This document discusses concepts related to customer relationship management (CRM). It covers topics like customer value, customer expectations, customer satisfaction, and customer loyalty. It provides information on how companies can understand and manage customer expectations through clear communication, cultivating loyalty, monitoring the market, and ensuring employees are seen as experts. The overall goal is helping companies understand customers and deliver value in a way that meets or exceeds their expectations.
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Customer Relationship Management: Unit - 2
This document discusses concepts related to customer relationship management (CRM). It covers topics like customer value, customer expectations, customer satisfaction, and customer loyalty. It provides information on how companies can understand and manage customer expectations through clear communication, cultivating loyalty, monitoring the market, and ensuring employees are seen as experts. The overall goal is helping companies understand customers and deliver value in a way that meets or exceeds their expectations.
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CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP
MANAGEMENT
UNIT - 2
PRESENTED BY
K.BALASRI PRASAD B.Sc(KU), M.B.A(OU), NET(UGC), (Ph.D)(MGU) ASSISTANT PROFESSOR IN MANAGEMENT
VISHWA VISHWANI GROUP OF INSTITUTIONS
Unit – II: CRM Concepts Customer Value, Customer Expectation, Customer Satisfaction, Customer Centricity, Customer Acquisition, Customer Retention, Customer Loyalty, Customer Lifetime Value. Customer Experience Management, Customer Profitability, Enterprise Marketing Management, Customer Satisfaction Measurements, Web based Customer Support. Customer Value CRM is the core business strategy that integrates internal processes and functions and external networks to create and deliver value to targeted customers at a profit. The task of directing the creation and delivery of value to targeted customers at a profit falls to strategic CRM. Value is the customer’s perception of the balance between benefits received from a product or service and the sacrifices made to experience those benefits. It is possible to represent this definition in the form of an equation:
* Value = Benefits / Sacrifices *
Companies can increase the customer’s perceived value in two main ways: increase the benefits they experience, or decrease the sacrifices they make. Customers make several types of sacrifices : Money : The price of the product or service, which may or may not be the listed price. There may be additional costs such as credit card surcharges, interest charges on extended payments or warranty costs. There may be discounts applied for relationship customers, early payment or volume purchases. Search costs: The purchasing process may include exhaustive pre-purchase work in searching for solutions and comparing alternatives. This can take considerable time. Psychic costs: Purchasing can be a very stressful and frustrating experience. Psychic costs can be so great for some customers that they postpone purchases until a better time. Others cancel purchasing completely. Total Cost of Ownership TCO looks not only at the costs of acquiring products, but also at the full costs of using, and servicing the product throughout its life, and ultimately disposing of the product. ‘Consumption’ can be broken down into a number of activities or stages, including search, purchase, ownership, use, consumption and disposal. TCO is an attempt to come up with meaningful estimates of lifetime costs across all these stages. When customers take a TCO view of purchasing, suppliers can respond through a form of pricing called Economic Value to the Customer (EVC). EVC computes for customers the value that the solution will deliver over the lifetime of ownership and use. EVC encourages suppliers to customize price for customers on the basis of their particular value requirements. Sources of customer value A value proposition is the explicit or implicit promise made by a company to its customers that it will deliver a particular bundle of value-creating benefits. Companies cannot be all things to all customers and need to concentrate on one of these three value delivery strategies. The strategies are characterized by Operational excellence, Product Leadership and Customer Intimacy. Operational excellence : Companies that pursue this strategy do a limited number of things very efficiently, at very low cost, and pass on those savings to customers. Operational excellence is underpinned by lean manufacturing and efficient supply chains, close cooperation with suppliers, rigorous quality and cost controls, process measurement and improvement, and management of customer expectations. Product leadership : companies aligning with this value discipline aim to provide the best products, services or solutions to customers. Continuous innovation underpins this strategy. Product leadership is reflected in a culture that encourages innovation, a risk-oriented management style, and investment in research and development. Customer intimacy : Companies that pursue this strategy are able to adapt their offers to meet the needs of individual customers. Customer intimacy is based on customer insight. Adaptation and customization based on deep understanding of customer requirements underpin this strategy. Customer Expectation Customer expectation encompasses everything that a customer expects from a product, service or organisation. Customer expectations are created in the minds of customers based upon their individual experiences and what they have learned, combined with their pre- existing experience and knowledge. Customers will have both explicit and implicit expectations regarding