Customer happiness and customer retention are closely intertwined.
Unfortunately, it’s difficult for organizations to be truly objective about customer satisfaction. Most teams face some temptation to inflate estimates of how pleased their customers are. And customers themselves are not always so transparent.
Think about this paradox, which helps explain why customer happiness is so slippery:
That means the two tools enterprises are most likely to use to measure customer happiness – social media listening and customer surveys – are imperfect instruments at best.
If you really want to get an accurate picture of customer happiness, you should know and use several methods. By evaluating different methods, you come up with a more accurate picture of the situation than you would with just one point of reference.
Let’s examine five of the most accurate ways to measure customer happiness:
Net promoter score isn’t perfect, but it’s as close as you can get to a universal standard for customer satisfaction. It was once the cutting edge “in” thing that let organizations know which way their business was trending – and it still has a place in your customer delight efforts.
NPS is simple: It measures how likely a customer is to recommend your business to someone.
This is especially important for subscription-driven SaaS services, but it has a role to play for all B2B firms. Satisfied customers may decline to recommend your business when they aren’t yet sure whether you’ll really be able to keep them happy.
NPS is rated from 1 to 10:
To get the score, subtract the percentage of detractors from the percentage of promoters. This gives you a data point oriented toward your customers’ long-term feelings.
Customer satisfaction scores are a short-term measure of how your customers feel about you right now. Collecting it allows you to uncover issues that should be addressed.
A typical customer satisfaction survey question has five options:
Once you’ve collected all your responses, the average response is the one that best indicates your average customer’s perception of your brand at this moment. While this can be shocking news, it can also be used to collect specific feedback and intervene to help your less satisfied customers.
Customer Effort Score (CES) is about convenience – it’s a measure of how much effort your customers feel they have to invest to “deal with” your company. This is usually ranked on a 1-5 scale, and there are two common ways to word the question:
The second version is nearer to the original statement pioneered back in 2010. Subsequent research has shown the wording of the question may bias responses. Experts now recommend going with the first version of the question listed above, which is up to 25% more accurate.
Social media sentiment is fickle, but people are more likely to be honest – even brutally so – in the heat of the moment, when they’re ready to click that “tweet” button.
To get a handle on social sentiment, implement a dedicated social media monitoring tool configured to pick up mentions of your brand, your products, your executives, and any branded hashtags you use.
This provides you with two major advantages in customer happiness:
This allows you to turn even negative feedback into a positive experience.
Last, but not least, there’s the customer experience survey.
Surveys are tricky on three different levels:
The best way to make a survey work for you is to issue it soon after a service is used. Keep the questions short, clear, and specific, and reward customers for taking time out to help you.
When all is said and done, customer happiness is what it’s all about. With these five methods, you’ll be on your way to knowing where you stand and how to improve.