Using Customer Intelligence to Understand Customers and Give Them What They Want

Know thy customer, and you will be able to please thy customer. When dealing with consumers, information is often lost in the hustle & bustle of everyday dealings. Few are able to fully utilize the signals their customers give in order to reap the rewards. Customer intelligence is aimed at doing just that.

It’s all about data in this age of e-commerce.

Once you have it, you’re working with first-hand accounts of how your customers wish to be treated, what they want to obtain, and how they think these things are to come about.

But data can be tricky to utilize effectively.

First of all, you have to obtain it. And not in any fishy manners if you want to build trust with your customers. 

Secondly, the information provided by customers won’t be in a set format that’s easy to collate, making it difficult and time-consuming to process.

Finally, it’s very easy for these pieces of information to slip through the cracks and get lost, never making their way to the people who would be able to use them.

So, once you have this data, how do you go about using this valuable resource? The secret lies in the art of customer intelligence.

What is customer intelligence?

Customer intelligence is a catch-all term for analyzing customer data in order to find new ways to conform your business to their wants & needs.

While this might sound simple, it’s actually difficult in practice to achieve such an analysis due to the fact that consumers have different preferences.

Think of it like making coffee just the way someone likes it. 

Sure, there are common factors between all of the cups you might make – coffee, milk, sugar, etc. – but there will be subtle differences that make the difference between a good cup of coffee and a great one. ☕

Customer intelligence can factor in those needs when potential customers approach you and vice versa.

It takes into account various data points such as age, location, habits, and more so that you can work with customers on an individual level. It means using all of the different combinations of these that might crop up when dealing with customers. 

It’s no exaggeration to say that this is enough data to give anyone a headache!

As a consequence, utilizing customer intelligence is always done with the help of specialized software. It’s simply too much data for a human to process by hand in any useful amount of time.

Why is customer intelligence important?

In the age of the internet, and even more so following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, e-commerce has become more and more personalized. 

It’s no secret that customers expect a personalized experience when dealing with a repeat seller, as 59% of them admit that it has an impact on their purchase decisions.

The customer experience has become increasingly relevant over the past few decades, with consumers following their hearts instead of cold numbers. 

Many will even select an objectively inferior product or service if they deem the experience they have with the seller to be more pleasant. After all, customers cite bad experiences as their number one reason for switching brands or providers.

And how do you provide good experiences? By understanding their individual desires.

What can customer intelligence do for you?

After talking about how emotions are so crucial to business, it’s time to get down to some cold hard facts (I love my coffee with a hint of irony).

As mentioned, improving the customer experience is an excellent idea that will boost your bottom line.

In the next section, we dive into the details of how customer intelligence makes it possible. While more strategies exist, the ones we’ll lay out definitely pack the biggest punch. ????

Cross-selling & up-selling

It’s often quite rare for people to go to a shop for a single item and actually walk away with only that item. 

There are just so many good deals that you can see, and you just have to try them out, right?

Online, things are different. 

You can’t see the entire store out of the corner of your eye like you can in a brick-and-mortar location. 

In fact, you’ll often only visit those pages directly relevant to the single item you’re looking for.

So, how do you show off your wares? Cross-selling and up-selling.

They’re both methods of encouraging customers to view items other than the one they specifically came to your site for, with cross-selling being concerned with complimentary products and up-selling with upgraded ones.

Essentially, they’re a means of getting a customer to want to spend more.

These can be done through advertisement banners, recommended product sections, and by related product sections on product pages.

The catch? Items often have multiple uses and reasons behind purchases, meaning you won’t necessarily know why an individual is after a certain product. 

This makes cross-selling and up-selling a bit less effective.

But with customer intelligence at your disposal, you’ll have the information you need to nudge individuals toward their next purchase.

For example, a customer may purchase a DDR2 piece of RAM, a common computer part.

They might be after it because it’s what they currently have and need a replacement, in which case advising the DDR3 as an up-sell is valid.

Or, they might be working with a legacy computer, one not compatible with DDR3, in which case it wouldn’t be.

If you know which one is the case, you know which action to take.

Below you’ll see a great example of how Amazon utilizes cross-selling.

Amazon offers both a “for you” section as well as one on trending deals. You can clearly see a theme across the top row of items, showing its effectiveness at showcasing an individual’s tastes.

This dual-focus method ensures that while general items that are enjoyed by many are not ignored when it comes to cross-selling, the individual is also acknowledged.

Customer retention

Consumers have changed the way they operate in recent years, being more willing than ever to switch brands or providers over minor disagreements or small mistakes.

One of the biggest changes we saw was the rise of e-commerce transactions, with people turning more and more to ordering products online. 

This makes the e-commerce customer experience critical for driving revenue. If your layout is confusing and the infrastructure is ancient, users will quickly become frustrated. And when that happens, they will easily leave your site in favor of another.

Seems plausible, right? When emotions run high, decisions are made that otherwise might not have been. 

There’s a very real possibility that customers will leave your website if they don’t get the personalized, easy-to-use experience they want. When they do, that’s another customer lost.

And perhaps worse than just another purchase lost, it may be an existing customer that’s not coming back.

Low customer retention is one of the most damning factors when it comes to e-commerce profits, simply because customers cost much more to obtain than they do to keep.

While customer intelligence won’t solve your infrastructure issues, it will help improve other aspects of the customer experience immensely. With all that information you possess, you’re able to highly personalize the experiences each individual has to a great degree. Be it specific items or even your site’s layout.

Given a choice between these two options:

  • A simple cookie-cutter website that’s rigid and confusing.
  • A personalized experience on a website that responds to the way you use it and makes itself easier to navigate.

Which would you pick?

Channel analytics

When you’re running an e-commerce business, you’re often operating across multiple channels of communication. It’s not enough to simply use one social media platform, for example, as you’ll miss out on selling to those who use others.

But what works on one platform won’t necessarily work on the others. Not just because they operate differently but due to the audience that frequents each channel.

With customer intelligence on your side, you can not only measure customer behavior on an individual level but apply these principles to the different channels of communication you work with.

After all, if you have data on the individuals, it’s not hard to lump those together for group analysis.

Then, you’re able to easily translate the customer intelligence data into a form that applies to the individual channels and analyze it accordingly.

This can give you information on:

  • Different customer behaviors by channel.
  • Effectiveness of customer service in each channel.
  • How specific customer service tactics work with each channel.
  • Your ROI for each channel.
  • Sales tactic effectiveness by channel.

Useful, right? You can even use the information you gain from this analysis to determine whether or not it’s worth keeping a channel of communication open.

You might be thinking, why don’t I just perform an analysis on each channel? Surely that’s just as effective?

Well, yes and no. 

You see, you can always use individual data as building blocks to create channel data, but you can’t do it the other way around.

This means that if you want to see how demographics affect each channel, you’d have to factor that into your data collection methods. 

While that might seem like common sense, sometimes you’ll only think of analyzing a factor after the fact, meaning you’d need to do the whole data collection part all over again. 

All-in-all, customer intelligence can always build up to a bigger picture, which is one of its most useful traits.

Optimization & cost-effectiveness

This one follows on from both customer retention & channel analytics, but it’s also its own thing, so a separate title is due.

On the surface level, increased customer retention means lower costs, and channel analytics means that you can optimize your approaches to each channel.

But it goes deeper than that.

When you deal with customers on the individual level, you’ll need to provide individual experiences. Customer intelligence lets you gain the information you need to provide this in a very short time frame, meaning you don’t waste time and money on ineffective techniques.

Overall, the information that customer intelligence provides means that every aspect of your organization can be streamlined, improved, and cut back when necessary. It cuts right to the heart of what customers want, which is the essence of e-commerce.

Brand loyalty

Loyal customers are hard to come by, but they’re well worth the effort to maintain. 

In addition to the retention benefits mentioned above, loyal customers will act as advocates for your brand. It’s like having your own organic advertising department, except it’s free!

So, what do brand loyalty and brand equity have to do with customer intelligence?

The thing about loyalty is that it doesn’t just come overnight. You need to perform consistently well in order to build up loyalty.

While in face-to-face transactions, you can usually tell how the customer reacts to specific methods and adjust accordingly, you have no point of reference as to how to best approach a customer online.

So, how do you choose the best approach? Well, with customer intelligence, you can make educated guesses using an individual’s data. 

This approach won’t be accurate in the beginning, however as time goes on and you gather more data on an individual, you will be able to adjust your approaches more effectively.

You might be thinking that this sounds like developing a relationship with that individual, and you’d be right. It’s simply done via software, as no human could ever keep up with that many individuals at once.

More effective approaches = more customer satisfaction = more loyalty.

The types of customer intelligence data

Generally speaking, customer intelligence data falls into two types, internal and external. The latter branches out into several other sub-types, but it’s quite straightforward and well worth familiarizing yourself with them.

It’s important to note from the get-go that both internal and external types of customer intelligence mix zero, first, and third-party data.

This means we recommend using both forms to gather as much relevant data as possible, especially as zero and first-party data becomes more and more precious with privacy concerns going up in recent years.

Internal customer intelligence

Internal data is the blanket term used to cover anything generated within your organization.

You can obtain internal data from your databases, point-of-sale systems, etc. The data that you receive from this won’t necessarily be different from that obtained externally, but it can be considered more organic and representative of a person’s true feelings than the data generated by prompted methods.

This data is the data that you don’t have to go out of your way to collect. It’s data that you’ve naturally picked up over the course of an individual’s interactions with you.

External customer intelligence

External data is what you get when you specifically gather customer intelligence data.

This data can be obtained via survey, from cookies, information that a user has been prompted to give to you, etc.

This data is often the more useful of the two types as it fills in the gaps and lets you see why certain methods are preferred, certain lines of communication are more used, etc. 

You can split externally-gathered customer intelligence data into three types, personal, geographic, and attitudinal.