the product or service which they have purchased. They will have performance expectations which include a dynamic element due to anticipated changes to the product or service over time. Factors Influencing Customer Expectations Customer expectations are influenced by a multitude of factors but there are a few key elements which are recognized as important influences on customer expectations. Previous Customer Experience One of the most significant factors influencing customer expectations is their prior experience with your organisation. If they are highly satisfied existing customers then this sets a high level of expectation which must be maintained. But if their previous experience has been suboptimal then they may lack confidence in your business and their expectations may be quite low. Customer Communications Every piece of outbound communication from your business may have influenced your customer expectations. Blog posts, tweets, web pages, emails, print advertising, radio and TV advertising all contribute to the expectations that your customers will have. It is essential that your communications are all honest, consistent, clear and unambiguous. Reviews and Word of Mouth The internet is a magnificent research tool so you can expect your customer’s to have carried out research before making their purchase. They will have read reviews of your product or service and they will have potentially read reviews of your business. They may also have read what people are saying in forums and on social media. What they derive from these sources will influence their expectations so you need to be aware of what’s being said. Previous Experience with Other Companies People’s experiences with other companies and organizations greatly influence their expectations. Regardless of whether other companies are in the same niche as yours, these days customers expect the same high levels of great customer service from all businesses and organizations. Customer Expectation Management Tips Having an understanding of how customer expectations are formed and how they change over time provides a great foundation for effective customer expectation management. It should be clear that developing an understanding of your customer expectations is vital for business success. It should also be clear how expectations vary. For example, customer expectations in hotels differ greatly from customer expectations from an insurance provider. Communicate Clearly and Honestly As noted, your customer expectations will have been influenced by what they have read and possibly seen. Since you have complete control over how you communicate with your customers you should ensure that the information you provide is clear, consistent, complete and honest. Lack of clarity in communications has been widely cited as a significant issue that negatively affects customer experience. Here are some fundamental guidelines: Ensure that the information provided from your website is accurate, complete, consistent and always up to date. The language used on your website and in all communications must be appropriate for your customers. Engage them using the right language and tone of voice. Your social media communications need to be responsive and timely. Advertising and promotion must not be misleading or dishonest. Cultivate Loyalty Fostering customer loyalty is enormously beneficial to all businesses. It costs far less to retain an existing customer than it does to create a new one. And loyal customers can be enormously helpful in identifying and defining changing customer expectations. Some basic tactics that contribute toward developing customer loyalty include: Always personalizing communications by using their names. Ensuring that each customer is made to feel special. Always thanking them for their custom and their loyalty. Regularly and routinely communicating with them. Pay attention to the details which can affect customer expectations. Monitor Your Market and Beyond The expectations of your clients and customers will be greatly influenced by what they may have experienced from other businesses in your sector and elsewhere. If a customer has previously used an online ‘chat’ facility on another website to get some customer support and they received a response within maybe 30 seconds then they are likely to expect the same from you when you implement an online chat tool. Similarly, if a customer has previously received a fast response via social media from an unrelated organisation or business then they are likely to expect the same level of response from your social media channels. Be Expert Company’s people need to be recognized as experts in what they do and what they are providing. Every employee involved in direct customer communications, from front-line service personnel to switchboard operators and sales professionals, need to be adequately trained and highly confident in their skills and their ability to manage even the most demanding customer expectations. Always Follow Up Customer experience can be greatly influenced by whether or not an organisation follows up after an initial contact. For example, if a customer has contacted a service desk, via telephone or maybe via an online chat facility, and a resolution to their issue was provided, this should be followed up, possibly via email, to confirm the recommendations provided and that the solution was successful. Discover and Exceed By establishing a rapport with your customers you’re in a great position to discover their anticipated expectations. What are they looking forward to in the future? What do they expect of the products or services provided from your company? What are they experiencing elsewhere that is influencing what they expect from you? Customer Satisfaction Customer satisfaction