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Customer Satisfaction: Main Benefits1
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Importance of Customer Satisfaction: Statistics1
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Customer Satisfaction – a Critical Component of Profitability
Exceptional
customer service results in greater
customer retention, which in turn
results in
higher profitability. Customer loyalty is a major contributor to sustainable profit growth. To achieve success, you must make superior service second nature of your organization. A seamless integration of all components in the service-profit chain – employee satisfaction, value creation, customer satisfaction, customer loyalty, and profit and growth – links all the critical dynamics of top customer service.
Sadly, mature companies often forget or forsake the thing that made them successful in the first place: a customer-centric business model. They lose focus on the customer and start focusing on the bottom line and quarterly results. They look for ways to cut costs or increase revenues, often at the expense of the customer. They forget that satisfying customer needs and continuous value innovation is the only path to sustainable growth. This creates opportunities for new, smaller companies to emulate and improve upon what made their bigger competitors successful in the first place and steal their customers. Customer Expectations Customer is defined as anyone who receives that which is produced by the individual or organization that has value. Customer expectations are continuously increasing. Brand loyalty is a thing of the past. Customers seek out products and producers that are best able to satisfy their requirements. A product does not need to be rated highest by customers on all dimensions, only on those they think are important. Measuring Customer Satisfaction To execute a successful client satisfaction survey, build one that your customers have the time and inclination to respond to, and that delves into the types of information that will truly help enhance your performance. By carefully constructing a brief, yet strong, survey, you can discover what your customers believe your strengths and weaknesses are and what makes your customers loyal to your company... More Kaizen Mindset
Case in Point Canon Production System (CPS) The Canon Production System (CPS) is about:
Customers for Life By: Brian Tracy
The purpose of a business is to
create and
keep a customer. If a business successfully creates and keeps customers
in a cost-effective way, it will make a profit while continuing to survive
and thrive. If, for any reason, a business fails to attract or sustain a
sufficient number of customers, it will experience losses. Too many losses
will lead to the demise of the enterprise.
According to Dun and Bradstreet, the single, most important
reason for the failure of businesses in America is lack of
sales. And, of course, this refers to resales as well as
initial sales. So your company’s job is to create and keep a
customer, and your job is exactly the same. Remember, no matter
what your official title is, you are a salesperson for yourself
and your company...
Customer Satisfaction
Illusion
and Trap Today, "it would be difficult to find a company that doesn't proudly claim to be a customer-oriented, customer-focused, or even-customer driven enterprise. But look closer at how these companies put their assertions into practice, and often you discover an array of notions and assumptions that range from superficial and incomplete to misguided."3 Some examples of customer satisfaction illusion include:
All these approaches are well intentioned, but "all of them offer, at best, partial solutions to their customer satisfaction, and all, as a result, fall short."3 There is nothing wrong with the notion of customer satisfaction per se. "The problem comes with its pursuit, which if fraught with peril. Most plans to improve customer satisfaction stand on two shaky – and dangerous – assumptions."3 What they create is an illusion – the customer satisfaction trap. Too often, measurement of customer satisfaction are misleading – they tell you very little about where you are, and they can't show you where to go. Process-managed Enterprise A process-managed enterprise supports, empowers and energizes employees, encourages their initiative, enables and allows its people to perform process work. "Process work is work that is focused on the customer, work that is directed toward achieving results rather than being an end in itself, work that follows a disciplined and repeatable design. Process work is work that delivers the high-level of performance that customers now demand."6... More Case in Point Benefits of Business Process Management The payoffs of process mastery can be breathtaking. Costs melt away, quality goes through the roof, and time spans shrink to a fraction of what they were. In 1999 Hammer and Company6 surveyed dozens of companies that had adopted the process approach to work and business.
These improvements in process performance paid off in the critical enterprise currencies of customer satisfaction, customer retention, and corporate profits.... More
Measuring Customer Satisfaction... Two Dangerous Assumptions... Getting Right Customer Feedback... Eight Best Practices of Successful Companies... Exceeding Customer Expectations... Giving More for Less... The Best Technique to Win the Customer Over... Marketing Strategy at Different Company Growth Stages... Understanding Risks Perceived by Customers... Apply 80/20 Principle... "When" Is a New "What"... Learning from Successes and Failures... Two Main Ways to Grow Revenue... Customer Intimacy... Customer Satisfaction vs. Customer Intimacy... Customer Partnership... Listening to Your Customer... The Five Objectives of Six Sigma... Success Story Nike... Case in Point Dell Computer Corporation... Case in Point Wall-Mart...
Case in Point
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