How to Measure Customer Satisfaction
Businesses survive because they have customers that are willing to buy their product or service. However, many times businesses fail to "check in" with their customers to determine whether they are happy or not and what it will take to make or keep them happy.
WHAT TO EXPECT
This Business Builder will explain why it's absolutely necessary to measure your customers' satisfaction level, different options for obtaining customer feedback, what is needed to ensure an effective survey, how to analyze the results of your survey, and the next steps you should take to attract new customers and keep your existing ones coming back for more.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW BEFORE GETTING STARTED
The Costs of Poor Customer Service
Businesses survive because they have customers that are willing to buy their product or service. However, many times businesses fail to "check in" with their customers to determine whether they are happy or not and what it will take to make or keep them happy.
Finding the reasons for customer defections and doing something about them is especially important. According to the U.S. Consumer Affairs Department, it costs five times more to gain a new customer than to retain an existing one. Other studies have reported that with just a five percent increase in customer retention a firm can raise its profitability by 25 percent and in some cases as much as 85 percent. Similar studies also show the longer a company keeps a customer, the more money it will make. What happens is that consumers spend slowly at first, but with succeeding years of good experiences, they will spend increasingly more. The Profit Impact of Market Strategy (PIMS) database (see the Strategic Planning Institute) shows that firms perceived as having better customer service can charge more for their products and services and still have higher market shares and returns on sales than their competitors.
TARP, a management consulting research company, reports only two to four percent of dissatisfied customers ever complain to a business regarding a poor experience. The others just leave and do business with competitors. Of customers that leave in a given year, 68 percent do because of supplier indifference or poor attitude. In a study conducted by General Electric, GE found that word-of-mouth has a significant influence on consumer decisions--twice as much as advertising. (The Information Challenge, General Electric Company, Louisville, KY, 1982. Survey conducted by Cambridge Reports, Inc. 12 pp.) Negative word-of-mouth can be really dangerous since dissatisfied customers are usually more vocal than satisfied customers. Depending on the industry and the nature of the bad experience, dissatisfied customers will complain to 10 to 20 friends and acquaintances--three times more than those with good experiences. Furthermore, this negative information is influential, and consumers generally place significant weight on it when making a decision.
If that isn't reason enough to be concerned about how customers perceive us, fierce competition is requiring more and more innovations to differentiate firms from one another. With technology available to virtually everyone today, the traditional feature and cost advantages are no longer relevant. Still, product and service quality provide an enormous opportunity to distinguish a firm from the rest. The Japanese have recognized this and have taught us to expect quality. Today's consumers do, and they know more about products and services than they ever did.
According to futurist and corporate advisor, Faith Popcorn, a new type of customer is emerging in the '90s. They are "vigilante consumers" — a new generation of super consumers that are smart, discriminating and vocal. They demand value for their money and expect the companies that they buy from to be responsible and accountable. When companies don't respond, these "vigilante consumers" will make sure that they will tell anyone who will listen why they shouldn't do business with those companies. Satisfying these smarter consumers just makes good business sense.
The Customer Service Payoff
Customers are your best source of business information — whether it's to improve an existing product or service or whether you're planning to launch something new. There's no substitution for "getting it from the horse's mouth." When you open up the lines of communication, you are able to align your resources to best advantage, and you often can make changes or launch products more quickly. By talking to your customers directly, you increase your odds for achieving success; you "mistake-proof" your decisions and work on what really matters. Just think of the money Coca-Cola might have saved if it had talked to its consumers before changing its cola formula. When you routinely ask your customers for feedback and involve them in your business, they, in turn, become committed to the success of your business.
Watch Out For…
Even the best intentions are subject to problems along the way. Temptations to avoid are:
ASSESSING YOUR CUSTOMERS' SATISFACTION LEVEL�
Sources of Customer Data
Too often organizations claim to know what their customers' requirements are, yet fail to gather and analyze the most useful data. Sure, they know their customers' general requirements, but do they know what influences customer buying decisions, how important each influencer is, or how they measure up to the competition in the areas most important to the customer? They don't and won't unless they collect this information in a formal, systematic manner.
* Your own organization — Uncover potential areas of customer discontent by reviewing your key operational data. Most likely you'll uncover some things that you can fix immediately, which will make your customers happy and get you started on the right track.
Check on the status of backlogs or stockouts. If these are significant, chances are you have some customers that are not happy with your delivery cycle time.