is defined as a measurement that determines how happy customers are with a company’s products, services, and capabilities. Customer satisfaction information, including surveys and ratings, can help a company determine how to best improve or changes its products and services. WHO ARE THE CUSTOMERS? Customers include anyone the organization supplies with products or services. The table below illustrates some supplier-customer relationships. Expectations–Disconfirmation model Satisfaction increases because customer insight allows companies to understand their customers better, and create improved customer value propositions and better customer experiences. As customer satisfaction rises, so does customer intention to repurchase. This in turn influences actual purchasing behaviour, which has an impact on business performance. Customer satisfaction is the customer’s fulfillment response to a customer experience, or some part thereof. The most common way of quantifying satisfaction is to compare the customer’s perception of an experience, or some part of it, with their expectations. This is known as the expectations–disconfirmation model of customer satisfaction. This model suggests that if customers perceive their expectations to be met, they are satisfied. If their expectations are underperformed, this is negative disconfirmation and they will be dissatisfied. Positive disconfirmation occurs when perception exceeds expectation. The customer might be pleasantly surprised or even delighted. This model assumes that customers have expectations, and that they are able to judge performance. Many companies research customer requirements and expectations to find out what is important for customers, and then measure customer’s perceptions of their performance compared to the performance of competitors. Customer Centricity Customer-Centric business relationship development is the core foundation of CRM. A customer-centric way of doing business is focused on. providing a positive customer experience before and after the sale in order to drive repeat business, enhance customer loyalty and improve business growth. However, a customer-centric company requires more than offering good customer service. Customer-centric is a business strategy that’s based on putting your customer first and at the core of your business in order to provide a positive experience and build long-term relationships. When you put your customer at the core of your business, and combine it with Customer Relationship Management (CRM), you collect a wealth of data, which gives you a full 360 view of the customer. This data can then be used to enhance your customer’s experience. For example: You can use customer data to understand buying behavior, interests and engagement You can identify opportunities to create products, services, and promotions for your best customers. You can use customer lifetime value to segment customers based on top spenders. Research by Deloitte and Touche found that customer-centric companies were 60% more profitable compared to companies that were not focused on the customer. Companies that focus on their customers are able to provide a positive customer experience through their entire journey. To accomplish this, companies must undergo a massive shift in their organization’s structure and culture. Best practices to becoming a customer-centric company Hire for customer success: Employees are the front-facing workforce that will shape many of the experiences with customers. Regardless of role, focus on hiring talent that can be aligned with customer-centric thinking and the importance of customer experience at your business. Put relationships first: Customers are not numbers to be measured and analyzed in a revenue performance report. They are people and benefit greatly when you establish a mutually beneficial relationship together. Democratize customer data: Adopting a new customer- centric strategy requires centralized access to customer data and insights. Having a CRM database can help facilitate a better understanding of customers to provide a unified front that delivers better customer experiences. Connect company culture to customer outcomes: Employees will be motivated by a customer- centricity strategy when actions can be linked to results. For example, strategies to reduce customer wait times or making transitions easier for a customer can be captured in real-time to highlight successful strategy implementation. Customer Acquisition Customer acquisition refers to bringing in new customers - or convincing people to buy your products. It is a process used to bring consumers down the marketing funnel from brand awareness to purchase decision. The cost of acquiring a new customer is referred to as customer acquisition cost. You can acquire customers through a variety of marketing tactics, digital channels, and strategies (both on or offline). The importance of customer acquisition varies according to the specific business situation of an organization. Customer Acquisition process is specifically concerned with issues like acquiring customers at less cost, acquiring as many customers as possible, acquiring customers who are indigenous and business oriented, acquiring customers who utilize newer business channels etc. The whole process should concentrate on following considerations: Primarily it is important to determine and focus on psychology of customers, like how the customers feel and think and then selecting the product segment to be presented to them. Concentrating on how the customers are influenced by the surrounding environment like the business culture, technology, media etc. Analysis of customer behavior and tendency while buying specific range of product. Studying the customer’s limitation of knowledge processing