Personal data

Personal data is all about demographics. That can mean:

  • Age.
  • Career.
  • Disability status.
  • Education level.
  • Gender.
  • Income.
  • Marital status.
  • Religion.

All of this is incredibly useful when trying to personalize the experiences you can provide, not the least to avoid making irrelevant or even downright unhelpful changes.

There are many ways in which personalization can go wrong, but the more personal information you have, the greater your chances of making it go right.

Geographic data

This covers anything to do with location. It lets you know roughly where a person is when they buy from you.

Why is this important information? Surely when working online it’s all the same, right?

Well, no. 

Certain tactics and strategies might work well in an urban environment but not in a rural one. Why? Because the people who live in these different places think in different ways.

Different environments create different experiences, which in turn means different habits are developed. While not exactly the same, there will be rough similarities in how people who live in the same city might behave online.

Similarly, there are probably differences between cities, states, and countries that need to be accounted for when drawing up plans.

Different geographies can also mean different delivery times, languages, tones, and more.

Attitudinal data

Attitudinal data is a little trickier to quantify, as it can change over time. 

Effectively, it consists of any information on how an individual perceives your brand and the general emotions they feel towards it.

A useful tactic to gather such data is by going through review data.

This gives you a direct line to the voice of the customer, helping you understand strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and (what’s the T for swot?)

To complement the review data, you can conduct other market research methods like surveys, questionnaires, and focus groups. These can help you get a more rounded picture of attitudinal data.

The process of utilizing customer intelligence: 5 steps to follow

It’s time to get down and dirty.

When trying to utilize customer intelligence, there are five key steps that need to be taken. It’s important to keep these steps in order and not miss any out, as they’re all necessary to obtain a complete picture.

Keep in mind, however, that you can always cycle back a step if your data is confusing. If it’s hard to analyze, hard to decide what to do with, etc., you might just need more data or data from a different source.

Before we begin going over the steps, though, a brief disclaimer.

Customer intelligence is highly contextual, meaning that when you’re performing it you absolutely need to have your aims in mind.

You can’t just perform customer intelligence for the sake of it, as the algorithms and data collection methods will differ depending on what area of the customer experience you’re trying to take a look at.

That said, let’s begin.

???? Step 1: Sourcing

The first step in the process is to choose your sources.

While each source that you could draw from will give some amount of similar data, there are distinct differences between how they operate and what data you can obtain from them.

You can split sources into three types: transactional, behavioral, and psychographic. We’ll talk a little more about them later on.

???? Step 2: Collection

The second step is data collection. 

Once you have your sources, you need to collect data from them. This can be done via website monitoring, heat maps, surveys, and more.

The data collection methods you should use are heavily dependent on the type of source you’re drawing from, so keep that in mind.

???? Step 3: Categorization

Next, you need to categorize your data.

This step is usually done while keeping the different facets of your organization in mind. If you’re looking to improve a specific area of your business, you should place the most weight on the relevant data.

Data can fall into the following categories:

  • Direct feedback, such as reviews & ratings.
  • Indirect feedback, such as comments & chatter.
  • Inferred feedback, such as history, cookies, and location-based data.

Direct feedback can be seen as a reflection of the customer experience, meaning it’s up to the marketing & customer service departments to use.

Indirect feedback is more broad but generally valuable for marketing & product testing departments.

Inferred feedback is all about website data, so it’s the domain of your dev team & design team.

All of these categories contain useful information, but some are more useful in specific contexts than others.

???? Step 4: Analysis

Once your data is all sorted into neat little packages, it’s time to analyze it.

This step is where customer intelligence software packages really shine. It’s one thing to know how to analyze data in theory, but a whole other ballpark to actually perform it.

Some common analyses methods that come pre-programmed include:

  • Customer lifetime value predictions.
  • Customer behavior modeling.
  • Predictive customer analysis.
  • Dynamic micro-segmentation.
  • Actionable insights.
  • Customer persona modeling.
  • One-to-one insight generation.

By using these pre-existing software packages, you’ll save yourself countless hours of hard work. We’ll discuss some of the platforms to generate customer intelligence available later on, as well as their features, advantages & disadvantages.

???? Step 5: Taking action

Finally, once your data has been analyzed, you need to take action.

This step is the crucial one where a lot of customer intelligence strategies fall apart. You see, in order to take action on your data, you need to be able to use the methods necessary to utilize it most efficiently.

Whether this is integrating new software into your website, adding this information to customer journey maps & workflows, or even altering your marketing campaign approaches entirely to account for different responses, you need to commit to these changes if you plan to get the most out of your data.

Change is scary, we can all agree on that, and many businesses would rather stick with tried and true methods than take a chance on something that may or may not work. 

So why should you act on customer intelligence? Why should you risk your profit margins?

Simply put, if you’re thinking of these actions as entirely new strategies, you need to reframe your perspective on them.

Customer intelligence isn’t about telling you what to do. It’s about finding out what you already do, to some degree at least, that is the most effective. 

When taking action, you’re not altering your direction, merely refining it. 

You can use customer intelligence to measure responses to new methods, that’s true, but the information you gain is useful in all aspects of your organization.

What are the sources of customer intelligence?

As mentioned above, the different sources of your data will grant you different information on customer behavior. 

Selecting your sources is the first step in the customer intelligence process, and making that selection depends heavily on what you’re trying to achieve. 

So, what are the types, then? Well, they generally fall into three types, transactional, behavioral, and psychographic.

Transactional

Transactional data is all about purchase history.

Think back to the last few times you’ve ordered items online. There are probably several of those items that fit a trend or are even repeat purchases. Sound about right?

Purchases rarely take place in a vacuum, and what you buy today is likely going to have an impact on what you buy in the future.

In the same way, what customers have bought from you in the past will show trends that can indicate what they might want to buy next. Using these, you can tailor your recommendations, discounts, etc., to each individual’s tastes. 

If you received a discount offer for a product you were thinking of buying in the future anyway, wouldn’t that tempt you to go through with it?

Behavioral

Behavioral data is concerned with customer behavior. In the realm of e-commerce, that translates to how they behave while using your website, emails, app, etc.

Now, you might be thinking, is it possible to track these factors? Well, yes. 

With emails, I recommend tracking mostly clicks rather than opens. Clicks are a strong indicator of subscribers’ intentions, while opens are much weaker ones. Further, with Apple MPP causing inaccurate open data, it’s best not to rely on this metric as it can lead you to false conclusions.

On your website and app, you can track various metrics such as time on page, viewed products, abandoned pages, and much more. In fact, there’s so much data readily available that it’s best to hone in on your goals before diving into them.

Psychographic

Psychographic data is about customer intentions. 

You can think of it as the underlying reasons behind purchases and what encourages someone to buy certain products.

You can get psychographic data in two ways.

First, there is the direct route where you simply ask them. Customer surveys, questionnaires, preference centers, and reading reviews all fall into this category. 

Remember though, while customers are mostly honest when filling out these forms, they may not remember or even be aware of the full story. Thus, treat these answers wisely.

Secondly, there are indirect indications that can inform you about customer intentions.

Transactional & behavioral data are often the sources that lead to this type of psychographic data, as what they show allows you to infer factors that otherwise might have been missed.

To give an easy example, imagine you’ve just received an order for some hockey equipment. It can be described as:

  • Good quality.
  • All bright red or white.
  • Dispatched to New York.

These facts alone don’t tell you much about why the customer purchased these particular items. However, when you take a look at their purchase history, you find that a previous order was dispatched to Detroit.

Taken together, these two factors indicate that this person might be a fan of the Detroit Red Wings and was motivated to buy these particular items as they resemble the team’s uniform.

Indirectly obtained information can be wrong sometimes, as there can be factors that appear together simply by coincidence. When dealing with a customer for whom you have little information, this is expected, and you can adjust your software accordingly.

As time goes on and more evidence is gathered, you can relax and become more confident in your deductions. 

After all, if it walks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it’s probably a duck. ????

Customer intelligence platforms to help you understand up from down

The customer intelligence platform you should use will largely depend on what you intend to do with it. 

Some are built for large-scale enterprises, some smaller, and some scale. There are also key differences in how each platform operates, with some being better than others at certain tasks. 

As you can see in the below chart from SoftwareReviews, users of each platform rate them differently in two different yet equally important aspects, features & vendor experience.

Overall, you should look carefully at each option before you decide, but let’s go through some of the more commonly used ones and assess their capabilities.

Revuze

Not to toot our own horn, but the Revuze platform does a stellar job at gathering and analyzing data, providing you with easy-to-understand reports and insights.

 

Not only that, it does everything in real-time and in a couple of clicks.

 

This means that you can respond to customers’ needs and demands swiftly, allowing you to gain a crucial advantage over competitors.

 

But don’t take my word for it. 

 

Our recent case study with Georgia-based grill innovator Char-Broil tells that story much better.

Adobe Analytics

Adobe Analytics, a part of the Adobe Experience Cloud, has the ability to interface with all other pieces of software within the Cloud. In particular, the AI-powered Adobe Target.

The downside? Like most Adobe products, it’s difficult to interface with software from other providers, so if you already use these, you’ll need to build an interfacing program to translate between the two.

Gavagai Explorer

Gavagai Explorer’s text analytics boasts multilingual features, quite useful for those working across borders. 

It also boasts an API that allows for interfacing with third-party platforms, notably Slack, SurveyMonkey & Zendesk.

Pricing starts at $130 per month, with a limitation of 20 ongoing projects per user.

Graphext

Graphext is a Spanish company that supports six languages in its main version, with another four being in beta versions.

Their seamless translation abilities are particularly useful for those wanting to operate in Europe, Latin America, and South America, as English, Spanish & Portuguese are among the languages that have been fully developed.

Users have noted that Graphext is cloud-based and limited to small or medium businesses due to its capacity limits. The platform is also available to individuals for small use with zero charges.

