Posts Tagged ‘extremely’

Best Practice-Integrating Customer Measurements into Business Processes

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Key Issue: How can a business be more effective?

Several recent surveys have highlighted two strong predictors of a business’ effectiveness. The first is having a continuous, interactive planning process between key business customers, business stakeholders and the business community. One of the most effective ways of doing this is through data and surveys.

Most measurement initiatives are either done as a single event or as an ongoing monitor of a single business process (e.g., a transaction-based survey or an annual employee satisfaction survey) and they are not incorporated into an enterprise wide, bottom-line impact quality program. Also, most initiatives are implemented once a problem has occurred (e.g., a decrease in customer retention rates) and not as an ongoing quality program to improve customer satisfaction, increase retention and bottom-line profits. The fatal flaws of these types of programs are that they are one-offs, only focused on a specific process and the feedback is never sent back to the respondents. In the long term, these initiatives will ultimately cause an increase in dissatisfaction, which is counterproductive to the organization.

The second predictor of a business’ effectiveness is for the key stakeholders and the business to make extensive use of external resources (e.g., best practice groups, consultants, research and benchmarking organizations) at all levels of business process maturity, including requirements, design and implementation phases. At each step in the sequence, the appropriate external resources should be leveraged to improve the effectiveness of the process and organization.

The high correlation found between the use of external resources and effectiveness is a function of several factors, including:

  • External resources enable the enterprise to learn more quickly and leverage the experience of others, reducing the number of potential mistakes.
  • The use of outside references and materials encourages the enterprise to break stagnant or harmful patterns of behavior and “think outside the box.”
  • External sources “triangulate” decision making between organizational structures, allowing leadership to consider the problem collaboratively with its constituents, rather than adopting antagonistic positions that reflect entrenched organizational biases.

Conclusion

Effectiveness measurement efforts need to evolve beyond metrics and demographics to the evaluation of perception. Why? Businesses can boast superior efficiency, meet posted service-level agreement (SLA) objectives and exceed all advertised functional requirements yet still suffer from the customer and stakeholder perceptions of missed alignment and lack of effectiveness. It is not enough to solicit the list of issues. You need the ultimate outcome to include an ordering of customer perceptions so you can successfully improve their experience and perception of your business.

Survey Tip #1: Choosing the right wording for your customer satisfaction scale

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

When it comes to creating any kind of research and/or survey, one of the key elements is the scale you use for measuring your customer’s satisfaction. The question is, what words should you use as anchors for your customer satisfaction and dissatisfaction scale? To help us get started, let’s go over some of the basics.

Description - Verbal Scale Anchors are the text that accompanies a number on a selection or option scale.

Examples - Two examples of verbal scale anchors are:

1. Assigning a verbal description to each number, selection or option:

  • 1 = Very dissatisfied
  • 2 = Dissatisfied
  • 3 = Neutral
  • 4 = Satisfied
  • 5 = Very satisfied

2. (don’t write second if you labeled the examples 1. and 2.)Assigning specific points to the scale:

  • 1 = Not at all likely
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10 = Extremely likely

This reminds me of a car dealership experience I had and now enjoy sharing with others.

Story - The Car Service Approach to Measuring Customer Satisfaction

Years ago, I was having my car serviced at a local dealership. After the the work was completed, my Service Representative showed me a questionnaire that I would be receiving in the mail to measure my customer satisfaction. To assist me with filling out the questionnaire, the representative kindly demonstrated to me how to complete one. Of course he rated everything at the highest level.

Very helpful, don’t you think?

So extreme means going to exaggerated lengths. Very true, I’ve watched the X Games which I find very extreme, but do I really think a customer service situation like the one at the car dealership should be going to an exaggerated length to keep me satisfied with my car service?

Well, shockingly he said, “NO, and we’re really surprised about that.” He went on to tell me, “We actually have customer’s that only select “Satisfied” and no matter what we do, we can’t get their scores any higher.”

NOTE - Bullying a customer because their being honest isn’t going to help your cause!

FACT - Many people will only achieve high levels of satisfaction a few times in their life. This is also true across certain cultures. We studied responses in 27 different countries with various verbal anchors over a two-year period and found that responses varied consistently by country. Some verbal anchors were very unlikely to be selected, extremely being one of them.

So why are you asking questions at such levels?

THINK - Think about what business you are in and what levels of satisfaction you really expect to achieve with your customers. Do you think your customers are going to be extremely satisfied with car service? It’s something we HAVE to do. Even if your customers are simply satisfied or happy after service, isn’t that enough? You’ve taken time out of their day, they probably had to wait, it’s an added cost and you may or may not experience any kind of benefit.

Recommendation - Select a scale that is in the range of what you want as a business owner. If you want your customers to be Satisfied, and/or potentially Very Satisfied, use these as the ends of your scale. An example is using the terms Very Satisfied to Very Dissatisfied, which are easily recognized and understood on equal scale ends.

Upcoming topics:

Survey goals - What are you doing with your results? If anything.

Question formats
- What are you after with your question?
- The confusion of a combo question.
- What do you mean by that?

Question wording - the good, the bad and the really ugly