Review your "Returns and Allowances." If they are high, then your customers are sending you a strong message that they were not happy with the product they purchased — either the quality was inferior or they felt the product was misrepresented.
Examine your production reject or yield rates. If your rejects are high or your yields low, you can bet that some bad product is leaking out to your customers. Even if you inspect the product before shipping it to the customer, tests have shown that inspection isn't 100 percent reliable — some bad product will sneak out.
Poll your employees for information on customer satisfaction. They interact with customers constantly and probably know a great deal about your customers' likes and dislikes. If you are a one-person organization, then you are the one dealing with customers. You know what's going well, what needs fine-tuning, and what needs a major overhaul.
* Customers — You may want to start with a review of customer complaints and inquiries. If you don't have a systematic way of collecting these, you should develop one. Both are good indicators of opportunity areas. However, don't limit yourself to just complaints and inquiries. Remember, only two percent to four percent of dissatisfied customers ever complain. If you're only looking at complaints, you're missing the other 96 percent to 98 percent who have problems with you.
If some of your customers are especially important to you, consider making some key customer visits to discuss ways to make them happier.
Surveys and focus groups are two popular methods for gathering information on more general customer needs. Surveys are written assessments given to individual customers; focus groups are discussion sessions with groups of customers. Both must have clear and specific goals up front in order to be successful. Broad questions in surveys or focus group sessions provide perspective, but it's usually too general to base decisions on. Objectives must be clear and questions specific if they are to provide results that can be acted upon.
Although focus groups and surveys are similar in what they want to accomplish, one may be more suitable than the other, depending on the application. Surveys are relatively simple and economical to administer and can reach large numbers of customers, but the survey results are limited by the question and brief response format. On the other hand, focus groups take more time and effort, are often more expensive to administer and may not be as far-reaching as surveys, but their interactive nature may produce clearer feedback. The best results are found when combinations of both techniques are used to identify customer requirements and expectations.
Currently, surveys are the most popular tool used by today's businesses for collecting customer satisfaction data so we will focus the remainder of the Business Builder on developing a customer satisfaction survey.
The Best Kind of Customer Data
More is not necessarily better when it comes to customer data, but getting the right kind of data is critical. Following are the key characteristics of good customer data:
There are six steps in conducting a successful survey. They are:
Step 1
Decide On Your Objectives
What do you want to know from the survey? Be specific. Your objectives will form the basis from which your survey questions will be developed. Limit your objectives to just a few. If you try to include too much, you will make the survey too long (customers may not complete it), and you may uncover more than you can handle (you can't respond to it). For instance, Josie's Custom Woodworking wants to increase sales. Josie's objective for her survey is to determine the best ways to increase sales. That might include questions about pricing, the competition, ways to add value, advertising methods, referrals, etc. In order to limit the length of the survey, she may have to be selective with the kind of questions she asks — even though she's chosen just one objective!
Two tempting traps to avoid when setting objectives:
Now determine the objective(s) of your survey.
Step 2
Determine Who Should Complete the Survey
First and foremost, know who your customers are and which are appropriate to survey! As obvious as this sounds, it is not so obvious in practice. If your market is large, you may have different segments of customers. Or depending upon the industry you may have different levels of customers. Nevertheless, your survey objective(s) will usually determine which customers you should survey. For instance, Sue's Dress Shop supplies dresses for designers and tailors clothing for individual clients. If Sue is interested in ways to increase her commercial business, then she should target the survey to her designer customers. Similarly, Oscar's OJ supplies fresh-squeezed orange juice to distributors who then sell to the consumer. If Oscar wants feedback on the flavor of his orange juice, he should survey the end-user, the consumer, not his direct customer, the distributor.
Also, give some thought to the number of customers you want to survey. Do you have a few key accounts? Maybe you want to survey each of them. If you have multiple customers, you may have to select a sample to survey. Also, you may want to hear from different individuals at the same customer site. Feedback from individuals other than your direct contact may reflect problems that your contact doesn't know about and report.
Each time you administer a survey, you should adjust the recipient list to assure that you don't accidentally survey the same customers repeatedly. Once you have initial results, you may want to assess one defined target segment repeatedly or assess one segment after another.