The downsides? As a small company, Graphext isn’t able to easily respond to queries, only offering a text-based chat solution currently. They’re also fairly new and thus not well established in terms of API integrations.

Microsoft Dynamics 365

Microsoft Dynamics 365 is a Microsoft product line, so you know it’s going to be able to run on almost any Windows system. It’s also available in both cloud and on-site versions.

Dynamics boasts excellent ratings for usability, good ratings for support, and mixed reviews for its user interface options.

As a Microsoft-provided app, it also boasts the ability to interface with dozens of third-party applications. It speaks the same language as your operating system, after all.

One complication is that Dynamics is not one app but a series of twelve applications. Naturally, these all seamlessly work together. However, for those working on mobile devices, this isn’t ideal.

Optimove

Optimove CI is known for its user-friendly interface, flexibility, and easy learning curve.

As an organization founded in 2009, Optimove has had a long time to refine its processes. It’s known for great database organization abilities, as well as for learning exactly what customers want. 

One of their greatest strengths, according to reviewers, is its very visual interface which makes visualizing concepts easy.

Downsides quoted include manual importing of data, issues with integrations, and an inability to delete templates which can quickly leave you swamped in them.

People Pattern

People Pattern comes from a US-based company operating outside of Silicon Valley. It’s rated highly for its data import abilities and its analytics but less highly for support & integrations.

One aspect that sets People Pattern apart from its contemporaries is its highly-rated customization abilities, which users have cited as their main reasons for purchase.

On the flip side, this software is only really useful for small & mid-size businesses or individuals. 

Signal CI Platform

Signal’s main pros are all about integration and scalability. That said, ease of use isn’t quite up to standard with some of the other platforms on this list. 

Signal CI also suffers from dataset size limitations, making it unideal for larger businesses. It more than makes up for this, however, with its Rules Engine feature that allows for automatic data filtering during collection & segmentation.

Overall, a solid choice for anyone from individuals to medium-sized enterprises.

Takeaways

Customer intelligence can be tricky to get to grips with, but once you’re more familiar, you’ll have access to a wealth of customer information.

Ultimately, customer intelligence in e-commerce is driven by the need to personalize and customize the user experience, lest you be left behind by others who do this more effectively. It’s one thing to know what your data says you need to do and another to actually put that into action.

Fortunately, we’ve recently published an article on that very topic, so check out our complete guide to e-commerce personalization next, so you can put your customer intelligence insights into action!

Customer Feedback Analysis: Analyzing & Understanding What Your Customers Are Saying

Customer feedback is a treasure trove of information with a wealth of insights to offer businesses seeking to improve products and boost revenue. But having feedback is not enough on its own. To understand what customers tell you, employing customer feedback analysis is a must, especially when done at scale. Learn what it means and how to do so successfully.

One of the most impactful approaches you can take to help your business grow is to become a customer-centric company. 

Because not only do customer-centric companies win over the loyalty of their audience for the long term, but they also see the financial benefit of doing so, being 60% more profitable than their competitors. 

In order to truly center your business around your customer, you’ll need to create a culture that commits to listening and catering to the customer’s opinions, thoughts, and needs. And there is no better tool for this than customer feedback analysis. 

By allowing you to systematically and regularly tap into your customers’ opinions, customer feedback analysis enables you to make smarter, more strategic business decisions that help you retain a highly loyal customer base.

In this article, we review everything you need to know about how to successfully implement customer feedback analysis in order to improve business outcomes. 

What is customer feedback analysis?

To understand what customer feedback analysis is and why it’s so important to modern businesses, let’s break the term down into its parts.

The customer part of customer feedback analysis

The customer, or the individual or entity that makes a purchase from your company, is absolutely key to your business’s success. 

As much effort as we may spend in building audiences, courting prospects, and attracting users, it is ultimately the paying customer who directly contributes to your bottom line. 

In understanding your customers, their needs, their pain points, and their opinions of your brand and your product, you’ll be able to make strategic decisions to improve e-commerce customer experience and customer satisfaction, and boost revenue as a result. 

The feedback part of customer satisfaction analysis

Customer feedback is all of the qualitative and quantitative data you receive from your customers that reflect their opinions, preferences, and concerns as they relate to your industry, company, and product. 

You can collect customer feedback through a number of channels, including but not limited to:

  • Emails
  • Surveys
  • Customer service portals 
  • Social media messages and comments
  • Third-party review websites

Feedback may be solicited or unsolicited and can come in several forms, including written comments as well as scores and ratings.

The analysis part of customer feedback analysis

Customer feedback is a form of raw data that contains a multitude of valuable insights for your company.

It is the process of analysis that helps you take this raw data, structure it, and explore it in order to find patterns, identify problems, and extract actionable insights that you can implement in order to make improvements to your product and processes.

???? For more analysis examples, check out our blogs on product performance analysis and competitive product analysis.  

Why should you analyze customer feedback?

Satisfied customers are the lifeblood of a successful business. 

By creating a superior, satisfying customer experience, you are motivating customers to take a number of desirable actions, including

  • Paying more.
  • Recommending your business/products to others.
  • And coming back for repeat purchases.

Indeed, 86% of customers are willing to pay up to 16% more for a superior customer experience. Further, a better retention rate is paramount for businesses seeking growth as existing customers are easier to sell to and are likely to pay more for new products than first-time customers.

Customer feedback analysis holds the key to creating an exceptional customer experience that keeps your customers coming back for more. 

By collecting, analyzing, and acting on the insights you find in customer feedback, you will be able to give customers what they want, address any problems, and gain a reputation as a customer-centric company like massively popular and successful brands.

How do you analyze customer feedback?

While analyzing customer feedback isn’t as simple as throwing numbers at a computer, it doesn’t have to be overly complicated.

In the next section, we break the process into five steps. And when working with dedicated customer feedback analysis tools, you can even skip most of them.

Step 1: Collecting customer feedback

The first step of customer feedback analysis is collecting customer feedback. Here are a few important sources of customer feedback.

Customer calls, chats, and helpdesk emails

This unsolicited form of customer feedback is incredibly valuable, as it represents problems and concerns that customers feel strongly enough about to have actively contacted your company to discuss. 

For this reason, it is best practice to automate a system in which helpdesk emails and customer service call transcripts are automatically added to a feedback database.

In this chatbot conversation from TheKnowledgeGym, a customer shares important feedback, including how they found a brand, how often they use its product, how they use the product, and more.

Surveys

There are a number of customer satisfaction surveys that are commonly used to collect customer feedback. These include:

  • Net Promoter Score (NPS)This metric measures how likely customers are to recommend your company to a friend or family member. 
  • Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT) – This metric measures customer satisfaction by directly asking how satisfied customers are with a product, service, or customer service interaction.
  • Customer Effort Score (CES) – This metric measures how hard or easy a customer finds a product or service to use.

You can solicit answers to these surveys through a number of channels, including your website, your mobile app, text message, and email. Individually – and even more so collectively – these surveys can all reveal highly valuable data about customer satisfaction and loyalty. 

NPS score

Here, clothing company Hem & Stitch uses an NPS survey to measure customer loyalty.

Social media comments and messages

Your social media is a fantastic source of customer feedback, with many users these days preferring to reach out to a company with a problem or question over Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram rather than through traditional customer service channels. 

Like with customer calls and emails, it is recommended to automatically forward communication received over social media to your feedback database.

However, not all mentions of you on social media will occur on your account, and not all will tag you. For example, a customer might tweet their opinion about your product on their own personal Twitter account without using any tags or hashtags to alert you to the mention. 

For this reason, it’s wise to engage in an ongoing practice of social listening, or actively monitoring social media in order to find mentions of your brand, even if it’s untagged.

twitter engagement

On Twitter, users are regularly mentioning and posting feedback about brands and products without tagging them.

Online reviews

A final source of customer feedback that we highly recommend tapping into is the online review, a go-to place for customers to share their opinions. You may be able to find reviews of your company in a number of places including:

  • Through your own website.
  • Through general review websites like Yelp and Google Reviews.
  • Through industry-specific review websites like MakeupAlley or Angi.
  • On the app store if you have a mobile app.
  • Reviews on marketplaces such as Amazon, Etsy, and eBay.

amazon reviews bring powerful customer feedback

A customer shares a wealth of important feedback about a product’s color, quality, and sizing through an Amazon review.

Step 2: Structure raw data

Once you have collected customer feedback data, you’ll be the proud owner of a giant mountain of unstructured data. In order to be able to learn something from this information, you’ll have to find a way to organize and categorize it into something more useful. 

First, we recommend going over the data to identify important keywords such as product names, locations, features, etc. Then, you’ll be able to organize the data into categories, which will allow you to identify trends in the data.

Great, now we have neat and ready-to-analyze data. What’s next?

A great way to draw insights from your data is to categorize it. There are endless ways to do that, so it’s important to know what you’re looking for before starting.

Here are some ideas to get you inspired:

  • Topic – If you seek feedback on a specific topic, such as price, delivery speed, or sizing, it is best to categorize data by topic.
  • Sentiment – An approach that is often helpful is to split feedback up by whether it is positive, neutral, or negative. Sentiment analysis is one of the best ways to keep informed on how your product is doing.
  • Type of feedback – Another option is to categorize based on what the feedback is aiming to do. This can be customers that complain, suggest a new product, request a new color, etc.
  • Priority – Some feedback may point to something that needs urgent fixing, like a bug. This is why it can be helpful to organize by priority ranging from less to more urgent.
  • Customer type – You may find useful insights by splitting up feedback by customer type, including paying, trial, non-paying, premium, or VIP/rewards status.
  • Location – If your company has multiple locations or is international, you can categorize feedback by city, state, or country.
  • Product – If you have multiple products, it may be helpful to group feedback by which product it pertains to.

Structuring raw data is something that can be done manually. 

