lot of feedback tools out there make it easy to collect user feedback on your website or mobile app, but do they really help make your digital channels more customer centric? The majority of these tools just focus on collecting data, but that’s only part of the process. What comes next?
https://mopinion.com/5-tips-online-feedback-strategy/
In today’s ever-accelerating digital world, most brands know that winning the battle for customers depends on exceptional customer experience (CX).
A relatively new type of effort called customer success (CS) — particularly prevalent in the B2B tech sector — brings a set of parallel tactics that CX leaders in any market should pay attention to.
https://www.cmswire.com/customer-experience/why-brands-must-unify-customer-experience-and-customer-success-and-how-they-can-do-it/
Companies work hard to listen to the voice of the customer (VoC) and innovate based on what they hear, but passive listening isn’t enough. I’ve found that you must always be on the lookout for new ways customers can connect with you and seamlessly share information to help you deliver products that better meet their needs.
The B2B technology company for which I work is doing some pretty amazing things in this area with many longstanding, and recently established, customer outreach programs. These programs serve as templates for active listening that are uniquely and directly connecting customers with our CX team, customer service and support — and more specifically with product development and product management.
Feedback channels are ongoing resources for us and help ensure that we approach VoC and product innovation from the customer’s perspective, developing new products and features that align with their current and future needs.
http://customerthink.com/4-ways-to-align-customer-feedback-and-product-innovation/
Are you sending out CX (customer experience) surveys days or even weeks after the customer interaction? If so, have you considered what the consumer’s experience of that might be and how that impacts on their perception of your brand? Or have you thought about some of the great opportunities the delay in your process precludes? Do you wonder what impact the delay has on future survey engagement or worse, customer loyalty?
These are some of the questions I cover in this post. The importance of capturing feedback in real-time should not be underestimated, particularly if you want to impact CX on an individual customer basis. While it is relatively easy to achieve in an online environment, it is much more challenging in a brick-and-mortar context, so I will offer some ideas on how to do it at the end of the post.
http://customerthink.com/why-you-need-to-capture-customer-feedback-in-real-time-and-how-to-do-it-in-brick-and-mortar-businesses/
On one level, retail marketing is all about getting your brand message across to your customers through channels including online, print, brick-and-mortar store signs and social media. Aside from communicating your message, however, it’s also increasingly about the reverse: listening to your customers.
Constant active listening through monitoring customer feedback and conversations will allow you to improve the performance of your business across the board. It also gives you insights into your business that you may have never noticed another way. Based on my experience, here are five takeaways on using customer feedback.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/forbescommunicationscouncil/2018/12/10/stop-look-and-listen-five-lessons-on-customer-feedback/
A 360-degree customer journey is a set of ideas and methods meant to take you from vague promises of being “customer-centric” to a concrete process for measurably offering more value to customers. By better understanding individuals and groups of customers, you’ll find ways to make your products more useful and smooth out the buying process, building an engaged audience for your brand along the way.
https://mopinion.com/360-degree-customer-journey/
Online negativity has hardened many brands to bad reviews. Serve enough customers, the thinking goes, and some are bound to trash you. But just how much damage can an online rant actually do?
Quite a lot, according to Moz. The marketing firm found that one negative article can lose a company as many as 22 percent of its customers. Just four such articles can drive off 70 percent of potential customers — something any business would struggle to bounce back from.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/serenitygibbons/2018/09/20/why-businesses-need-to-see-customer-feedback-as-make-or-break/#76be14311083/
When customers have a positive experience with a company, they’re likely to share their thoughts with an average of nine people. But they’ll share thoughts on negative experiences with about 16 people, nearly double the amount.
Companies are wise to correct any issues that lead to poor experiences before customers share their negative opinions with the masses, but you won’t know what those issues are unless you ask. Customer feedback survey emails are an effective tool for gathering information that can help you craft a positive experience every time.
https://www.business2community.com/customer-experience/how-to-write-a-customer-feedback-survey-email-02141136/
Having customers who are willing to give feedback about your product or service is a potential gold mine for your company and its growth. The important part is knowing when to listen to the customers and when and how to use their feedback to help your company become better. There are many different ways to accomplish this, and each one has a benefit. The input that you may need might depend on your company's current stage. It also could depend on the tools that you have to collect that information.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/theyec/2018/05/07/11-founders-on-how-to-best-listen-to-customer-feedback/
Today’s consumer has incredibly high expectations of the brands they spend their time and money with. Consumers realize they are not beholden to brands as options arise across the ever-expanding market of goods and services, and brands have begun listening to customers to help drive their product roadmaps, and ultimately, to drive success through loyalty. Going one step further, customers no longer only compare brands to their direct competitors; they compare their experiences to the best customer experience they’ve ever received, which sets the bar even higher.
But even though today’s brands are wising up to the importance of listening, a gap still exists between customer feedback and how brands act on it. According to a new report from Gladly, 92% of customers say they would stop purchasing from a company after three or fewer poor customer service experiences, and 26% of those would stop after just one bad experience. Listening to and acting on feedback shows respect, and quite frankly, today’s consumers don’t have the time or patience to deal with brands who don’t respect them.
https://www.business2community.com/customer-experience/turn-your-digital-experiences-into-customer-feedback-opportunities-02139137/