Step 3
Develop the Survey
Having settled on objectives and decided what kinds of customers you'll target, it's time to draft the survey. You'll need to formulate questions whose answers will help you decide what needs to be changed to achieve your objectives. The following tips may help you:
First, list potential question topics. Common service factors for which you may want to ask customers to grade your performance and product value include:
Products:
Employees:
Customer feelings:
Environment:
Post-sale service:
Company perception:
Consider what you know and what you want to know regarding customer perception of each factor you consider to be significant. Then shorten the list to just significant factors that you would be willing and able to work on to increase customer loyalty or attract new customers. Conversely, also list factors where there may be opportunities to cut back on quality if it would reduce production costs without driving away customers.
Now, decide how much difference learning what you want to know about each factor will make. If responses to a related survey question are unlikely to affect what you do, don't waste the respondent's time. Don't ask it.
It's time to draft the survey questions. Common question formats include yes-or-no questions, Likert scales (discussed below), and lists for the respondents to rank. Examples appear in the survey example near the end of this document. More tips for effective question syntax and survey layout can be found in the Business Builder "How to Create a Customer Survey."
Before you finalize the survey questionnaire, see if any of the questions can be answered to your satisfaction by observing and talking to your sales staff and customers.
For each question in a checklist format, the customer will be able to respond either "yes" or "no." While this is the simpler of the two formats, it can be confusing if the customer's answer is actually "maybe," "sometimes," or "mostly." The Likert-scale format, developed by R.A. Likert in 1932, represents a bipolar continuum where the lower end is a negative response and the higher end is a positive response. Examples of Likert scales are:
Strongly disagree, disagree, neutral, agree, strongly agree
Very dissatisfied, dissatisfied, indifferent, satisfied, very satisfied
Very poor, poor, average, good, very good
The advantages of the Likert scale are (1) it allows the customer to express a degree of opinion, and (2) scales with five response items have shown to be higher in reliability than those with just two. However, reliability appears to level off after five responses, so while a five point scale is better than a two point, ten is not necessarily better than five.
For example, Karen's Kolorful Kites just completed a survey and discovered that one of its distributors experienced on-time delivery problems. The distributor commented that the carrier Karen utilized did not have a regional depot in his area. He was always the last stop. Karen had no idea this had been a problem and immediately switched his product to a regional carrier. The problem was solved, and the distributor was elated.
Step 4:
Administer the Survey
You may want to contact the people you intend to survey before hitting them with questions, and ask them if they will help you by responding. Prenotification will both let the survey candidates know how important it is to you and help you avoid irritating clients who resent surveyors.
If you are handing out survey cards to customers, be aware that research has indicated that it's better to do it as they depart, not as they arrive. Having a list of features to criticize during the visit makes a customer more likely to notice weaknesses. That inspires useful feedback, but it can cost you the customer.
If you are not satisfied with the initial response rate, don't give up. Consider supplementing the survey in another medium--for example by asking questions by telephone or on a Web page when not enough were answered by mail.
Step 5:
Analyze the Results
Once your customers return the completed surveys, you are ready to compile the data and analyze the results. In most cases, competency with a computer spreadsheet program is all you'll need. First, you'll need to design the spreadsheet, enter the data, then choose the graphs to summarize the results. These might be pie charts, bar graphs, or line graphs which are available in all of the popular spreadsheet programs.
For both the checklist and Likert format, you'll be able to determine the percentages of positive and negative responses for each response. Each "yes" is a positive response and each "no" is a negative response for a checklist. With the Likert scale, you can determine positive and negative percentages by combining the responses on each end of the continuum. For instance, Strongly Agree and Agree become positive; Disagree and Strongly Disagree become negative. When this happens, you transform the five-point scale to a three-point scale that just happens to be the same as your "Level of Importance" scale and very similar to a checklist format.
If your customers decide to fill in the biographical information (name, function, company, etc.), you'll be able to do some further manipulation that may prove helpful. For instance, you may want to sort the survey data by type of customer, function, sales level, product purchased or whatever makes sense to determine if any trends are developing.
Kath's Karaoke Kompany decided to sort its customer satisfaction survey results by job function. After analyzing the results, Kath found that the manufacturing and sales people gave her company high satisfaction results. Yet, the executives gave her company low marks. It was obvious that she needed to investigate why the executives were dissatisfied. If she had not sorted the data in this manner, she may have overlooked this issue.
Step 6
Communicate the Results
After you have analyzed the data, it is time to communicate the results to your staff and customers.
First the staff: Remind everyone that customer satisfaction is essential for continued prosperity. Emphasize the importance of keeping the customer wants and needs in mind whenever decisions are made--especially in product design, marketing, and customer services.