However, not only is it incredibly time-consuming, but error-prone humans are liable to make mistakes every now and then. 

Instead, most companies will rely on some form of technology for this step, whether it’s simpler Excel sheets or more sophisticated dedicated data structuring software.

Step 3: Identifying insightful data

The next step is to separate the insightful data – or new data that either confirms a hypothesis you had or contradicts your prior working assumptions – from non-insightful data, which is data that points to an issue you already knew about. 

When determining whether or not data is insightful, ask yourself:

  • Does this data validate a hypothesis we had?
  • Can this data motivate us to think more critically?
  • Can this data lead us to take action to make an improvement? 
  • Can this data reshape our strategies?

For the rest of the steps of customer feedback analysis, you can set aside the non-insightful data to focus exclusively on the insightful data.

Step 4: Write a customer feedback analysis report

A customer feedback analysis report is a document summarizing the findings of your customer feedback analysis and laying out recommendations for how to follow up. 

How do you write a customer feedback analysis report? We recommend including the following five key sections.

???? Background – Discuss your company’s current state and why you are engaging in customer feedback analysis. Lay out any hypotheses you may have about what you might find in the data. Mention any relevant changes that the company has made recently.

???? Methodology – Explain how you conducted your customer feedback analysis. Review what sources of feedback you used, how you structured your raw data, what tools you used, what your sample size was, and any other relevant details.

???? Results – Display your data in as easy-to-understand a way as possible. Quantitative data can be displayed through graphs and charts. For qualitative data, you may want to choose select quotes to display that demonstrate relevant trends in the data. 

???? Analysis – Discuss the insights that you found in the data. What problems came up, if any? What new features or products did your customers request? What surprised you? Were your hypotheses confirmed or contradicted?

???? Recommendations – Make your recommendations for the next steps. Based on the insights you found, what actions can your company take in order to improve business outcomes? 

Step 5: Act on insights

It’s important to emphasize that customer feedback analysis is only the beginning of a process of ongoing improvement. 

Feedback analysis can serve as an arrow pointing the way in a direction that your company can go in order to improve customer satisfaction and experience. 

It’s up to you to follow the arrow and fix the problems, create new products, and make the tweaks your customers ask for. 

Example of customer feedback analysis

Let’s say you own a start-up that built an app customers can use in order to identify problems in their house plants, such as pests, underwatering, and insufficient sunlight. One of your company’s values is being data-driven, and you aim to become the go-to plant diagnosis app by becoming customer-centric and offering the features customers will prefer most. For this reason, you have decided to implement an ongoing customer feedback analysis process. 

You choose to collect customer feedback through several channels including:

  • App store reviews.
  • NPS, CSAT, and CES surveys.
  • Social media mentions.
  • Customer calls, emails, and chatbot messages.

Once you gather a sufficient sample size of customer data, your business decides to categorize it by topic into the following groups:

  • Feedback about pricing.
  • App bugs.
  • Feature requests.

Once you’ve removed non-insightful data and used an AI tool to group your insightful data into the relevant categories, your business intelligence team generates the following important insights from your data:

  • Trial users aren’t converting into paid users because they feel that the monthly price of the app is too high.
  • Customers are expressing interest in a feature that allows them to browse photos of other plants with the same issue as theirs.

Based on these insights and your BI team’s customer feedback analysis report, your company has decided to lower the monthly subscription fee by 10% and begin work on building the new feature your customers asked for.

Customer feedback analysis and acting on it isn’t some pie-in-the-sky process. It’s something you can do, and your competitors are most likely already doing it.

Customer feedback analysis tools

As we mentioned above, manually conducting customer feedback analysis can be challenging.

The manpower required to go through hundreds or thousands of comments, transcripts, and messages is tremendous, requiring more resources and time than many companies have to spare. 

To help you be more efficient and accurate in your customer feedback analysis, here are some tools worth looking into.

Revuze 

Revuze is a powerful insights tool that uses AI technology in order to automatically collect unstructured customer feedback data from multiple sources, structure it, and organize it into granular, actionable insights. 

Revuze’s machine learning algorithm operates independently to discover relevant topics and trends within the data and analyze sentiment in order to accurately report on customer satisfaction. 

This is a great all-in-one customer feedback analysis solution perfect for implementing a more efficient, scalable customer feedback analysis strategy than what you’d be able to achieve by hand.

Typeform

Typeform is an online survey creator known for being highly intuitive and user-friendly. This tool is great for building and sending out customer satisfaction surveys in order to collect feedback to analyze. 

Power BI

Power BI is Microsoft’s interactive data visualization software that can help you create reports and model the customer feedback data you collect. 

By helping give you a clearer, more visual picture of your data, Power BI can help you better understand it in order to reach valuable insights.

What comes after analyzing customer feedback?

In today’s consumer landscape, it takes more than a great product to win market share. 

The modern consumer seeks an exceptional customer experience from brands that makes them feel seen and understood. 

In order to satisfy customers, win their loyalty, and gain a brand reputation as a company that puts customers first, you need to tune into what customers are saying about you, what they want from you, and what changes they’re asking for. 

Customer feedback analysis is an incredibly powerful process that allows you to keep your finger on your customers’ pulse in order to remain on top of things and continually deliver a delightful experience. 

Best of all? With the right tools, you can automate and optimize these workflows so they can become an integral part of your process without eating up all of your time.

Analyzing your customers’ feedback is a never-ending process. One way to gain insights into the minds of your customers is by conducting focus groups. But to make the most out of them, you’ve got to ask the right questions. Find out more in our blog on the topic

53 Focus Group Questions to Ask for Better Insights

Focus group questions allow discussion to be used as a means of gaining detailed qualitative information. From issues regarding PR to product specifications, nothing brings more information than an in-depth, interactive conversation. Find out below how to ask the right focus group questions to understand the market better.

Focus groups can be highly useful, but too often, you won’t get the information that you need from them. They have disadvantages; whether that’s due to misinterpretations, misunderstandings, or simply recording information the wrong way, you can end up more confused than when you started.

Focus group questions can lead to confusing & conflicting information if not asked in the correct manner.
Focus group questions can lead to confusing & conflicting information if not asked in the correct manner.

The key to great focus groups appears before you’ve even opened your mouth, and that’s writing excellent focus group questions. 

In this piece, we’re going to help you nail this aspect. We’ll talk a bit about focus groups, and discuss use cases, but – more importantly – we’ll provide you with dozens of amazing focus group questions that will help you refine your market research and understand what your customers want and need.

Sometimes, it’s not what you say but how you say it that makes the difference.

What are the four types of focus group questions?

Focus groups function similarly to any conversation or debate you might have. You need to break the ice and introduce the main topics in a way that is easy to understand.

There are four types of focus group questions you can ask, and these should be used no matter the topic that you’re exploring. 

These consist of:

  • An introduction.
  • A prompt. 
  • A discussion.
  • And a way to wrap up the discussion without leaving anything unsaid. 

In that way, focus groups are similar to an essay or article in structure.

Let’s take a look at the four types in more depth and learn why they’re necessary.

Introductory focus group questions

Introductory questions are the foundations upon which your group will form their discussion. 

Essentially, introductory questions set the stage for what is to come next. They’re ideal for ensuring that everyone is on the same page, but more importantly, they allow the group members to relate to one another. 

They should be simple and easy to answer, as it can prove difficult for participants to answer fully and honestly to strangers.

Introductory questions also serve as a means to gauge everyone’s experiences with the topic that you will be discussing. Someone who’s been interacting with you on a monthly basis will have more insight on the topic compared to someone who does so once in a blue moon.

Some examples of introductory questions might be:

“Welcome to our focus group. Today, we’ll be discussing [topic]. Could each of you please share a story about how you’ve interacted with [topic] recently?”

“Hello, and welcome to our focus group. How did everyone find the journey here?”

“We’re [brand], and today we’re leading this focus group. Can you tell me when you last bought something from us?”

In each of the above examples, a context is given, and a simple question is asked. While these might seem irrelevant to the larger discussion, you should always ensure that the results are noted down for context.

Information is power.

Exploratory focus group questions

These are the sparks that will light a fire in your participants.

Exploratory questions are always directly linked to the topic that you intend to gather information on and are designed to provoke discussion among the group. 

These questions should be carefully designed with customer personas in mind so as to steer the conversation in the direction that you desire.

Each exploratory question should be specific enough to determine what your group will discuss but vague enough so that there isn’t a straightforward and easy answer. 

While that might sound paradoxical, remember your aim is to get your participants talking, not simply to get a yes or no answer.

Some exploratory questions that you might ask are:

“Could you give me an example of a bad experience you had with us?”

“If you could choose {this feature} or {that feature} when looking for product features, which would you pick and why?”

“What alternative features do you think we should include with our product?”

Follow-up focus group questions

Follow-up questions happen in the discussion period and are intrinsically linked to exploratory questions. They’ll always come after an exploratory question has been asked and are related to that specific discussion.

Because of this, some analysts might place them within the same category. However, there are distinct differences between the two.

The key difference is their focus. Exploratory questions are vague. They’re designed to provoke a whole host of potential opinions from coming forth. 

Follow-up questions are precisely the opposite. They’re designed to get pinpoint accurate information on how your participants feel, think, and might act. 

Some examples of follow-up questions are:

“You said that you dislike this feature. Why specifically would you say that?”

“You’ve pointed out that there isn’t much flexibility. How would you go about improving that if you were the designer?”

“When you use this item, you said you felt frustrated. Could you tell me a little bit more about what frustrates you about it?”

In each of the above examples, context is taken from the previous discussion and used to form the question. 

It can be very tricky to write follow-up questions in advance since they’re so intrinsically linked to how the discussion evolves. Humans are unpredictable factors, and these discussions don’t always go in a direction that you anticipate.

After all, if you could perfectly predict what people were going to say, what would be the point of a focus group?

