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"Customer feedback from retail units is combined with company website
feedback, online services feedback, and central call center feedback."
Source : Mindshare Technologies
Listen and Learn: Improving Operations by Using Customer Feedback
Customer Feedback is also known as :
Customer Feedback Analysis,
Customer Feedback Complaints,
Customer Feedback Data,
Customer Feedback Database,
Customer Feedback Examples,
Customer Feedback Important,
Customer Feedback Management,
Customer Feedback Methods,
Customer Feedback Options,
Customer Feedback Page,
Customer Feedback Procedure,
Customer Feedback Process,
Customer Feedback Programs,
Customer Feedback Questions,
Customer Feedback Rating,
Customer Feedback Report,
Customer Feedback Research,
Customer Feedback Reviews,
Customer Feedback Site,
Customer Feedback Software,
Customer Feedback Solutions,
Customer Feedback System,
Customer Feedback Tools,
Customer Feedback Website,
Automated Customer Feedback,
Business Customer Feedback,
Collect Customer Feedback,
Customer Quality Feedback,
Customer Satisfaction Feedback,
Customer Service Feedback,
Direct Customer Feedback,
Effective Customer Feedback,
Free Customer Feedback,
Get Customer Feedback,
Good Customer Feedback,
Internal Customer Feedback.
Customer service means being aware of needs, problems, fears and aspirations.
Numerous studies have shown that the cost to acquire a new customer is five to ten
times the amount of retaining an existing customer. And according to several Harvard
professors,1 even a 5% improvement in customer retention can boost profits 25 to 85%!
How then, do companies retain a loyal and consistent customer base? They listen
to their customers, learn from them, and adapt their operations accordingly. The most
powerful training tool an organization can possess is customer feedback about its products
and services. Understanding your customers’ needs and perceptions can give you an edge over
the competition by improving your operations, including:
- Delivering enhanced and consistent customer service
- Turning employee weaknesses into strengths
- Allocating resources in the most effective manner
- Motivating employees with incentives based on customer satisfaction
Listen. Learn. Adapt.
The formula is simple: analyze your customer satisfaction data to determine which specific service
processes need improvement, and how to improve them. Bud Wilkinson, the famous football player and coach, said it best,
"Every game is an opportunity to measure yourself against your own potential."
Let’s look at an example from a fine-dining restaurant chain.
This restaurant was experiencing individual service lapses. Management wanted
a way to measure and monitor employee service delivery and to involve the customer
in constructing better service. Examples from verbatim customer voice recordings
at the time of service included:
- "There were no clams in my clam chowder."
- "Your server did not know the menu offerings and never filled my water
glass."
- "Could you include more vegetarian or low-carb offerings?"
Real-time customer feedback enabled this restaurant chain to make immediate changes to
poor operational practices. For example, clams sink to the bottom of the pot, if the chowder
is not stirred frequently. New servers ignorant to this fact were serving bowls of chowder
without any clams. The restaurant adjusted its training program to include teaching servers
to stir the clam chowder before serving individual bowls, thereby solving the problem.
In addition, the restaurant was able to effect immediate service-lapse recovery by contacting
the affected customers, explaining the situation, and inviting them to return for a complimentary meal.
Thus the restaurant’s customers became
"performance coaches" for front-line staff, leading to both customer retention and increased profits.
The Importance of Real-Time
According to British Airways’ Donald Porter, "Customers don’t expect you to
be perfect. They do expect you to fix things when they go wrong."
However, in order to make effective changes to processes, customer feedback needs to
be monitored in real-time. Although many customer and employee feedback approaches exist,
to be truly useful, an effective feedback solution should deliver real-time employee performance
information while the experience is still fresh in their minds. The longer the data sits unused,
the more difficult it becomes to implement change.
Individual Employee Performance
Organizations can obtain and analyze feedback from a department, region, branch, or most importantly,
an individual employee. This allows management to critique individuals in order to maximize performance
and hold them accountable for meeting goals.
Analyzing data from individual employees gives companies the ability to offer targeted
training based on areas needing improvement. Here’s an example from the salon industry. Most
people go to the barbershop or beauty salon for two main reasons: (1) get a haircut, and (2)
engage in pleasant conversation with a stylist. A talkative, chatting stylist fits this need
exactly. But some people just want to be left alone. The truly successful salon companies note
the customer’s preference each time they visit, and then meet those expectations. They may even ask the customer if
"he or she feels like talking today?"
At Mindshare we provide automated customer feedback across more than 25 service industries and many
of the Fortune 500 companies, which gives us unusual insight into customers’ perceptions of service.
Good employees want to be held accountable. Customer feedback gives organizations an objective measurement
of their service delivery, allowing managers to fine-tune training to the individual employee.
According to former Ritz Carlton Hotels’ CEO, Horst Schulz, "Unless you have 100% customer satisfaction and
I don't just mean satisfied, I mean that they are excited about what you are doing, you must improve." This, of course,
applies to all companies. Customer service is the essence of commerce and affects us all. In order for a company to
provide great customer service, information about what is and what is not working for the customer is critical to
success. Obtaining customer feedback can help determine areas of weakness within an organization, and with
appropriate adjustment, can turn those weaknesses into strengths.
This is how I see it.
About Richard D. Hanks and Mindshare Richard D.
Hanks is the President of Mindshare Technologies, a leading provider of real-time, automated customer and
employee feedback solutions. His experience spans multiple industries and disciplines, including many years as an
adjunct professor at Cornell.
He is an author and frequent teacher/speaker at trade, academic, and professional gatherings. Mindshare's
business monitoring tools help companies improve operational excellence and minimize customer attrition through
personal customer involvement. Mindshare's proprietary survey technology captures the voice of the customer
in real-time and immediately transforms it into actionable intelligence through powerful enterprise reporting.
As a hosted system, Mindshare is affordable and flexible, with surveys and reports tailored to fit a company’s
individual needs.
For more information please visit:
www.mshare.net.
To reach Rich directly, contact him at
rhanks@mshare.net
or
(801) 263-2333.