There is no shortcut to improving Net Promoter Score. As some advise, following up with detractors, trying to engage with passives, and thanking promoters is a good idea and practice. Good communication is known to be healthy for any kind of relationship. In the short term, responding to NPS feedback will help prevent avoidable churn. However, for long-term structural improvement to your NPS, you need to look deeper. NPS, after all, is the tip of the iceberg. The only way to a higher NPS, is to incorporate the voice of the customer across the organisation and into your product or service offering roadmap. Listen equally to your promoters, your detractors, and passives: what is so compelling about your offering or brand? and what are its weaknesses? Go underwater to look at the iceberg, understand the “why” behind the score. Learn to love unhappy customers’ feedback.
We all know about “first impressions.” Customers have their first impressions too. The buyer journey and customer experience might start earlier than you think.
Step 1: Keep the Brand Promise.
Remember your first Apple experience? I remember mine. I purchased my first Apple product long after most people. Despite Apple fans raving about the brand — whether their Mac, their iPod or their iPhone — I could not be swayed, especially at such a premium. It took one bad instance of PC rage one day, for me to turn to the apple online store and purchased my first Mac… And oh, was I impressed by the package that arrived home. I could not get myself to throw the box away. First impressions matter.
Step 2: Beware Of Overzealous Sales Reps.
Understand the customer pain points, and help them choose the right solutions for their need. Having account execs force fit a solution a customer does not need, for an extra bonus, or lies about what the product can actually do is short-sighted and inevitably harms the brand–and your NPS. Think about your customer’s needs before your bottom line.
Step 3: Invest In Customer Success.
Customer success is somewhat of a new function introduced by the software industry as the industry shifted from on-premise licenses and maintenance fees to subscription software as a service (SaaS) model. Suddenly product adoption and usage became much more important to a company’s bottom line, as customers switching costs became much lower. But Customer Success is relevant to any industry. Customer Success is not just customer support or service, it is a more proactive approach to these functions. The role of customer success teams is to set expectations, onboard the customer, and make sure the customer make the most out of the product and achieve their desired outcome, and channel the voice of the customer to the right part of the organisation.
E-BOOK
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Step 4: Analyse so you can understand the “why” behind the score.
Segment NPS feedback by important business drivers and dig into the qualitative feedback, too. This will make it easier to allocate resources to improve NPS. For example, you might pay more attention to feedback from customers who spend a lot of money on your products and services, vs those that are occasional purchasers or are on a free plan.
Step 5: Align the entire company behind NPS as your “north star” metric of customer-centricity, and share how you plan to act on customer feedback that you receive.
Over time, a steady focus on improving customer experience at all touch points generally results in an improvement in Net Promoter Score.
Step 6: Get your promoters to spread the good word.
They will attract like-minded customers.
Step 7: Never stop talking to your customers, and taking a pulse.
Quite frankly I don’t know how today’s CEO can live without a systematic customer feedback loop. It is akin to flying blind.
Good luck on your NPS journey.
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