The key to forming good follow-up questions is thinking on your feet. It’s not easy, but if you know the topic well, you should have an idea of what information you need and how to aim these questions correctly.

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Exit focus group questions

Exit questions are exactly what they say on the tin, questions designed to end the discussion and wrap up the focus group.

While it might seem easy, there are several factors that you should keep in mind.

  • Not everyone may have gotten to air their opinion fully over the course of the discussion. 
  • Someone may want to mention something tangentially related.
  • Even with hours and hours, you’ll never be able to predict every facet of the topic that someone may want to mention.

Exit questions are designed to solve these issues. Essentially, their purpose is to ensure that you get all of the information you can possibly get out of your focus group.

Let’s take a look at some examples:

“Thank you for your time. Before we wrap up, is there anything that you’d like to mention?”

“Do any of you think there’s something that we missed in our discussion today?”

“If we were to cover other factors involved, which do you think would be most relevant to the discussion we’ve had today?”

Each of these is short and to the point, but also open to interpretation. This way, any information not already given can be obtained with ease.

Are you ready for even more focus group questions?

Focus group questions examples to focus your participants

Describing the four stages of questions in an abstract sense is all well and good, but how do you make it relevant to your topic?

Don’t fret, for we’re here to provide you with some fantastic examples of focus group questions. Each of the following sections will contain several questions on a specific topic, as well as some general advice on how to use them. 

Remember, though, context is key! Be sure to mold the questions to fit your business, your products & services, and your way of doing things.

Focus group questions for new products

❔ “Were we to create an updated version of [product], what features would you like to see added?”

Features are the backbone of most products, and unfortunately, you can’t usually put them all into a single package. This is especially true of physical products but applies to software too.

When asking this question, you gain insight into what features that were left off would be of use to your customers, and by delving deeper with follow-up questions, you can find out why. By using this information, you can make your product better in the next iteration.

❔ “Who or what product do you think would rival any new launch we put out?”

There’s no use in launching a brand-new updated product if your competition surpasses it a week later. Knowing who and what your customers would view as competition lets you know what you have to account for in your marketing and placement strategies.

Remember, customer perception doesn’t always equal reality. You might judge your competition by cold, hard facts, but the general public won’t have access to all your information. It’s entirely possible for an inferior product to beat you out. 

❔ “Would you be interested in beta testing the new version of [product]?”

Not only will the use of this question potentially gain you willing testers that are enthusiastic about your latest releases, but it allows you to see whether your customers are interested in testing products before launch and/or becoming involved in the design process.

Focus group questions for marketing

“How did you first come across us?”

If you know where your marketing strategies are seeing the most engagement, you’ll be able to judge how well they’re doing.

This question is most often used in surveys where you can judge proportions from a high number of responses but is useful in focus groups too. 

The discussion that comes with a focus group can reveal not only where customers first encountered you, but what their thought processes were afterward.

“When you shop online for [product], what sites do you generally use?”

While not directly related to your brand, knowing where your customers would look to find a specific product or service tells you where you should prioritize your efforts.

To use a rather extreme analogy, there’s no use putting up a great big billboard in the middle of New York if your customer base is located in Los Angeles.

“What methods of communication with us do you prefer?”

In the 21st century, there are dozens of different ways in which you can communicate with others.

The problem is, different demographics have preferences for different means, so which do you choose? Well, you ask.

Your customer will generally have qualities in common with each other, and one of those is communication methods. You’re likely to have more than one demographic of customers, so expect different answers here depending on who you ask.

“How often would you prefer for us to communicate with you?”

If you’re anything like the average person, you probably get newsletters & similar email marketing materials that you subscribed to but don’t actually read.

While it’s a harmless nuisance to most email users, what you might not know is that unopened newsletters can actually harm your credibility as an email sender! Oh no!

By matching your customers’ schedules on when they prefer to receive communications from you, you can ensure that they’re more likely to actually open and read them as opposed to simply deleting them, or worse, sending you to the spam folder.

While a focus group is a great start to understanding your customers’ preferences, creating an email preference center where each subscriber can tell you exactly how they want you to communicate with them is a must.

“Would you consider our advertisements intrusive, or say that they know too much? If so, where have you experienced this?”

When dealing with personalization, there’s a fine line between being relevant and coming across as knowing a scary amount of details about you. Computers, which we rely on for advertisement algorithms, aren’t the best at knowing where the line is; bless them.

A key factor in e-commerce is product recommendation, however, you need to balance that against coming across too strongly. Once you’ve identified the areas in which your advertisements put customers off, you can reassess the methods you use in order to lessen further damage.

Customer experience

“How has your opinion of us shifted in the past X amount of months/years? Why would you say that is?”

Customer experience isn’t static, and knowing how opinions are shifting can help you decide whether your CX strategies are working or not.

One thing to keep in mind when asking this question is that time periods and the experiences tied to them are highly contextual, and the specific events happening around that time need to be taken into account.

“Do you use our products more than you did in the past? Or would you say your usage is decreasing?”

Customer interactions are the basis of customer experience. You can’t say you’ve experienced something if all you did was observe it from afar, after all.

This question aims to judge how these customer interactions are progressing and whether or not you need to make changes to your strategies in order to retain customers.

Once again, this question is highly contextual. As the worldwide COVID-19 restrictions come to an end, a disposable mask manufacturer would expect purchases to decrease. This wouldn’t be a CX red flag for them, as the underlying reasons behind the drop aren’t within their control.

“Are there any particularly positive experiences you’ve had with us? What made them stand out?”

When dealing with customers, it’s the standout experiences that affect opinions more than most. 

Let’s say you’ve had a particularly rough day, and the cafe you go to is busy. You don’t expect much, but the person behind the counter notices your bad mood and tries to cheer you up.

You’d remember that more than if they simply gave you your order and waved you away, right?

Standout experiences let you know when your brand went the extra mile and can give you a blueprint as to how to perform brilliant customer service in the future.

“Are there any particularly negative experiences you’ve had with us? What made them stand out?”

On the other hand, there are bad experiences that stand out too.

To use the analogy from above, you’ve had a terrible day, and when you drop by the cafe, your coffee is cold! “That’s it,” you say to yourself. “I’m never coming here again!”

While not exactly a fair and rational judgment, it’s nevertheless the thought process that many of your customers (or ex-customers?) would follow if they had a particularly bad experience with you. 

It’s been proven that negative interactions are far more impactful on a person’s feelings than positive ones, and one bad experience can override dozens prior.

These experiences provide a blueprint of what not to do, essentially, as they’re the events that stuck in the minds of your participants as particularly bad. While it’s unfortunate that they had these experiences in the first place, you can turn them into teaching moments to ensure that they aren’t repeated.

“From your experiences, can you say what you expect when purchasing something from us?”

Experiences create expectations. That’s true whether you’re talking about business or baseball, and the experiences that your customers have with you will shape what they will come to expect from their interactions.

Sometimes these experiences are controllable and influenceable, sometimes not. The key is to identify which parts of said experiences & expectations you can replicate and make a part of your repertoire.

Focus group questions for customer perception

“Would you recommend our brand to others? Why/why not?”

This question lets you get to grips with one of the basic questions of customer perception, whether or not you’re a brand to recommend to others.

While it’s not absolutely essential in business to have customer advocacy, it is a huge boost to your sales ability without you having to spend a penny.

“What made you choose us over the alternatives?”

The root differences between you and your competition reveal a lot about how your brand is perceived. Knowing what you do better than others allows you to maintain an edge, whether that’s an advertisement, product features, or simple availability.

“What would make you choose an alternative over us?”

On the other hand, there are always things that your competition will have the edge in. By identifying these, you can factor them into your product strategy and hopefully overcome any weaknesses it possesses.

“Where would you expect to find our products?”

Are you a part of the eye-level shelf where the premium brands lie or are you on the bottom shelf with the discounts? Are you found solely in specialized stores, or could you be found in a supermarket?

When you know exactly where your customers expect to find you, it can tell you a lot about how they view you.

“When you compare [product] to the previous version, how well do you think we incorporated customer wants & needs?”

This one is applicable to all types of products barring those expected to last a lifetime but is mostly aimed at those with short lifetimes.

Essentially what you’re asking is, “do your customers feel heard?” which has been rated as one of the most essential qualities for a brand to possess.

Focus group questions for competitor research

“If you intend to buy [product], what brand comes to mind besides us?”

When you think of a certain product, there are usually go-to brands that you’ll look for, no?

In most cases, there is more than one brand that fits the bill. Knowing who your customers think of besides you when looking for a certain product allows you to identify your biggest rivals on a practical level.

“Who do you see as our biggest rival? The Xbox to our Playstation, if you will?”

Sometimes you may have a direct competitor, and sometimes not. It’s always useful to see who your customer base sees as an alternative, even if, in practice, they might not purchase from them due to said rivalry.

“Is there any situation where you’d prefer our competitor’s product to ours? Why is that?”

Knowing what your competition is doing is important. Knowing what they’re doing that’s better than what you do is even more so.

Specifics are key here. You should ask your participants to provide information on features, availability, etc., in order to judge these situations and how you might turn them to your advantage.

“What would you recommend we do to become more useful/enjoyable than [competitor]?”

Specifics are good. By narrowing the field to a single competitor, you allow specific strengths of theirs to come to light, ones which you can learn from.

When you delve further into this topic, you can use follow-up questions to find out why these competitors are preferred to you.

“In what areas does [product] succeed where its competitors fail?”

In the world of product design, it’s often more important to be better than the other option than it is to simply be good. By finding out where you stand out, you can ensure that future versions maintain and amplify these qualities to retain customers.

Focus group questions for branding

“When you see our brand, what immediately springs to mind?”

Knowing what gut reactions customers have to your brand is important. These feelings are the root motivations behind every interaction that they will ever have with you. Knowing what customers feel will allow you to shape the way you interact with them in the future.