power which influence the decision making power. Finally it’s very important to engage best strategies for effectively convincing new customers and improving marketing campaigns. Acquiring a customer depends on how effectively the organization is able to build a comprehensive relationship with that customer. When companies have healthy relationship with customers, the revenue of the organization always increases as customers tend to buy more and more. There is possibility that a satisfied customer seek to buy special category of related products apart from the regular ones from that particular supplier. For enhancing the revenue, the organization should always balance the number of customers acquired with number of customers who divert to different organizations. Failing to which will definitely effect the economic growth of the organization. Customer Acquisition Process Define the Target Prospects Your acquisition process begins with identifying who are the potential or targeted customers for your business success. Find out who are they, how to gain them, how you can talk with them or how you can sell your products to them. Finding right customers for your products will help in knowing which individuals are interested in buying your products or using the same type of products from your competition. How to Reach Targets? After deciding who the target is, find ways how to contact them. Do research, survey, call, email or use analytics tools to find right customers for your products. If you are able to acquire the new customers, then chances are turning them into potential buyers. Hire Right Staff Customer Acquisition process requires hard work and dedication. Therefore, hire right people who understand the process correctly and implement it. Your employees should wear the hat of their defined responsibility to work accordingly. They should be able to understand what a customer wants and offers a relative product that customer find valuable. Define Customer Acquisition Cost Before on-boarding the Customer Acquisition Process, determine the cost you will have to bear to implement the process. Companies have to spend more without assuming customer spend like. Commonly, cost is calculated as total cost spend on acquisition process (sales and marketing cost) divided by total new customers acquired in the given time frame. Create your Product Demand Though you know the fact, big brands already have large number of customers who are aware of their brand. Acquiring new customers won’t be a big challenge for established organization. However, bigger challenge bombards for the startups or small brands where they require to inform customers about their existence, be with them throughout the process, tell them how much you care or how effectively your product meets their demands. Customer Retention Customer retention refers to the ability of a company/product to retain its customers over some specified period. High customer retention means customers of the product or business tend to return to, continue to buy or in some other way not defect to another product or business, or to non-use entirely. The customer retention definition in marketing is the process of engaging existing customers to continue buying products or services from your business. When to focus on customer retention 1. Just starting: When you’ve just started your store there is one thing you should be focused on: getting customers. At this point your acquisition efforts should completely focus on retention. Focus on strategies and tactics that will help you grow your customer base. 2. Gaining traction: You now have customers and you are getting irregular sales. At this stage you can begin to introduce retention elements to encourage each customer to buy more. Start with retention email campaigns that focus on encouraging a past customer to purchase from you again. 3. Consistent: This is the point where company should begin to think about mixing in more retention with acquisition efforts. company can look at starting a referral and/or a loyalty program as well as getting more serious with marketing automation. 4. Established: A common problem for retailers of this size is finding ways to continue to grow. Acquisition may be leading to a lot of one time purchases, but a retention strategy can get customers to buy more often which increases their lifetime value. At this stage, company should be serious and deliberate about your retention efforts. 5. Well-established: At this stage company achieved many early successes and have a lot of processes and automations in place. Now is the time to focus heavily on retention. Customer Retention Strategies 1. Use customer accounts Customer accounts can be a double-edged sword. On one hand, accounts can make repurchasing easier by giving customers instant access to previous orders as well as pre-filled shipping information. On the other hand, customer accounts are often seen as too big of a commitment for new customers. 2. Improve your customer support Support systems help you effectively communicate with your customers and provide them with the right level of support. A support system can help both pre- and post-sale by enabling you, or a customer service rep, to clearly communicate with the customer. 3. Start a customer loyalty program Loyalty programs, sometimes referred to a customer retention program, are an effective way to increase purchase frequency because they motivate customers to purchase more often in order to earn valuable rewards. This becomes a profitable exchange for both company and your customers: they get more value each time they shop, and you benefit from their repeat business. 