsiveness to enquiries After sales service Technical service Reputation of the company Ease of doing business Invoice clarity Invoices on time Market price Total cost of use Value for money
About price
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MARKET RESEARCH WITH INTELLIGENCE
B2B International (www.b2binternational.com) UK: +44 (0)161 440 6000 US: +1 914 761 1909
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The list is not exhaustive by any means. There is no mention above of environmental issues, sales literature, frequency of representatives calls or packaging. Even though the attributes are deemed specific, it is not entirely clear what is meant by product quality or ease of doing business. Cryptic labels that summarise specific issues have to be carefully chosen for otherwise it will be impossible to interpret the results. Customer-facing staff in the research-sponsoring organisation will be able to help at the early stage of working out which attributes to measure. They understand the issues, they know the terminology and they will welcome being consulted. Internal focus groups with the sales staff will prove highly instructive. This internally generated information may be biased, but it will raise most of the general customer issues and is readily available at little cost. It is wise to cross check the internal views with a small number of depth interviews with customers. Half a dozen may be all that is required. When all this work has been completed a list of attributes can be selected for rating.
B2B International
MARKET RESEARCH WITH INTELLIGENCE
B2B International (www.b2binternational.com) UK: +44 (0)161 440 6000 US: +1 914 761 1909
Advantages Easy for a DIY researcher to administer Low cost Respondents can complete in a time to suit them Easy to complete scalar questions Visual explanations can be provided
Disadvantages Low response rates Poor response to open ended questions Misunderstanding of questions can not be rectified by an interviewer Attracts response from complainers or the very satisfied
Typical applications Where there is a strong relationship with the subject (e.g. new car and new home buyer surveys) Where there is a strong relationship with the company (key supplier surveys, employee attitude surveys) Where people feel obliged to fill it in (e.g. utilities research) For key customers Where customers are tightly grouped geographically Where the subject is complicated or lengthy
Face-toface interviews
Ability to build rapport and hold the respondent longer Queries can be answered Show cards can be used Good response to open ended questions Can ask respondent to self complete tedious scalar response Low cost High control of interviewer standards High control of sample Easy to ask for ratings using simple scales Quick turnaround of fieldwork
Expensive for a geographically dispersed population Takes longer to carry out the fieldwork because of the logistics
Telephone interviews
Tedious for respondents when there are dozens of attributes to rate Some consumers are hard to access by phone Cannot show explanatory visuals
When planning the fieldwork, there is likely to be a debate as to whether the interview should be carried out without disclosing the identity of the sponsor. If the questions in the survey are about a particular company or product, it is obvious that the identity has to be disclosed. When the survey is carried out by phone or face to face, co-operation is helped if an advance letter is sent out explaining the purpose of the research. Logistically this may not be possible in which case the explanation for the survey would be built into the introductory script of the interviewer. If the survey covers a number of competing brands, disclosure of the research sponsor will bias the response. If the interview is carried out anonymously, without disclosing the sponsor, bias will result through a considerably reduced strike rate or guarded responses. The interviewer, explaining at the outset of the interview that the sponsor will be disclosed at the end of the interview, usually overcomes this.
B2B International
MARKET RESEARCH WITH INTELLIGENCE
B2B International (www.b2binternational.com) UK: +44 (0)161 440 6000 US: +1 914 761 1909
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B2B International
MARKET RESEARCH WITH INTELLIGENCE
B2B International (www.b2binternational.com) UK: +44 (0)161 440 6000 US: +1 914 761 1909
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Someone once told me that the half way point in a marathon is 22 miles. Given the fact that a marathon is 26.2 miles it seemed that their maths was awry. Their point was that it requires as much energy to run the last 4.2 miles as it does the first 22. The same principle holds in the marathon race of customer satisfaction. The half way point is not a mean score of 5 out of 10 but 8 out of 10. Improving the mean score beyond 8 takes as much energy as it does to get to 8 and incremental points of improvement are hard to achieve. Other researchers prefer to concentrate on the top box responses those scores of 4 or 5 out of 5 the excellent or very good ratings. It is argued that these are the scores that are required to create genuine satisfaction and loyalty. In their book The Service Profit Chain, Heskett, Sasser and Schlesinger argue that a rating of 9 or 10 out of 10 is required on most of the key issues that drive the buying decision. If suppliers fail to achieve such high ratings, customers show indifference and will shop elsewhere. Capricious consumers are at risk of being wooed by competitors, readily switching suppliers in the search for higher standards. The concept of the zone of loyalty, zone of indifference and zone of defection as suggested by the three Harvard professors is illustrated below in diagram 1 (overleaf):
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100
80
Loyalty (Retention)
Zone of loyalty
60
Zone of indifference
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40
20 10
Poor Fair Good
Zone of defection
Excellent
Satisfaction Score
Source: JL Heskett, The Service Profit Chain; The Free Press; New York 1997
Diagram 1:
This raises the interesting question what is achievable and how far can we go in the pursuit of customer satisfaction. Abraham Lincolns quote about fooling people could be usefully modified for customer satisfaction research to read You can satisfy all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot satisfy all the people all the time. As marketers we know that we must segment our customer base. It is no good trying to satisfy everyone, as we do not aim our products at everyone. What matters is that we achieve high scores of satisfaction in those segments in which we play. Obtaining scores of 9 or 10 from around a half to two thirds of targeted customers on issues that are important to them should be the aim. Plotting the customer satisfaction scores against the importance score will show where the strengths and weaknesses lie, (see diagram 2) with the main objective to move all issues to the top right box.