“How much more would you be willing to pay for our products over an alternative?”

Brand equity is the ability to charge more for products with your logo on them. It’s a form of trust and it shows that customers value your brand highly. 

By asking this question, you’re able to both measure your brand’s value and quantify it with a numerical value (often a percentage).

“What kind of reputation does our brand have when it comes to X?”

Of course, a brand can have a good reputation overall but a bad reputation when it comes to certain practices.

Knowing precisely how you are viewed in certain circles is key to improving your practices, as well as maintaining the ones in which you are held in high regard.

“Can you name a few positive aspects of our brand?”

Another vague question, this one allows you to open the topic to any and all answers, not simply the ones that you anticipated. 

By asking about the positive aspects of your brand, you’re going to know what to continue doing in order to keep customers loyal.

“Can you name a few negative aspects of our brand?”

On the flip side, there are going to be negative aspects, no matter how hard you try to purge them.

By knowing your weaknesses, you can improve upon them. Remember, these are merely the negative aspects in the minds of customers and can be inaccurate!

If that’s the case, you should look to spreading awareness about your practices rather than improving them.

Focus group questions for industry trends

“Have you noticed any new trends in our industry recently?”

While you’re certainly going to want to keep on top of industry trends, there’s always a chance that you’ll miss something or simply not be able to see it because of perspective bias.

Not only can your focus group identify trends that you may have missed, but you’ll also get information on their perspective about what’s going on in the industry and what they expect to change in the coming months.

“What sources do you get your industry news from?”

When you’ve identified where your customers obtain their news, you can look to involve yourself with these sources further. 

Whether that’s interviews, collaborations, etc., becoming more visible to your target audience should be your aim.

“Is there anything in our industry that you think is lacking?”

Industries are made up of businesses, which are made up of people, and people miss things sometimes. 

There’s every chance that customers are looking for something but haven’t been able to find it because it simply doesn’t exist in the industry yet. If you’re the one who asks them about it first, you’re the one who gets a leg up on the competition.

“Are there any individuals or publications that you see as industry experts and would trust their opinion?”

Whatever the industry, there are always those big-name sources or people with lots of letters after their names that are trusted more than anyone else.

Why? Well, mostly it’s because they’re seen as knowing what’s up. They can tell the good stuff from the bad, the value-for-your-money from the ripoffs.

Whether these big names are actually experts, that’s largely irrelevant. The important thing is that your customer base will think they are, so it’s best to either get them on your side or avoid their wrath.

“When you’re keeping up with our industry, what type of content do you prefer to engage with?”

Knowing what type of content your customers engage with is just as important as knowing where they look to obtain it. 

Short-form vs. long-form, essays vs. articles, technical specifications vs. overall statistics, all of these are different forms of content that say and do different things. If you know which of these is preferred, you can keep your industry engagement in those forms so as to appeal to your customer base.

You’ll likely have more than one type of customer, which means you’ll have more than one type of content that is preferred. 

Focus group questions for positive aspects of your products

“When using [product], what are you always satisfied with?”

By using the term “always,” you ensure that you receive the most positive aspects of your product. You can also use this question as a starting point to rank product features and aspects, asking when they are “mostly satisfied” and “usually satisfied.”

“What situation would make you reach for [product], as opposed to an alternative?”

Asking for the motivations behind the purchase will grant you insight into customers’ thought processes. The strengths that are the root causes of their purchase are what you should aim to obtain, whatever those may be. 

“What made you decide to purchase [product]?”

This question allows for any motivation behind the purchase to shine through, even some that you may not expect. Sometimes products have uses that even the creators didn’t think of!

“When you first saw [product], what stood out to you?”

When looking through the eyes of someone unfamiliar with a product, the first things they see will shape their experiences with it. Ensuring that you know which features are the most prominent will allow you to influence that first encounter in a positive way.

“What features of [product] are the most useful to you?

Product purchases are driven by their usefulness. If you know what features are essential, you can ensure that those are preserved and advertised further in the future.

Conducting a focus group vs. a survey

A focus group is a small group of people who are brought in and asked questions about their experiences with your brand. You ask them questions, they answer, and you analyze the results.

So what makes this any different from customer satisfaction surveys or other forms of collecting feedback? Why should I bother bringing a group of people into a room together when I can just as easily send out emails?

The answer to that is simple, and it lies in group dynamics. 

You see, in a focus group, the participants don’t just rattle off answers like a computer. They talk about them with others and can come to conclusions that an individual couldn’t reach alone.

Ever had a feeling that you needed to put into words but never could, only for someone else to describe it perfectly? That’s the type of interaction that can happen in focus groups.

While surveys can give clean, easy-to-analyze answers, they often lack the depth that focus groups can provide. 

If you’re looking to the future and offering “what-if” scenarios, a focus group’s in-depth discussion will give you a much better idea of your customers’ responses to those scenarios than surveys ever could.

There’s also the fact that focus groups usually have a moderator, someone who represents the company and will be actively involved in the group.

They’ll ask the questions, set the stage, and keep things on track. You can think of them as being akin to a courtroom judge, only not as likely to bang on a gavel.

Why are focus groups useful?

So, focus groups can give you in-depth information. But how can they be used? What information can they help you find?

Well, as mentioned before, the key to focus groups is discussion. 

Focus groups are all about diving into the minds of your customers, about understanding what they want, what they need, and what drives them. 

Unique perspectives coming together

Different people will have different perspectives depending on their situations in life. That’s true in any regard, but especially important with respect to focus groups.

You see, different perspectives combined will give you a much clearer picture of the situation you’re in than simply seeing from those angles independently.

Thank you to our friends at CCRC for showing this concept perfectly. Their VIEWPOINTS podcast exemplifies this concept, bringing different perspectives togetherto fully explore topics.

Combined perspectives exemplify the saying “more than the sum of their parts.”

Non-verbal information

There’s a lot of information in what people say, but even more information in how they say it.

Take, for example, sarcasm. It’s hard to detect in writing, and might even cause you to think that a person believes the opposite of what they actually do.

There’s also tone, body language, and a whole host of other indicators that can tell you a lot about how a person feels. Using cameras to capture these provides you with an easily accessible, accurate idea of what’s going on.

The more strongly you feel about something, the more it shows up in how you present your case. You can say that you dislike two individual aspects or features of a product, but if your tone is clearly stronger when speaking about one of those, it’s obvious which one you hate more.

All in all, when done right, focus groups can give you a lot more information than any text-based source of information. 

Interactive questioning

When answering a survey, you’ll often put down the first thing that comes to mind when answering a question.

After all, most people’s aims when completing a survey are to get it done, not to think it over for any great length of time.

The facet that puts focus groups in a different light from other methods is the fact that you can interact and respond to the answers that are given to you. This provides more information, more depth, and a greater understanding of what the person in question is thinking.

Surveys, questionnaires, and ratings are all well and good, but nothing gets to the heart of the matter like a conversation.

Which focus group type should you pick?

It might not come as a surprise that there are multiple types of focus groups. These largely perform the same function but differ slightly in their methods. 

Let’s take a look at the most common types.

Single-focus

The single-focus group is the traditional focus group, where a group of participants actively discuss topics when prompted by a moderator. 

There is no split in the group, no division that sets participants apart from each other, and as such, all participants are treated as equals.

Two-way

In a two-way focus group, you have two separate groups. One discusses the topic, while the other observes the discussion. Following that, the second group conducts their own discussion.

The key to this type of focus group is that seeing the way the first group interacts with the topics can alter the way in which the second group thinks, opening them up to new ideas and perspectives without introducing a direct form of conflict.

Two-way focus groups are useful when you have a split customer base, where two or more demographics might think about your brand or product differently.

Dueling moderators

So, we get the moderators to face off with pistols at dawn, right?!

Hehe, no, that’s not the meaning of the word duel that happens here, but the general gist is the same.

In a dueling moderators focus group, you have two moderators who take specific sides in an issue that’s being investigated in order to prompt discussion of opposing viewpoints.

These types of focus groups are intended to investigate how an opposing viewpoint might affect customers’ opinions. You can think of it as playing devil’s advocate, whereby conflict is purposefully used to gain more in-depth information than you’d otherwise get.

After all, if everyone in the group agrees on a certain topic, you’re unlikely to delve further.

Wrapping Up

In the end, a focus group is about as useful as you make it.

The way you deal with the information that’s given to you by your focus group is just as, if not more important, than what you obtain from it. That’s why having a good brand strategy is crucial to modern business.

Your brand strategy should revolve around your customers – what they want, think, say, and do. Customers are the lifeblood that drives business, and without them, your brand will falter.

Great focus group questions can assist you significantly in creating a customer-centric brand strategy, using the knowledge you’ve gained to become relatable and reliable, and creating a brand identity that truly stands out.

You can find out more about brand strategy and innovation in our guide here.

 

How Convergence Marketing Empowers Your Brand and Customers

Today’s world is all about data, and bringing your data together is the heart of convergence marketing. When every department can access it, your customers stand to win through personalized and improved experiences. Let’s dive in to understand how convergence marketing benefits everyone and how to apply it successfully.

 

Traditionally, a business’s marketing, communications, and IT divisions are kept separate. These sections run independently of one another, interacting only when necessary. 

This allows businesses to operate smoothly without having the burden of double and triple-check everything.

Customer reviews

It’s a good approach, born from times when most management strategies were being developed. Times when keeping everyone up to speed meant sending paperwork back and forth between departments. It’s a lot of hassle, and efficiency dictated people should know only what’s needed for them to perform their jobs.

But we live in different times.

In today’s world, with technology allowing for instant communication and data sharing, this approach might seem outdated. Siloing your departments might be what’s always been done, but that doesn’t mean it’s the only way to go. That’s where a new approach comes in, called convergence marketing.

Keep reading to discover what potential it holds for your customers and company.

What does convergence marketing mean?