4. Send engaging emails to customers If purchase frequency is the backbone of customer retention, email marketing is the backbone of customer engagement and your retention toolkit. Emails give you the opportunity to continue building a relationship with your customers before and after their initial purchase. It’s critical that each message you send adds value to your customer’s experience. If it doesn’t, you run the risk of losing them. Customer Loyalty Customer loyalty is the likelihood of customers to continue purchasing from you, and recommend you to their friends and family. Customers who are loyal spend more money with you, speak highly of you and are power users of your product or service. Customer loyalty is a measure of a customer’s likeliness to do repeat business with a company or brand. It is the result of customer satisfaction, positive customer experiences, and the overall value of the goods or services a customer receives from a business. When a customer is loyal to a specific brand, they are not easily influenced by availability or pricing. Characteristics of a loyal customer They are not actively searching for different suppliers; They are more willing to refer a brand to their family and friends; They are not open to pitches from competing companies; They are open to other goods or services provided by a particular business; They are more understanding when issues occur and trust a business to fix them; They offer feedback on how a brand can improve its products or services; As long as there is a need, they will keep purchasing from a business. How to Build Customer Loyalty Reward loyal customers with a loyalty program A reward system for the most loyal customers is a great way to keep them coming back. The simplest and probably the most popular loyalty programs use a point system, that is, customers earn loyalty points every time they buy from the brand. Then, these points, when accumulated, earn them a reward, e.g., discounts, special client treatment, freebies, etc. Make customer care a priority for the brand An effective client relationship management strategy translates to more focused solutions for specific customer needs. First, learn all you can about the brand’s different customer segments, including their buying habits, favorites, feedback about products, or the brand as a whole. Boost customer experience by introducing VIP tiers Social status is a great motivator and influencer of customer behavior and can be leveraged in a business’s customer loyalty strategy. By adding VIP tiers for the most loyal customers, a company can boost loyalty among existing customers and entice new and less engaged customers to interact more with the brand. Start with smaller rewards for all customers who are in the program, then encourage repeat purchases by increasing the rewards for each step up the loyalty ladder. Send event-based emails Stop sending the same email to the entire mailing list and choose event-based marketing. This means that every time a user performs a specific action interacting with your brand, you respond to their efforts with the relevant email automatically. Optimize the businesses’ referral program Consumers trust recommendations from a friend or family member over other forms of markets when buying a product according to several reports. That is why creating a program where customers can get rewarded for recommending the brand to other people is so important. Encourage customers to give feedback and act on it Make it easy for customers to reach the brand and encourage them to provide feedback. Ask them why they prefer to buy from the brand as opposed to competitors and areas they think the business could improve. Also, set up a dedicated line of contact for customers who have an issue to get assistance with. How to Measure Customer Loyalty Lifetime value (LTV): Lifetime Value refers to the total amount of money shoppers spend on a brand right from their first to their latest purchase. Marketers can get this metric from various subscription payment systems. Increasing Lifetime Value is a good indicator of loyalty. To boost lifetime value, brands need to develop relationships with customers, cross-sell, and upsell. Churn rate: This is all about customers who cancel or disengage. Marketers determine this metric by calculating the percentage of customers lost based on the number of customers at the start within a specific timeline. To get the user churn rate, divide the number of customers churned by the number of customers at the beginning. The percentage can help marketers understand the number of customers lost monthly or quarterly. Another more critical churn metric is revenue churn. It allows businesses determine churn in terms of lost revenue as customers cancel. Revenue churn presents a more accurate picture of how business is going. Referrals: A business that runs a referral program can keep tabs on the number of new customers who register based on recommendations. By measuring referrals, a brand can track not just new conversions but also customers who are satisfied enough to tell others about it.
Net promoter score:
Net Promoter Score estimates a customer’s intent to tell others about the brand. Though this metric does not tell the business if the customer recommends the product or brand, it helps the company to find out the general loyalty rate of its users. Customer Lifetime Value Customer Lifetime Value represents a customer’s value to a company over a period of time. CLV Informs how much company Should Spend on Customer Acquisition CLV allows company to segment Customers based on Value Focusing on CLV is Key For Long-Term Company-Wide Growth Calculating Customer Lifetime Value(CLTV) There are four KPIs that determine your LTV: Average Order Value (AOV) Purchase Frequency (F) Gross Margin (GM) and Churn Rate (CR). It’s important to look at each of these individually to find out which one needs the most work in terms of profit maximization. Formula: CLTV=AOV*F*GM*(1/Churn) AOV = Total Sales Revenue / Total Number of Orders F = Total Number of Orders / Total Number of Unique Customers GM = Total Sales Revenue – Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) / Total Sales Revenue Churn Rate = (No. of Customers at End of Time Period – No. of Customers at Beginning of Time Period) / No. of Customers at Beginning of Time Period Customer Lifetime Period = 1/Churn Rate Customer Experience Management Customer experience management (CEM or CXM) is the collection of processes a company uses to track, oversee and organize every interaction between a customer and the organization throughout the customer lifecycle. CEM defines what a company looks like to the customer. CEM is a strategy that puts customers at the center of marketing, sales and customer support in order to drive brand loyalty and repeat business. CEM programs heavily rely on voice of the customer programs that quantify customer sentiment about their experiences with a company. Benefits of implementing a CXM strategy: Customer retention costs less than acquisition: Studies indicate that a 5% increase in customer retention can result in a 25% increase in profit. This happens mainly because a retained customer avoids the costs of acquiring a new customer, and satisfied customers tend to order more. Customer feedback drives improvement: Voice of the customer data, in the form of web surveys and mobile app feedback as well as phone and chat conversations, provides a blueprint to improve customer experiences and retain customers. Happy employees project a better brand experience to the customers: Studies show that there is a strong link between employee experience and customer experience. Companies with the best customer experience concentrate on measuring voice of the employees data with an eye toward improving their experience and retention. Contented, loyal customers voluntarily endorse a company's brand to peers: Customer endorsement can often weigh more heavily in buying decisions than advertising or marketing efforts. Measuring customer sentiment yields information about competitors: Customers compare brands when making their decisions and offering feedback. Knowing this information can help a company position itself favorably against a rival. Customer Experience Management challenges Not enough voice of the customer data: A company can't accurately measure customer experience without large data sets, and it can't solve customer experience problems it doesn't know about. Lack of omni-channel support: When brands cannot listen to or help customers in the channels they are interacting within, whether through email, social media, web chat, mobile apps or smart speakers -- customers can't make their wants and needs known. Customers that do not feel heard are more likely to switch to a competitor. Ignoring qualitative data: Brands should harvest and analyze individual comments in survey free-text fields, which can yield much deeper understanding of customer experience issues that need solving than numbered ratings can. Qualitative data can also give rise to new ideas for improving overall experience. Poor internal communications: A Customer Experience team must do its homework by analyzing the customer journey, building voice of the customer programs and collecting voice of the customer data to create better experiences. Those initiatives won't work, however, unless CX leaders distribute that information in an understandable way to stakeholders in sales, marketing, customer support and senior leadership. Enterprise Marketing Management Enterprise marketing management (EMM) is a type of software that is used to provide, monitor and maintain a promotional structure across a large organization. Enterprise marketing can be defined as company-wide customer relationship management and lead generation through multichannel, integrated marketing campaigns targeted toward large enterprises Enterprise marketing management is closely related to enterprise customer relationship management (CRM), but with a greater focus on the marketing aspect as far as generating and creating new leads rather than just maintaining the existing customer base. Enterprise marketing management software provides a single platform that serves all of a business's marketing needs, including: Campaign management across all channels (social media, Web, mobile, traditional) Customer experience management (pre-sale research, post-sale follow up, and so on) Analysis of campaigns, including conversions and other important factors Management of marketing resources (budgets, people and so on) Five factors are critical for EMM to boost marketing performance: Integration of data at every touch point: Information is critical in the marketing decision process and as such it must flow freely at every point in the process. Collaboration: Not just within the internal marketing value chain but also with the external value chains of suppliers and vendors. Availability of data, resources, materials, and documents: It is important that marketing resources are available to all when needed to complete their job. Proactive tracking and management of marketing strategies, tactics, campaigns, and initiatives. You need to know where everything is; what is on time and what is late; who has too much work and who doesn’t have enough; what has worked and what hasn’t. Key marketing performance indicators defined within a balanced framework available to all. This entails a disciplined approach to defining objectives and facilities to allow team members to understand cause and effect. It also entails providing managers with information on performance through either lead or lag measures.
