Providing service that is informed by and responsive to customer input leads to improved consumer loyalty as well as significant financial advantages for today’s companies. Crucial to providing this optimized level of service is the ability to gather and analyze customer experience feedback in the most strategic and effective ways possible.
Innovative approaches to choosing what feedback to collect along with how and when to collect it differentiate companies benefiting from a satisfied customer base from those being hindered by poor customer service.
Great customer service is an important differentiator and critical priority for many companies, especially when you consider that poor customer service costs U.S. businesses $75 billion a year1! In fact, investing in customer service can result in significant profit. According to the Temkin Group, companies that earn $1 billion annually can see around $823 million in additional revenue over three years2 when they proactively perform customer feedback analysis and gain insights to realign operational processes. Beyond potential gains in profit, investing in customer service means building a stronger and happier customer base that is likely to continue using and recommending your services.
To improve customer service, it is important to benchmark current customer experience (CX) performance. One critical way to do this is by collecting customer feedback. It is important to be strategic and succinct in this process — you want to be able to collect feedback in a way that maximizes response rates and results in actionable CX analytics without annoying your customers. Successful CX programs contact the right customers at the right times using the customers’ preferred methods of contact.
By using a smart, relevant and proactive approach for collecting feedback, companies are now able to deepen their understandings of their customers and deliver the experiences that their customers not only expect but deserve.
While the customer base is different for every CX program, one thing is clear: Today’s CX leaders know how to leverage the best channels to collect feedback from as many of their customers as possible. These customer-savvy companies gain higher response rates, more actionable data and opportunities to design a CX approach that bolsters brand and company loyalty.
Before investing in a specific strategy or strategies, it is important to understand the most common channels for gathering customer feedback.
Online surveys are a cost-effective way to gather CX analytics data for companies large and small. and They can be easily set up without a lot of technical expertise, including as links in the emails that invite customers to complete them. Online surveys typically have lower response rates than the next two approaches, as they incorporate weak calls to action and need to compete for attention in crowded inboxes.
SMS text messages are increasing in popularity among companies and customers alike as a preferred mode of communication for providing feedback. There are two primary methods of SMS feedback gathering:
IVR is easy to use and familiar to many customers. IVR surveys are an effective CX analytics gathering mechanism when best practices are followed.
IVR surveys tend to be more expensive to implement and operate than other survey methods, but they also offer higher response rates compared to less personalized methods. With IVR it is important to ensure that you are not over-contacting or over-surveying customers, which can lead to survey fatigue as well as increased requests by customers to be put on a do-not-contact list.
Companies are increasingly using chatbots to engage customers directly. Think about a time when you have gone to a company’s website and seen a chatbot window pop up, asking if you have any questions about their services or products. Chatbots can be used to not only provide key information and services to customers — and triage more complex inquires to customer service teams — but to also solicit feedback.
Chatbots can provide a feedback mechanism to customers by prompting them to complete a short survey almost immediately after their interactions with a company have occurred. Chatbot records can be analyzed by customer service teams to better understand the interactions.
Chatbots can also provide reminder prompts to customers to provide feedback when the customers revisit the company’s website, Facebook page and other platforms.
Social media has quickly emerged as a critical way for customers to provide feedback — often unprompted — on platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and Instagram. Additionally, many companies have begun to use options like Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp to engage with customers directly and privately to provide support and address their questions or concerns.
There is no one-size-fits-all method for securing the highest survey response rates and attaining meaningful CX analytics. CX teams should examine the benefits and drawbacks of each approach, assess their customer demographics and select the right feedback gathering method — or use a combination of methods. Ultimately, the method must be relevant and contextualized to the customer base. If not, the results may be the same poor customer service experiences as before.
Adopting the right feedback collection strategy is the first step for brands seeking higher response rates. Designing an effective feedback methodology is the next critical element in gathering high-quality CX analytics data.
To gain meaningful customer input, companies must seek out customer feedback soon after the interactions. The longer it takes to get feedback, the less meaningful and actionable the feedback could be. While delivering surveys within 24 hours is acceptable, contacting customers sooner allows companies to respond to incidents faster. For example, top-performing field service companies can reroute technicians to fix a “repeat” issue while still in the area versus having to schedule a repeat truck roll for another day.
This minimizes customer frustration and reduces operational costs. Since the most valuable feedback often taps into customers’ emotions about interactions, sending surveys quickly enables CX programs to reach customers while those feelings are still fresh in their minds. As the time between the interaction and feedback opportunity lengthens, customers are more apt to have shifted perspectives or even forgotten key details and thoughts about transactions.
Although companies may find it tempting to create long surveys that address many facets of customer experiences, they can often become too involved and result in lower response rates. Many people are just not that interested in answering in-depth questions about a brand or interaction — that is what focus groups are for! People are more likely to respond to surveys when they have had memorable experiences, be they positive or negative.
Customers want to share their opinions and feedback quickly and then move on to the next thing. Providing customers with long surveys can frustrate them and potentially turn positive experiences into negative ones. Be sure to ask the most important questions first to ensure you get the most critical CX analytics you need. Additionally, it is important to offer customers the option to transfer to or contact support when there is an issue rather than forcing them to complete the survey and wait for a response, which can further exacerbate problem situations.
Although companies may find it tempting to create long surveys that address many facets of customer experiences, they can often become too involved and result in lower response rates. Many people are just not that interested in answering in-depth questions about a brand or interaction — that is what focus groups are for! People are more likely to respond to surveys when they have had memorable experiences, be they positive or negative. Customers want to share their opinions and feedback quickly and then move on to the next thing. Providing customers with long surveys can frustrate them and potentially turn positive experiences into negative ones.
