Posts Tagged ‘customer satisfaction’

What Should You Do to Keep Your Clients

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

Have you ever asked yourself what the greatest determinant of client contentment? The answer will be added value.
In a highly competitive market, where we all have to struggle, the best and the most valuable tactics you need to follow is differentiation. You need to become more than a lawyer – experienced and reliable adviser, more than a store – someone’s favorite bookstore, more than a SEO agency~SEO Company~Search Engine Optimization Company~SEO&PPC Company~PPC Management Company – trusted professional who knows how to help.
Achieving such great reputation is hard, this is why you should always search for new opportunities of adding value to your clients. People don’t like to be sold, they want their problem to be resolved. In other words, give before you get. It is a best way to increase your customers loyalty. Let’s take a closer look at the most common value adds.
Show your clients you are thinking about them. Start to send them articles, newsletters and other important information, which they might be interested in.
Educate your clients. Offer them to participate in useful seminars or conferences on subjects relevant to your business. It will be highly appreciated.
Offer your selected clients some benefits. Let them be first to discover the items from the new collection, invite them for a meeting with a famous writer in your book store.
Report your customers the status of matters. Periodic reports may serve as your great performance record, or, vice versa, give you notice of that something is wrong and needs improvement. Another definite winner is finding how your customer can save his money with your company.  For example, redesigning a website for your client is the part of SEO and PPC service package.
Invite your client to participate. Usually clients love it. Communicate with your clients, chat with them live, do not hide anything they need to know, build trust with them, get them acquainted with what exactly is going to happen and how are you going to let it happen. Don’t hesitate to ask your clients what they think. Let them feel you care. Do not forget, you are dealing with people not robots.
Assist your clients to exchange information.
Recommend other noticeable products or services to your clients. Make it easy for them to ask you for a piece of advice, even if it is absolutely not connected to your business.
By building a trust between you and your client, by providing a value added services, you will obtain a synergy of service and relationship, which will positively affect your all business processes and your business vision in general.

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Designing Customer Satisfaction Surveys that Work

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Why should you bother?

Good customer service is the life blood of any business. Although you should try and attract new customers good customer service will help generate customer loyalty and encourage repeat business. With each satisfied customer your business will secure many more customers through word of mouth and you should always keep in mind that if you are not taking proper care of your customers there is always a competitor that will.

A customer satisfaction survey will help by not only identifying problem areas but show that you care and are proactive in looking for ways to improve the service that you provide.

 

Where to start?

Objective – As a first step decide what the main objectives of the survey are, in that way you will be able to retain focus and find it easier to decide what questions to ask.

Analysis – When the survey is complete consider how you will analyse the answers.

Keep in mind that ‘closed’ questions (where a respondent is asked to choose from a limited number of responses) are much easier to analyze than ‘open’ questions (where the respondent can reply in anyway they want).

A great deal will depend on the volume of respondents, the higher the volume the more important it is to have an easy method of analysing the results.

Opportunity – Keep in mind that as well as obtaining valuable market research data customer surveys are also a good way to publicise aspects of your service that your customers may not be aware of.

After you have drafted your survey read through the survey from a market research view point and check that you are asking the right questions in the right way and that with the feedback information you will be able to make informed decisions.

Then, read through the survey from a marketing view point, check that you have phrased each question so that every opportunity has been taken to promote your business?

The ideal question will perform the following three functions:-

  • Market research – provide valuable feedback to help you improve your customer satisfaction levels and in turn your business
  • Marketing – promote aspects of your business
  • Information/Education – advertise a service that you provide that your customers may not have been unaware of

For example:- Do you find the in-store baby changing facilities useful?

In asking this question the store will hopefully not only receive useful feedback on the baby changing facility but they will also promote the store as being child-friendly even beyond the customers who actually require the facility.

Warts and all – to maximise the benefit from a customer survey you must be prepared to take criticism.

A well designed customer satisfaction survey will enable you to identify problems so that they can be addressed; regular customer satisfaction will prevent complacency and give you early warning on where you might be losing out to your competitors initiatives.

 

What questions should you ask?

Depending on their own particular size and makeup each business is likely to have unique factors in relation to providing good customer services however there are common areas relevant to all businesses be they a physical store, online store or a service industry. The following are some key areas to providing good customer service.

Communication – Do you make it easy for the customer to contact you?

When a customer telephones is their call answered promptly; are enquiries about products or services handled properly? A good business will make every effort to ensure that whatever the customers query it is resolved by the right person, quickly, politely and fairly.

If a problem cannot be resolvable immediately do you promise to respond in a given time period and do you deliver on your promise?

Use a customer satisfaction survey to confirm that your customers find all your staff to be helpful, courteous and knowledgeable.

Location – Are you doing everything you can to ensure that your customers find it easy to visit you, if a physical store, does it have good access and is it conveniently located?

Making it pleasant, making it easy – For an online business it is important to ensure that your website is easy to use and aesthetically pleasing.

Physical store or online website, is the store properly laid out, can your customers find what they need and is there sufficient information and help on hand to explain how a particular product works?

The right quality products – Not only should you measure the quality of the service that you provide but you should check that the products and services that you market are what the customer wants and closely match their expectations.

Value for money – Cheap or expensive is rarely a good measure, value for money is.

Is your business associated with value for money by your customers, if not, why not?

Speed and attention – Customers want their enquiries or queries to be dealt with quickly but attentively.

Are you doing everything you can to avoid delays?

A good business will try to treat each customer as an individual, does yours? Attention is one thing but this has to be hand- in-hand with a quick and satisfactory resolution of the query.

Demographics and Specific issues – Take the opportunity to profile your customers, for example where do they live and what is their age group?

Understanding your customers more will allow you to properly target your business.

Within the survey encourage customers to highlight their problems and provide contact details.

 

What is next?

Analyze the results once the survey has been completed.

Trends – Identify specific and common areas where the customer service is failing.

Ask yourself if any criticism is valid, be honest to yourself, is there anything that can be done to properly resolve, or at the very least, minimise the problem?

Training – Are the staff properly trained and do they have sufficient knowledge?

Where customer service training programs have been implemented have they had the desired effect and improved the customer experience?

Follow-up – If a customer who has completed a survey has raised a specific issue do all you can to ensure that their complaint is addressed.

Do not lose the opportunity to resolve a problem and keep a customer.

Continuously Monitor – Make changes based on the survey results and then re-measure by issuing follow up surveys.

If you are concerned about customer satisfaction and would like to see a sample survey for a store that demonstrates some of the above advice please view the Sample Customer Survey

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