These key elements combine to deliver true business
benefits: building strong brands to sustain the customer experience; understanding and predicting customer belief and behavior while optimizing communications to them; and managing consistent communications across all channels. Tips for Successful Enterprise Marketing Find the account-based marketing and enterprise marketing sweet spot: Enterprise marketing and ABM go together like peanut butter and jelly because both require you to take a focused approach to build rapport with accounts and the individuals within them. ABM can help you gather critical business intelligence about your prospects that will make developing enterprise marketing programs across your intended channels much easier. Get ready to understand the diversity of your marketing assets and to scale accordingly: Enterprise marketing demands that you take the time to learn what tools and best practices exist to help you scale your marketing programs to your most important audiences in a smart way. This requires reviewing your inbound marketing programs, social selling, content strategy, lead scoring and organizational preparedness to meet the expectations of the people you sell to. Lean on your executives for a helping hand: When developing an enterprise marketing program, you need your team leaders to help build consensus and buy-in as well as craft and implement de-siloed programs for which people can be accountable. Remember that relationships go a long way: No one understands an organization or industry better than a person who works in it. When prospecting leads and getting to know an organization to develop your enterprise marketing strategies, it can be a good idea to ask a friend in the know…especially one who happens to work at the target enterprise. By adding value to your friend’s life and making his or her job easier in some way, you can make the benefits of this relationship reciprocal in the long term. Understand that typical key performance indicators probably won’t work: While every marketing strategy needs goals, the KPIs that are commonly upheld as “best practices” in more general marketing likely won’t be suitable for an enterprise marketing program. Customer Satisfaction Measurements Methods for Measuring Customer Satisfaction 91% of unhappy customers will never buy from you again. 1. Customer Satisfaction Surveys The customer satisfaction survey is the standard approach for collecting data on customer happiness. It consists of asking your customers how satisfied they are, with or without follow up questions. Three useful variations: In-App Surveys Post-Service Surveys Long Email Surveys In-App Surveys With this company integrate a subtle feedback bar inside your website, with generally not more than one or two questions. It’s one of the methods with the highest response rates, the customer is asked for their opinion while they are engaged with your company. Post Service Survey This type of survey focuses on the customer’s satisfaction with a specific service customer just received. Company ask it right after the delivery, when it's still fresh in the mind. This can be done in email support with a rating link in the mail, or in live chat with a rating view that appears after the chat. It can also be done over the phone, but it's somewhat problematic because it takes more time from the customer, and customer might not feel comfortable sharing an unfiltered opinion. Email Surveys The above survey methods aren't suitable for in-depth insights about your customer happiness. Why are they happy or unhappy? Email surveys, on the other hand, are a good tool in-depth insights about your customer happiness. Although they have a downside of low response rates (10% - 15%, according to Survey Gizmo ), they do allow your customer to take their time in answering multiple questions. Google Forms is an excellent free tool for this purpose. 2. Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT) This is the most standard customer satisfaction metric, asking your customer to rate their satisfaction with your business, product, or service. Your CSAT score is then the average rating of your customer responses. The scale typically ranges between 1 – 3, 1 – 5, or 1 – 10. A larger range is not always better, due to cultural differences in how people rate their satisfaction. The charm of the CSAT metric comes from its directness. The downside, however, is that satisfaction is hard to estimate, even for the customer. 3. Net Promoter Score (NPS) The Net Promoter Score (NPS) measures the likeliness of a customer referring you to someone, and it’s probably the most popular way of measuring customer loyalty . Customers are asked how likely they are to recommend your products/services on a scale from 1 to 10. The strength from NPS is that it's not about an emotion of satisfaction, but about customers intention of referring – which is easier to answer. It cuts down to the question of whether the product is good enough to put your own reputation on the line. Calculating your NPS score is quite easy. Take the percentage of respondents who fall within the ‘promoter’ category (10 - 9) and subtract the percentage of ‘detractors’ (0 - 6). 4. Customer Effort Score (CES) Customers aren’t asked for their satisfaction or likeliness of referring, but for the effort it took them to have their issue solved — generally on a scale from 1 (very low effort) to 7 (very high effort). Company’s aim is to lower this average score. According to CEB (Corporate Executive Board Company) , 96% of customers with a high effort score showed reduced loyalty in the future, while that was the case with only 9% of those who reported low effort scores. 5. Social Media Monitoring Social media has had an immense impact on the relationship between business and customer. Where before, a great or poor service experience would maybe be shared with the closest family and friends, social media offered an outlet and reach to potentially millions of people. 6. Things Gone Wrong This metric originates from the Lean Six Sigma approach , and measures the number of complaints, or "Things Gone Wrong," per 100, 1000, or up to a 1,000,000 units of survey responses, units sold, or other. The standard approach to measure TGW is through complaint sections in customer surveys, but you could also maintain internal metrics. In the worst case scenario your score is 1 or higher, meaning that you get at least 1 complaint per chosen unit. Important Questions 1. Discuss Customer Value, Customer Expectation, Customer Satisfaction? 2. Explain Customer Centricity, Customer Acquisition, Customer Retention, Customer Loyalty? 3. Elaborate Customer Lifetime Value, Customer Satisfaction Measurements, Web based Customer Support?
Journal of Business Research Volume 63 Issue 11 2010 (Doi 10.1016/j.jbusres.2009.10.012) Caroline Tynan Sally McKechnie Celine Chhuon - Co-Creating Value For Luxury Brands