Be sure to ask the most important questions first to ensure you get the most critical CX analytics you need. Additionally, it is important to offer customers the option to transfer to or contact support when there is an issue rather than forcing them to complete the survey and wait for a response, which can further exacerbate problem situations.
In the past, companies often relied on aggregate customer satisfaction data to perform customer feedback analysis. Today’s CX leaders take a much more granular approach to CX analytics. Leading CX solutions tie customer feedback directly to the employee who delivered the most recent interaction. With this approach, managers can quickly identify which frontline employees deliver quality interactions — and which employees need more coaching.
In the past, companies often relied on aggregate customer satisfaction data to perform customer feedback analysis. Today’s CX leaders take a much more granular approach to CX analytics. Leading CX solutions tie customer feedback directly to the employee who delivered the most recent interaction. With this approach, managers can quickly identify which frontline employees deliver quality interactions — and which employees need more coaching.
Over time, CX owners should examine each question to understand if they have taken recent action based on the customer feedback analysis. If not, this is a good indication that the question may no longer be relevant. In addition, customer demographics should be assessed periodically to ensure that the optimal feedback collection method is being used. Planning for periodic survey review and refinement ensures that CX programs keep pace with dynamic customer needs.
Feedback gathering approaches and technologies have seen rapid change in recent years. Software platforms can contact customers more quickly after an interaction, and the calls to action across all collection mediums are more configurable and better able to engage end customers. New mediums like SMS and mobile phone-enabled surveys are expanding the breadth of CX analytics collection around the world.
In addition to new software features, there are several innovative trends driving improvements in gathering feedback from customers.
Most CX programs have traditionally leveraged one method, such as email, for engaging customers for feedback. However, this traditional approach is unlikely to be effective in the future, when customers will expect to be contacted how, when and where they prefer
For example, customers are likely to engage with a brand across multiple channels during a single transaction. A customer may research an item online, order it online, receive SMS or email updates on fulfillment status and go to a brick-and-mortar location to pick it up. CX programs must mirror this multi-method communication approach in their customer outreach.
This is known as an omnichannel approach, where customers’ experiences are continuous no matter how they engage with the company. An integrated CX analytics collection approach that can easily leverage all available contact methods (e.g., email, IVR, SMS and social media) is more likely to engage all customer types, collect useful feedback for the CX programs and serve a variety of other needs:
For the best results, CX practitioners should seek to understand customer preferences and deliver surveys via customers’ preferred channels. By using a short preference-gathering survey early in the customer relationship, companies can determine if the customer welcomes contact via SMS, IVR or email. By aligning survey contact with customer preference, CX programs can demonstrate that they listen to and value customer input, which can create positive impressions and drive higher response rates for their CX practice.
Artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) techniques are already playing a critical role in customer service today. Companies are recognizing the importance of creating tailored, personalized and consistent experiences for customers.
AI can be used to analyze customer feedback in Three several ways:
This technique analyzes the emotion underlaying any qualitative customer communication and can categorize it as positive, negative or neutral. This can help automatically prioritize and triage which customer tickets to respond to and forward them to the appropriate teams to address.
This technique analyzes qualitative communication to extract any relevant and useful information. It is different from sentiment analysis because sentiment analysis categorizes the text, whereas text analysis does not. .
Text analysis is useful because the company can see what types of words are being used in association with their brand. It can be particularly useful if negative words are being used often, which can alert the company that something needs to be addressed or changed
This technique is used to evaluate all customer service-related activities to determine how to improve their quality as well as cut costs. It enables the measurement of customer retention rates, user satisfaction, goal completion rates, advanced call analysis and customer review analysis.
These tools allow companies to engage in predictive CX analytics, which are more adept at recognizing, prioritizing and triaging customer complaints. For instance, a McKinsey CX report shared a story about an airline company using predictive CX analytics to prioritize customers who were “at-risk of defecting”. This resulted in an 800% increase in customer satisfaction and a 60% decrease in attrition.
In addition to AI, ML techniques can also be used to further categorize customer feedback by product features, price points, quality of customer service and online availability, among others.
Customer survey programs typically focus on “active” feedback collection, where the companies initiate contact with customers to ask them to complete surveys. CX innovators are beginning to leverage “passive” collection opportunities, where customers take to social media to provide feedback. There are a variety of social networks that have been set up to allow customers to share their thoughts on almost everything. Some of these are even focused on a specific area, to assist consumers in deciding which products and/or services are its “best”.
Paying attention to what is being said on social media can minimize the impact detractors have on the brand and provide insights into what customers ultimately want. This enables companies to better support their customers and continue to innovate.
Depending on the dynamics of your customer base, you may opt for a single channel — either IVR, SMS or email — but for broader reach and enhanced customer input you may need to employ multi-method feedback gathering. Whatever feedback collection approach you choose today may need to evolve as customers’ expectations rise and their opportunities for interactions with your brand multiply.
Whether you aim to retain customers, fortify your brand or deliver a higher quality customer experience, you can rely on SkyCreek’ s flexible, scalable solutions to capture and understand customer feedback. With over twenty years of experience working with Fortune 500 leaders, we are one of the most experienced CX firms in the industry.
Our robust feedback collection options, proven closed-loop alerting approach and advanced CX reporting platform gives the real-time insights needed to gather customer feedback, identify and manage unhappy customers and maximize enterprise-wide customer experience practices.