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How to really mess up your business by Jeff Mowatt When managers plan their business strategies, common sense dictates that these game-plans should be in line with customer needs. The first step in planning is therefore to identify customer preferences. Unfortunately, most conventional approaches to determining customer needs are flawed.
Here are five of the most common methods used to gather customer opinions along with their drawbacks. Keep these often-made mistakes in mind when planning your business strategy.
One way to find out what customers think - indirectly at least - is to look at revenues. The assumption being that if revenues are increasing then customers must be happy. Dangerous. A repeat customer isn’t necessarily loyal. Customers may come back more by default than desire. If that’s the case, the moment your competitor finds a way to
truly satisfy your customers, those repeat customers will abandon you. Or, if your team is providing support services to internal customers, you may be setting yourself up to be outsourced. So, even though your revenues may indicate that you have happy customers, unless you do the research, you are potentially vulnerable. Business leaders whose companies endure are those who do not just assume that customers are happy, they create the right systems to know it.
Mistake #3: Trust focus groups
As an alternative, rather than using standard telephone surveying, the manager of the company uses a resource I often recommend to my clients —business students. Picture yourself again at home. The phone rings. When you answer, a youthful voice says, "Hi, I’m a business student at the local university. For my marketing class I’m doing a project where I’m conducting a survey on such and such." You find yourself saying, "OK, kid, let’s make this quick." Response rates soar. Bonus - students work for the price of Kraft Dinner! The lesson is that managers need to stop interpreting high percentages the way we did in high school. If you have a 98% customer-satisfaction rating you may still have serious problems in customer loyalty. According to marketing research expert, Dr. Mike Heffring, "It has been shown that it’s the percentage of people who give you excellent or outstanding ratings (e.g., nine or ten on a ten-point scale) who matter. If you increase that percentage, then market share actually moves. If you don’t, then you may feel better if the percent satisfied goes up but the impact is insignificant."
Identify what customers really think Just make sure as you do this, that you also ask yourself if your current information is telling you what your customers really think. This article is based on the critically acclaimed book, Becoming a Service Icon in 90 Minutes a Month by business strategist and international speaker Jeff Mowatt. To obtain your own copy of his book or to inquire about engaging Jeff for your team, visit www.jeffmowatt.com or call 1-800-JMowatt (566-9288).
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