Then the customers: Communicating survey results and resulting action is absolutely necessary if you want to continue to receive feedback from your customers. If they feel that the survey results do not get the proper attention, they'll be reluctant to provide you with feedback in the future.
Get your customers involved when you can. This gives them ownership of the issues, makes them part of the solutions and allows them to experience firsthand your dedication in satisfying their needs. You might also want to solicit their input for your annual goals and objectives. Then, tell them how you're doing against the goals, and tell them frequently. That way they know that progress is being made and that you value their opinions and their participation. Plus, it provides you with some great public relations.
The Bedrock Bank Corp. decided to communicate what they were doing with their customer feedback during their Customer Appreciation Week. Instead of the general promotions, free coffee and giveaways they were accustomed to providing, they designed a major communication campaign to inform their customers of the survey results and announce their follow-up plans.
NEXT STEPS
Once you've identified your customers' needs, your strengths and weaknesses, and the priority for improvements from the surveys, pick a few areas on which to concentrate your organization's efforts. If there are some simple, quick fixes then, by all means, make them, but focus the majority of your efforts on those "vital few" that will achieve the biggest gains in satisfaction levels. Identify some key performance indicators for customer satisfaction, develop goals, and measure your progress against those performance indicators. Also, under-promise and over-deliver. Keeping expectations slightly below perceived performance keeps your customer happy and makes you look good.
Ongoing assessments are needed to keep a current and accurate account of customer satisfaction. Remember, surveys and focus groups are valuable in detecting shifts and spotting trends in satisfaction levels, for providing incentive for continuing progress, and in identifying new opportunities for improvements. Direct customer input is imperative. A system that doesn't include large doses of customer input is meaningless. Also, updates or revisions to performance indicators are often necessary to reflect changes in customer needs.
As quality guru John Guaspari wrote in I Know It When I See It, "It doesn't matter whether your own records show high satisfaction levels, it's the customer's perception that counts."
SOME THOUGHTS ON HOW TO SAVE MONEY
With each succeeding survey, you'll improve the process. Furthermore, when you conduct the survey yourself, you internalize it, and it becomes the cornerstone from which you make some very important business decisions — not just another program performed by an unrelated third party.
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Date: Company: Name (optional): Department (optional): Role/Function (optional): Address (optional): Phone (optional): Instructions: First evaluate the services provided by us. Next, evaluate the services provided by an alternate supplier or the competition in general. A "5" represents world class levels, "1" is poor, "3" is average. If you feel that we or the competition perform this service in a world-class manner, then circle "5". If you feel that we or the competition perform at a poor level, then circle "1". Please use the remaining numbers to describe less extreme feelings. In the last column indicate how important you feel this service is to you. If the statement describes a service that is important to you, please circle "H" for High. If the service is not important to you, circle "L" for Low. If you feel somewhere in between, indicate so by circling "M" for Medium. If you wish to add information not covered by the statements or provide examples that describe your opinions about a service, please do so in the comment sections provided at the end of each question. The questions are general in nature yet comprehensive when accompanied with your specific comments. Your comments are valuable in improving our understanding of your requirements, and we appreciate each one of them. Thank you for your time and effort in helping us become a world-class vendor!
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RESOURCES
Books
Measuring Customer Satisfaction — Development and Use of Questionnaires by Bob E. Hayes. (ASQC Quality Press, 1998).
Delivering Quality Service: Balancing Customer Perceptions and Expectations by V.A. Zeithaml, A. Parasuraman and L.L. Berry. (The Free Press, 1990).
Customer Satisfaction: The Other Half of Your Job by Dru Scott. (Crisp Publications, Inc., 1991).
Customers For Life: How to Turn That One-Time Buyer into a Lifetime Customer by Carl Sewell and Paul B. Brown. (Doubleday, 1998).
Software
Creative Research Systems — The Survey System
Internet Sites
"Customer Satisfaction -- How Can I Measure It?" by Yoshio Kondo. Conference Proceedings from World Congress for Total Quality Management. European Society for Organizational Excellence, 2001.
"Using The Telephone To Perform Customer Satisfaction Surveys," by Michael Kirsch and Leslie Wood. Agency Sales Magazine 32:4 (April 2002), 40 (2).
American Society for Quality Control
International Customer Service Association
Other Sources
Writer: Susan Smith
All rights reserved. The text of this publication, or any part thereof, may not be reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the publisher.
This In-Depth Business Builder was originally published in 1996.
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