Convergence marketing is more of a philosophy than a strict step-by-step approach. In essence, it’s the art of merging your marketing, information, and design divisions in order to allow a unified message across all forms of marketing media you use.

The main idea of this approach is to place the customer at the center of all forms of communication, seeking to ensure that all messages they receive present a single, unified front. 

This reduces the number of mixed messages the customer receives, allowing for greater brand recognition and trust to flourish.

Convergence marketing generally applies the most to digital or digital-supported forms of marketing. That’s because digital information can flow freely and seamlessly, as it’s retrieved from a database within milliseconds. 

As such, attempting to converge marketing strategies that are mostly offline will be very difficult.

Convergence marketing vs. integrated marketing

A similar yet different term is integrated marketing. 

Integrated marketing is all about coordinating marketing messages across different communication channels to increase brand awareness.

While this might seem identical to convergence marketing, this approach only considers the marketing department, ignoring all other aspects of the brand that might serve as touchpoints for customer communication. 

It shares the same idea as convergence marketing but applies it on a smaller, more isolated scale. That being said, integrated marketing often happens naturally when you do convergence marketing, as you’ll likely factor in all communication channels.

Convergence marketing vs integrated marketing

What are the advantages of convergence marketing?

Now you may be thinking, this sounds like a lot of work, and that’s because it is. 

Bringing separate departments of a business together is never easy, doubly so if you want them to be able to communicate in real-time. 

If it’s that difficult to employ convergence marketing (which means it’s likely to cost a decent sum of money), why do it? 

The benefits of convergence marketing tend to outweigh the costs if done correctly, as presenting a unified message on all fronts has numerous benefits. Let’s go over the most immediate ones.

Customer empowerment

By putting the customer at the center of your marketing strategy, you’ll be empowering them to act and provide feedback, giving them a voice in future decisions.

Any customer-centric marketing strategy takes in feedback, but where convergence marketing empowers customers is the linking of marketing and communications channels. Each piece of information collected by the communications team will be passed on to the marketing team and vice-versa.

Two way communication

This has the effect of not only increasing the customers’ voice within the organization as a whole, which allows you to tailor your marketing campaigns appropriately but increasing brand recognition overall.

While it might seem as though useful customer data is difficult to get, it’s been proven that two-thirds of consumers will willingly share their data with you if they think it will improve their overall experience. 

They’re also willing to let you use first-party tracking cookies and other means of observing their online behavior if they think they’ll get something out of it.

In other words, convergence marketing is like symbiosis. Each party gives and takes, and both benefit overall.

Improved customer experience

Convergence marketing necessitates a shared database of information to which all sections of the business have access. 

By creating this cross-transfer of information, various departments of your business will have access to all data collected on customers, enabling them to see previously documented interactions, and provide a better overall customer experience.

A Google report showed that up to 85% of digital customer journeys use more than one form of interaction with you. That’s a lot of data that you might miss if you’re relying only on information from one IP address.

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With all available information on a particular customer, you will be able to learn what experiences they’ve had with you in the past, what approaches they respond best to, and even what might cause them to walk away satisfied. 

Remember, engaging your customers is the best way to make sure they walk away happy! 

Integrated communication between departments

Convergence marketing requires departments to collaborate, which means you need to have a robust communications system between them. Integrated communication isn’t so much an unintended benefit as a necessary part of convergence marketing. 

Once the channels of communication are open, they can be used for more than they were designed for. Departments can share ideas and get feedback on them, ask for help from one another, etc. 

Another factor is post-purchase customer service. Almost 60% of consumers would use social media to get this, but without information from the sales team on what’s been purchased, whoever is running the social media won’t be able to do their job.

Collaborations are also an option. With the traditional siloed form of organization, the different departments wouldn’t know about each other’s plans and, therefore, wouldn’t be able to offer assistance or request adjustments.

One of the greatest examples of inter-departmental collaboration in modern times can be found in Apple’s Transparency Report, designed to keep track of both government and private party data requests to Apple.

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Apple’s aim here was to keep their customers reassured that their data was safe and wouldn’t be sold to third parties. 

In order to achieve this massive task, Apple had to keep a record of any and all requests for data, the reason for such, and whether or not the request was granted. 

This quite obviously involved their communications department. The collaboration also involved their legal team, who determined whether or not to release data in the face of law enforcement requests, and their information security team, who decided how to release the data.

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They pulled all information together and released it in the form of their Transparency Report, released annually. In the above table, taken from their 2021 report, you can see that over 70% of private-party data requests were rejected. Apple is practicing what they preach, being open and honest about its responses to data requests when needed.

Apple scored a major PR win with customers who want to keep track of their data and be reassured that Apple would only release it as a last resort. It’s arguably their greatest collaboration and one that perfectly exemplifies convergence marketing.

Instant access to information

Converging your departments necessitates placing information within a shared database. It also means that your data will take a standardized form and that anyone within your organization who has access can use it.

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Imagine you’re a member of the marketing team who’s had an idea about using some of the latest designs in your new marketing campaigns. Without a unified database, you’d have to:

  • Request the designs from the design team.
  • Wait for a member of the design team to read your message.
  • Wait for the design manager to okay sending the designs over.
  • Wait for the design team to actually send the designs over.

Each of the above steps takes time, whereas with a unified database, you can simply hop into the relevant folder and pull the designs out for use. 

Where and how can you apply convergence marketing in your business?

Convergence marketing isn’t something that you can apply overnight. It’s a slow and steady process that brings different sections of your business together, requiring careful preparation. 

The simplest, and altogether the most sensible approach, is to alter each of your departments’ approaches little by little until they’re aligned with each other. 

Once the processes and guidelines that each part of your business uses are similar, you can begin the sync, allowing them to work in harmony.

Let’s go over what each department needs to do to get the convergence ball rolling.

Where and how can you apply convergence marketing in your business

Marketing department

Convergence marketing, as the name suggests, is focused on marketing. It should come as no surprise in that case that the marketing department will be at the center of your efforts to converge.

When implementing convergence marketing, the first step in the process is to begin documenting and recording your marketing efforts within a database. That is, if you have not already done so.

Marketing department

The next step is to take a look at the way you store information, including but not limited to:

  • Acronyms.
  • Filetypes.
  • Naming conventions.
  • Database layouts.
  • Access protocols.

These all need to be standardized into a form that the other departments involved in your efforts will be able to read and understand. 

Once information is standardized it can be read by anyone who knows the syntax used, which should be provided to all other teams involved. Other teams may not necessarily use the same software as the marketing team, so you’ll need to take this into account.

You might be asking yourself, why is data standardization important? Surely anyone who needs to use the data can simply convert it into a form they can read.

The answer is two-fold. 

Firstly, errors can crop up in translation. The data you end up with might not match the data you started out with, and it’s not feasible to manually check every piece that comes your way.

Secondly, your staff is only human. It’s inevitable that someone will forget to convert data, use the wrong conversion methods, etc. 

If you think this is overstating the matter, please remember that NASA lost an entire Mars probe in 1999 thanks to someone forgetting to convert from inches to centimeters. Hopefully, any mistakes that crop up in your departments won’t cost $125 million and involve crashing objects into planets.

While standardized information is vital for all departments involved in the convergence efforts, it’s especially important for the marketing department. 

And since marketing plays an integral part in your efforts, you should consider convergence within the department.

Internal convergence

Converging your marketing efforts can mean many things. Perhaps the most important aspect you should look at is converging your online and offline forms of marketing.

Due to their different philosophies, it’s common for businesses, especially larger ones, to silo these two forms of marketing into different teams so their operations flow smoothly.

Online marketing is a far more advanced approach, crunching big data from each particular consumer and personalizing ads and offerings based on behavior, interests, and more.

Offline marketing, on the other hand, needs to be far more general. It’s not that you can’t make offline forms of marketing more personalized; it’s that the amount of effort that it takes means it’s not always worth it.

In today’s world, attention spans are shorter than ever. It’s estimated that the average human’s attention span is just over 8 seconds, a drop of nearly 5 seconds from the year 2000. This puts the average human’s attention span at less than that of a goldfish!

This drop doesn’t come as a surprise, given how technology has sped up in the past 20+ years. With this information in mind, it’s more important than ever to grab consumers’ attention early on in your interactions. 

That doesn’t mean you should ditch offline marketing efforts. Some can work brilliantly. Take the billboard below as an example.

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It was created as part of a Minnesota anti-smoking campaign. 

It’s a simple design, with only the website link on the billboard itself, but the pole beneath dressed up as a cigarette makes sure that we know the purpose of the advert. 

The green color often associated with hospitals is the final nail in the board, subconsciously reminding the reader why they should consider getting in touch.

In short, the billboard has conveyed:

  • What service is offered.
  • How to best contact them.
  • Why you should do so.

Online marketing can learn a lot from offline forms. Digital designers may be tempted to make elaborate and attention-grabbing content, but paradoxically it’s best to keep things simple even when you have a theoretically unlimited amount of space.

No one wants to keep scrolling forever, after all. It’s estimated that the average website user stays on a webpage for only 50 seconds, and that’s with an engaged audience, so you want them to take in as much information as possible in that time.

This is where the convergence of online and offline marketing comes into play, with the two learning from one another and leaning on each other. In all forms of media, you have to present information in a very efficient way. It’s not enough to simply make a consumer aware of your product. You need to tell them what it is and why it’s the best option for them to purchase. 

The below images taken from IKEA’s website showcase how simple designs can convey a lot of information. 

This image displays a sense of aesthetics that would make the viewer see IKEA positively while not being too complex or distracting from the point.

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The second section, shown below, uses extremely simple outline images to get the point across, displaying all of IKEA’s services in a readable form.

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Simple, easy-to-read marketing.

Communications

Communications refer to the part of your business responsible for communicating with outside parties. That’s anything from customer service helplines to writing emails to your shareholders. 

