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Measuring Customer Satisfaction

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Measuring Customer Satisfaction

  1. 1. Measuring Customer Satisfaction (A Brief Presentation) HENRY JOHN N. NUEVA Management Engineering
  2. 2. Customer Satisfaction A measure of how products and/or services supplied by a company meet or surpass customer expectation. It is also a key performance indicator (measure) within business and is often part of the Balanced Scorecard.
  3. 3. Customer Satisfaction? • Delighted customers or clients are profitable on every company business. • It can be use as a basis of monitoring, evaluating and developing new products and process that contribute to company’s performance management. • Provides an indication of how successful the organization is at providing products and/or services to the marketplace.
  4. 4. Customer Satisfaction? The collection, analysis and dissemination of CS data send a message about the importance of tending to customers and ensuring Satisfaction is perhaps the best indicator that they have a positive of how likely it is that the organizations’ experience with the company’s customers will make further purchases in the future. Since current goods and services. research has now focusing on the relationship between customer satisfaction and retention.
  5. 5. Customer Satisfaction
  6. 6. Direct Methods: Directly contacting customers and getting their valuable feedback is very important. Following are some of the ways by which customers could be directly tabbed: 1. Getting customer feedback through third party agencies. 2.Direct marketing, in-house call centers, complaint handling department could be treated as first point of contact for getting customer feedback. (these feedbacks are compiled to analyze customers’ perception) 3. Getting customer feedback through face to face conversation or meeting. 4. Feedback through appreciation letter. 5. Direct customer feedback through surveys and questionnaires.
  7. 7. Indirect Methods: The following are indirect methods of getting feedback regarding customer satisfaction: A. Customer Complaints: Customer’s complaints are the issues and problems reported by the customer to supplier with regards to any specific product or related service. These complaints can be classified under different segments according to the severity and department. If the complaints under a particular segment go high in a specific period of time then the performance of the organization is degrading in that specific area or segment. But if the complaints diminish in a specific period of time then that means the organization is performing well and customer satisfaction level is also higher. B. Customer Loyalty: A customer is said to be loyal if he revisits supplier on regular basis for purchases. These loyal customers are the satisfied ones and hence they are bounded with a relationship with the supplier. Hence by obtaining the customer loyalty index, suppliers can indirectly measure customer satisfaction.
  8. 8. Quality Measures & Data
  9. 9. 1. cognitive (thinking/evaluation) 2. affective (emotional-feeling/like-dislike) 3. behavioral (current/future actions)
  10. 10. 1. cognitive (thinking/evaluation) How satisfied are you with the "taste" of Yoni fresh yogurt? How important is "taste" to you in selecting Yoni fresh yogurt?
  11. 11. 2. affective (emotional-feeling/like-dislike) Would you recommend "Yoni" to your family and friends? Overall, how satisfied are you with "Yoni fresh yogurt"?
  12. 12. 3. behavioral (current/future actions) Would you recommend "Yoni" to your family and friends?
  13. 13. Customer Satisfaction Survey Customers This is probably the only way to get customer feedback unless they use a direct contact to your organization, which most people are too busy to bother with unless they are extremely upset for some reason. We can provide surveys in several ways (through mail, email, over the phone or websites) and in order to get the best information, we should allow customers to answer questions on a weighted scale like: (“Rate your experience on a scale of 1 to 5 with 1 indicating complete dissatisfaction and 5 indicating complete satisfaction”).
  14. 14. Customer Satisfaction Understand Expectations If we know what our customers expect from us, it logically follows that we will be better able to offer them an enjoyable experience. Therefore, make an effort to discover the expectations of your customers in terms of both service and products in order to ensure that you’re meeting their needs.
  15. 15. Customer Satisfaction Find Out Where You’re Failing If you’re not meeting customer requirements, you need to find out where the failure is occurring. Examples of general questions that would behave the company to know where the lines of communication are breaking down so that relationship with customers can be mended are as follows: 1.Are the products less than what is advertised? 2.Are employees making promises that cannot be met? 3.Are customer service representatives dropping the call on customer concerns and managing their complaints?
  16. 16. Customer Satisfaction Pinpoint Specifics Whether a customer is satisfied or not, the data we collect will need to accurately assess what is working and what isn’t. So inquiries into level of satisfaction should include more than just the overall experience. We need to determine the products and/or services they purchased, what they liked or disliked about their sales interaction, how the actual purchase compared to their expectations, and any suggestions they have for improvement.
  17. 17. Customer Satisfaction Assess the Competition If we don’t know why customers prefer another brand over ours, we cannot hope to keep them from flocking to the competition. So as part of the survey process, we may want to consider inviting customers to compare and contrast similar products or companies to find out what they are offering that you are not.
  18. 18. Expectancy Value Measures of Behavioral Intention (BI), Attitude (A) and Satisfaction (SAT) Expectancy value models have been found to perform well in predicting both satisfaction/dissatisfaction and behavioral intention (intention to try, purchase, recommend, or re-purchase a product or service). The Expectancy value model using attitudes and beliefs reads:
  19. 19. where: •w1, w2 = weights that indicate the relative influence of the overall attitude toward the object and the normative influence to purchase the product •Ao = Attitude toward the object (brand, product, service or company) • = the overall attitude toward the object. The overall attitude is formed by the multiplicative product of ai (the person's affective evaluation of attribute i), and bi (here defined as the importance of attribute i in the purchase decision). The sum is taken over the k attributes that are defined as salient in the purchase decision. • = The overall normative component of the decision process. This is computed as the multiplicative product of nbi (the norms governing attitude i), andmci (the motivation of the respondent to comply with those norms).
  20. 20. Behavioral Intention (BI) Behavioral intention is measured using a question such as "Indicate the likelihood of you buying sometime during the next year" with a five or seven- point Likert or semantic differential scale labeled "definitely will purchase" and "definitely will not purchase" at the endpoints. Satisfaction Overall satisfaction or dissatisfaction with an object is often measured using a five-point satisfaction scale. As an example, "Overall, how satisfied are you with Sparkle toothpaste?" could be measured with a "Very Satisfied, Somewhat Satisfied, Neither Satisfied Nor Dissatisfied, Somewhat Dissatisfied, Very Dissatisfied" scale.
  21. 21. Attitude (ai*bi) bi - the probability that attribute i is associated with performing behavior B. The concept "Crest toothpaste prevents decay" could be rated on a seven point scale with endpoints labeled "Very Likely" and "Very Unlikely". ai - the evaluation of belief i. A representative measure of ai would be "In terms of buying Crest toothpaste, decay prevention is …" with a five or seven point scale with "good" and "bad"; or "Excellent" and "Poor" at the endpoints
  22. 22. Customer Satisfaction Survey
  23. 23. Customer Satisfaction Survey
  24. 24. Customer Satisfaction Survey
  25. 25. Customer Satisfaction Survey

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