CRM - October 2007 - (Page 12) CUSTOMER CENTRICITY BY LIOR ARUSSY Imperfect Scores Is a new industry standard keeping executives from focusing on the relationships that matter? “W O U L D Y O U be willing to recommend us?” This question, underlying the Net Promoter Score (NPS) concept, is capturing the imagination of many executives in diverse industries. (See “Influential Leaders,” September 2007.) Tired of five-inch-thick reports on customer satisfaction—most of them simply Excel graphs in rainbow colors—executives are flocking faster than ever to the NPS, gravitating to the concept due to its simplicity and clarity. These executives fail to realize that they’re not solving their core issue— they’re simply replacing one problem with another. Previously, many customer-satisfaction reports failed simply because no action followed them. Executives gathered in the conference room for several hours, reviewed the results, nodded in agreement, and left to continue their DON’T ASK, IF YOU CAN’T ACT. CUSTOMERS ARE NOT LOOKING “TO VENT”—THEY ARE SEEKING ACTION AND CHANGE. YOU SHOULD BE READY TO DELIVER BOTH. business as usual. The multibillion-dollar customer research industry failed to notice what was wrong with that picture and continued to spoon-feed businesses expensive statistical data, little of which was actionable. Now, however, with NPS, executives can finally reduce their time commitment to customers’ responses to a single question. But consider why you bother to ask for customer feedback in the first place, and what you do with it. Rather than driving change, NPS aligns with the corporate desire for a collective “Thank you” letter: Executives somehow think that customers simply forgot to send that letter, and they’d like to give customers a last chance to do so through a customer survey. In other words, “Would you recommend us?” equals “Aren’t we great?” When high scores arrive, no one wonders, “What did we do to deserve it?”—the company’s greatness is obvious, most of all to itself. Only when complaints and dissatisfaction are expressed do internal arguments start. 12 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT | OCTOBER 2007 In our study, 71 percent of respondents claimed that they have difficulties obtaining internal buy-in for actionable customer feedback. Stripped from the politically correct tone, executives who receive bad scores simply call the customers liars. They cannot handle the bad news, denying it through any one of several rationalizations: The sample is not representative; only the upset customers responded; it was the wrong time; they were the wrong questions; and so forth. Customer feedback must be designated from Day One as a vehicle to drive actions. In fact, before launching any attempt to solicit customer feedback, a group of managers must have the responsibility to act. Even if your scores are high, you should focus on the efforts that led to those scores and how to adapt and improve them. Feedback should never be a vehicle for bonuses or selfgratification, as it is with many companies. In short, don’t ask, if you can’t act. Customers are not looking “to vent”—they’re seeking action and change. You should be ready to deliver both. And when you do ask, ask the questions that can lead you to action. Net Promoter Score tells you nothing about what you need to do to get better. If you want to be honest with your customers, ask the questions that will improve your relationships, not your score. Lior Arussy is president of Strativity Group (www.strativity.com), a customer experience research and consulting firm in Parsippany, N.J. He is also the author of Passionate & Profitable: Why Customer Strategies Fail and 10 Steps to Do Them Right. He can be reached at lior@strativitygroup.com. www.destinationCRM.com http://www.strativity.com http://www.destinationCRM.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of CRM - October 2007 Contents Front Office Reality Check Customer Centricity Coupons Without the Clipping Something Special in the Air Oracle’s Name Game Market Focus: Sports & Entertainment: CRM Scores for Sports Franchises Statistically Speaking The Pulse Required Reading Are We There Yet? Help Them Help Themselves The Chain Gang Pay Day OutClick Media Gets a Second Opinion Best Kiteboarding Makes a Splash with NetSuite True-Blue Service Documentation Secret of My Success The Tipping Point Re:Tooling Pint of View CRM - October 2007 CRM - October 2007 - (Page Cover1) CRM - October 2007 - (Page Cover2) CRM - October 2007 - (Page 3) CRM - October 2007 - (Page 4) CRM - October 2007 - Contents (Page 5) CRM - October 2007 - Contents (Page 6) CRM - October 2007 - Contents (Page 7) CRM - October 2007 - Front Office (Page 8) CRM - October 2007 - Front Office (Page 9) CRM - October 2007 - Reality Check (Page 10) CRM - October 2007 - Reality Check (Page 11) CRM - October 2007 - Customer Centricity (Page 12) CRM - October 2007 - Customer Centricity (Page 13) CRM - October 2007 - Coupons Without the Clipping (Page 14) CRM - October 2007 - Something Special in the Air (Page 15) CRM - October 2007 - Oracle’s Name Game (Page 16) CRM - October 2007 - Market Focus: Sports & Entertainment: CRM Scores for Sports Franchises (Page 17) CRM - October 2007 - The Pulse (Page 18) CRM - October 2007 - Required Reading (Page 19) CRM - October 2007 - Are We There Yet? (Page 20) CRM - October 2007 - Are We There Yet? (Page 21) CRM - October 2007 - Are We There Yet? (Page 22) CRM - October 2007 - Are We There Yet? (Page 23) CRM - October 2007 - Are We There Yet? (Page 24) CRM - October 2007 - Are We There Yet? (Page 25) CRM - October 2007 - Help Them Help Themselves (Page 26) CRM - October 2007 - Help Them Help Themselves (Page 27) CRM - October 2007 - Help Them Help Themselves (Page 28) CRM - October 2007 - Help Them Help Themselves (Page 29) CRM - October 2007 - Help Them Help Themselves (Page 30) CRM - October 2007 - Help Them Help Themselves (Page 31) CRM - October 2007 - The Chain Gang (Page 32) CRM - October 2007 - The Chain Gang (Page 33) CRM - October 2007 - The Chain Gang (Page 34) CRM - October 2007 - The Chain Gang (Page 35) CRM - October 2007 - The Chain Gang (Page 36) CRM - October 2007 - The Chain Gang (Page 37) CRM - October 2007 - Pay Day (Page 38) CRM - October 2007 - Pay Day (Page 39) CRM - October 2007 - Pay Day (Page 40) CRM - October 2007 - Pay Day (Page 41) CRM - October 2007 - Pay Day (Page 42) CRM - October 2007 - Pay Day (Page 43) CRM - October 2007 - Best Kiteboarding Makes a Splash with NetSuite (Page 44) CRM - October 2007 - True-Blue Service Documentation (Page 45) CRM - October 2007 - True-Blue Service Documentation (Page 46) CRM - October 2007 - Secret of My Success (Page 47) CRM - October 2007 - The Tipping Point (Page 48) CRM - October 2007 - Re:Tooling (Page 49) CRM - October 2007 - Pint of View (Page 50) CRM - October 2007 - Pint of View (Page Cover3) CRM - October 2007 - Pint of View (Page Cover4)
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