10
Importance of attribute 10 = very important
Technological strength
8
7 6
5
4 0%
40%
60%
80%
100%
Diagram 2:
B2B International
MARKET RESEARCH WITH INTELLIGENCE
B2B International (www.b2binternational.com) UK: +44 (0)161 440 6000 US: +1 914 761 1909
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B2B International
MARKET RESEARCH WITH INTELLIGENCE
B2B International (www.b2binternational.com) UK: +44 (0)161 440 6000 US: +1 914 761 1909
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There has been considerable research into the links between customer satisfaction and employee satisfaction Kaplan & Norton (1996), McCarthy (1997), Heskett, Sasser & Schlesinger (1997). The argument is a very obvious one. Happy employees work harder and try harder and so create satisfied customers. A co-ordinated customer satisfaction programme should consider linking with an employee attitude survey. The employee attitude survey could also be used to check out how well staff believe they are satisfying customers as there could be a dangerous gap between internal perceptions of performance and those of customers.
DEVELOPING AN ACTION PLAN THAT RECTIFIES WEAKNESSES & BUILDS ON THE STRENGTHS
The purpose of customer satisfaction research is to improve customer satisfaction and yet so often surveys sit collecting dust. Worse than that, customers have generously given their time to assist in the survey believing that some positive action will take place. Their expectations will have been raised. The process of collecting the data seems easier than taking action to improve satisfaction levels. In any customer satisfaction survey there will be quick fixes actions that can be taken today or tomorrow that will have immediate effect. These could be quite specific such as a newsletter, changes to the invoicing, or a hot-line for technical information. In the longer term, cultural changes may well be required to improve customer satisfaction, and that is more difficult. A five-step process can be used to make these longer-term improvements:
Step 1: Spot the gap Look at the customer satisfaction data to see where there are low absolute scores and low scores relative to the competition Pay particular attention to those issues that are important to customers Assume the scores are correct unless there is irrefutable evidence to the contrary and remember, perceptions are reality
B2B International
MARKET RESEARCH WITH INTELLIGENCE
B2B International (www.b2binternational.com) UK: +44 (0)161 440 6000 US: +1 914 761 1909
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How do satisfaction scores vary across different types of customer? Are segments correctly defined in the light of the customer satisfaction findings? How could a change in segmentation direct the offer more effectively and so achieve higher levels of satisfaction?
Step 3: Challenge and redefine the customer value propositions Are customer satisfaction scores low because the customer value proposition (CVP) is not being communicated effectively to the market? Are customer satisfaction scores low because the CVP is not being effectively implemented? Is the CVP right for the segment? How could a change in CVP achieve a higher customer satisfaction index (CSI)?
Step 4: Create an action plan Describe the problem Think through the issues that need to be addressed and list them out Identify the root cause of the problems Identify any barriers that could stop the improvement taking place Set measurable targets Allocated resources (usually money and people) Assign people and time scales to the tasks Measure and review progress
Step 5: Measure and review How has the customer satisfaction index (CSI) moved? Is the movement significant/real? Has the action recommended in the plan, taken place? Has it been enough? Has it had enough time to work? Revisit the steps spot the gap, challenge the segmentation and CVP, more action
Many of the issues that affect customer satisfaction span functional boundaries and so organisations must establish cross-functional teams to develop and implement action plans. One of the best ways of achieving this involvement by different groups of employees is to involve them in the whole process. When the survey results are available, they should be shared with the same groups that were involved right at the beginning. Workshops are an excellent environment for analysing the survey findings and driving through action planning. These are occasions when the survey data can be made user friendly and explained so that it is moved from something that has been collected and owned by the researcher to something that is believed in and found useful by the people that will have to implement the changes.
B2B International
MARKET RESEARCH WITH INTELLIGENCE
B2B International (www.b2binternational.com) UK: +44 (0)161 440 6000 US: +1 914 761 1909
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As with all good action planning, the workshops should deliver mutually agreed and achievable goals, assigned to people who can make things happen, with dates for achievements and rewards for success. Training may well be required to ensure that employees know how to handle customer service issues and understand which tools to use in various situations. Finally, there should be a constant review of the process as improving customer satisfaction is a race that never ends.
B2B International
MARKET RESEARCH WITH INTELLIGENCE
B2B International (www.b2binternational.com) UK: +44 (0)161 440 6000 US: +1 914 761 1909