In small businesses, this department might be merged with another or simply have its responsibilities spread across several other teams. Still, the principle behind convergence marketing extends whether you have a dedicated team or not.

Your communications department greatly benefits from convergence marketing, with the most obvious advantage being access to the other departments’ data.

With access to all the data your marketing department has collected on a particular customer, you’re better able to tailor your approach to them. This can extend to:

  • The channel of communications.
  • The tone used in communications.
  • The complexity of the language used.

You might think that that’s all there is to it, but there are other benefits as well. Not only can the information you get improve your communications department’s operations, but collaboration with your other departments can provide benefits that neither could produce alone.

Take this creative approach from Capital One as an example.

The company was on the ball with their Capital One Cafes, a re-imagined form of banking where their branches doubled as cafes with co-working spaces and workshops.

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Despite the fact that most banking is done online, there is still demand for in-person interaction when dealing with problems. Capital One saw this and decided to use its spaces as a means of connecting with the community better. 

This strategy was the brainchild of combined marketing and communications thinking. Not only is the cafe a great marketing stunt, but it’s also a relaxed setting that consumers can use to communicate with the business without fear.

Going up to a teller screen can be intimidating after all, and many consumers are put off by the formality of the whole process. By removing the physical barrier between the bank workers and the customers, a more welcoming environment is created.

It’s doubtful that either department would have been given the go-ahead without collaboration. Altering your entire business strategy is extremely costly and risky, but with multiple departments backing it, the alterations went ahead.

Management

Finally, let’s talk about the management side of things, specifically the upper management. While there isn’t much to say regarding implementation, it’s easy to see the benefits, especially in terms of decision-making and cohesiveness.

It’s often said that the upper management doesn’t know nearly as much about the goings-on below them as they should. This is mostly due to how difficult it is to pass information and manage it in a centralized and standardized manner. 

CEOs and COOs make the decisions, but how can they make them reliably when they aren’t getting the complete picture?

In the traditional approach, department directors report to their superiors, passing along different strategies, suggestions, and requests at once. Keeping track of all of that can prove difficult even for the most qualified managers.

By converging your marketing, there is a single, unified goal that the business wants to achieve. This means that anyone who makes these decisions can always fall back on that, rather than having to keep track of all the different strategies your business might be going after.

Convergence marketing is all about passing on information in a clear manner. Better information means better decisions, which make for better business strategies, and a more unified organization.

What tools can help enhance convergence marketing?

If you’ve read this far, you’re probably looking to apply convergence marketing to your organization. There are many ways and tools to go about it. So many that you may get overwhelmed at first.

To help make sense of all of this, we’ve prepared a list of the most useful tools and why they’re useful in tackling convergence marketing. 

This isn’t an exhaustive list. It has to be on the general side of things, as each industry and context requires a different approach. So, if you think you have a better option, we encourage you to go for it.

Social media

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Social media is a powerhouse of the current digital marketing age. It’s a tool that can create a lot of data for you to utilize, while also allowing for better interaction between your communications department and your customer base.

Social media communications is a tricky business, with even the most innocuous of comments being able to spark outrage or dissent among your viewers. By looping back real-time information into your marketing department, you will be able to mitigate any crises.

This is where social media monitoring comes in. Social media monitoring software can assist you in keeping track of your online statistics, flagging any urgent or suspicious data, and allowing you to give feedback and responses to questions rapidly.

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The software is fairly new but has already made great strides. Some countries have even used it to monitor the accuracy of news shared on social media sites, with the aim of keeping their population informed when electing their new leaders.

In short, social media can be used as both a form of marketing and a form of communication, sometimes simultaneously. 

The platform you use will depend on your market, target demographics, etc., but all share the advantage of global reach. Their downsides are also similar, with rapid responses and careful monitoring being crucial.

Mailshots

Mailshots, also called direct mail marketing, is the art of using mass production of a single advert to market to large numbers of consumers at once. Typically, the term has been used to refer to letters or leaflets you send through the post, but it is also applicable to email marketing.

The advantage of convergence marketing when using email mailshots is immense. 

You can combine clicks and conversion statistics, along with other forms of data you’ve collected on customers to further personalize communications. Something you wouldn’t see in a siloed system.

And it’s a big deal, as segmentation and personalization are by far the most effective email strategies.

Consider the following scenario – a customer is after a specific brand of eyeliner, so they send an email to a store, asking if they have it in stock.

If your departments are siloed, the marketing department won’t know about this instance, and future newsletters and promotions will be less relevant for that person.

With your marketing and communications departments converged, this information will be communicated between them, allowing for it to be used in future personalized marketing efforts. The customer gets more relevant content, and you get a happier customer. Everybody wins.

To sum it up, mailshots are all about information. The more relevant you can be, the greater their chance of paying off. Keeping the flow of information open between departments means everything can be considered, not just what the marketing department has immediate access to.

Apps

When you create an engaging app for your brand, customers are more likely to use it for browsing, purchasing, and interacting with your company. 

This gives you heaps of data about your customers in a simple and efficient manner. It’s especially true with apps as they’re usually linked to an individual account, leaving less margin for errors.

Another great thing about apps is they can be heavily personalized according to the data you just collected. Whether that’s to do with how the content in your app is laid out or specific times you’d like to use push notifications. There are even capabilities to change the design with AI-generated art, though these processes are still in the early stages.

All in all, apps are a sandbox for you to create your perfect customer contact point.

Cloud software databases

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Market Report

To move information between the different sections of your organization, you will need a database of some kind. In essence, each division needs to know what the others are doing and why they’re doing it. This prevents your sections from conflicting or producing mixed messages.

Cloud software is a particularly efficient method to use, with many tools to choose from. The main players are SalesForce, PipeDrive, and Zoho. Your choice will mainly depend on your organization’s:

  • Size.
  • Goals.
  • And ability to implement technology.

Let’s go through a list of the benefits that cloud software can provide and discuss why they’re superior to other options.

Scalability

If you’ve ever used a flash drive or similar device to store your files, you know that they can very quickly become full. Data takes up space, and the amount of data you collect won’t always fit into the storage space you’ve allocated.

If you’re using traditional data storage means, you’ll need to physically go out and obtain more storage space, install it, link it to your data collection software, etc.

All that takes time, time in which valuable data will be lost. Cloud-based services offer expansion as your organization’s data storage needs grow. Perhaps more importantly, you can also decrease the capacity when you see a drop in your needs.

Cost-effectiveness

Cloud software is a far more cost-effective solution than traditional forms of information storage. 

For one, you don’t have to store the data yourself in a physical location which would come with maintenance costs. You also don’t have to maintain and replace the storage drives every few years when the technology moves on, which is quite costly.

Another factor that bears mentioning is the time cost of duplicating files, emailing them to relevant people, and of those people downloading them. This might not seem like much, especially with smaller files, but when this process happens thousands of times a day, it starts to add up.

Easier collaboration

As mentioned before, the instant transfer of information between different people greatly benefits cloud software. However, the ability to collaborate goes further than that.

In traditional collaboration, one person might send a draft to a second, who suggests edits and sends it back. Then, if the first person doesn’t like some of those edits, they would suggest something else.

This takes time, causes great delays in projects, and is very inefficient overall. The key issue here is that each person cannot see what the other is doing until the edit is complete, and if they disapprove of it, that’s time and energy (and money) wasted!

With cloud software, the projects can be hosted online in a place that both participants in this hypothetical example can see. Each edit can be reacted to live as it is being done, saving time and effort in both parties’ cases. 

Enhanced data security

Physical means of data storage aren’t the most secure. Once a connection is made, it’s very easy for a hacker to steal data and very difficult for you to stop them without physically severing the link to your server.

Cloud computing offers a unique opportunity in the data security world. Since your providers will necessarily have great data security measures in place (that’s their entire point), your customers can rest safe and easy knowing that their data won’t be stolen.

Cloud software is necessarily shared over multiple parties, which needs to be transmitted in real-time. This makes it an ideal candidate for blockchain security measures, which are considered almost unbreakable. 

While data can be extracted from an external source, doing so requires the consent of all parties involved, so hackers would have to go the extra mile. Furthermore, a complete block in the chain cannot be altered, making most run-of-the-mill hacking methods ineffective.

Wrapping up

It’s not always easy to switch to new methods of thinking, but converged strategies are the future as customers are expecting a more personalized approach.

Convergence marketing ensures your customers will get it, as each department will be able to fetch, understand, and send data from across the company.

The next step would be to measure how customers feel about your new approach. Luckily, it’s something you can measure via advanced tools that provide sentiment analysis, providing valuable insights for your business. Read more about it here

 

How To Ask for and Get Customer Feedback

Customer feedback typically comes in the form of a review, or any other type of comment offered by customers on the level of satisfaction they experienced related to a specific product or service. It can be crucial for a business to understand how to improve or adjust the products or services they offer, and to measure the overall customer satisfaction and customer experience.

Reviews and opinions offered by customers are crucial to the process of making improvements and adjustments tailored to their needs. Aside from getting feedback through online surveys, the opinions of customers can also be found in comments which can be collected using monitoring tools.

Top brands are aware of the importance of feedback from their customers, which is why they consistently pay attention to the voice of their clients. Not only does feedback help businesses measure customer satisfaction, but metrics obtained either through surveys or polls can also help a business create the best experience for their customers.

In addition, most customers make decisions based on the reviews of another customer who has already used a specific product or service in the past. Thus, focusing on the opinions of your clients and making alterations that will meet their requirements will not only increase sales, but also boost customer retention and make them more loyal to your brand.

What Is Customer Feedback?

Customer feedback is the information provided by consumers about a product or service based on their experience. The main use of customer feedback is to discover how satisfied they are, and from this to help to increase the success of products and to assist in making necessary adjustments and improvements. Customer feedback can be collected by companies using polls, surveys, interviews, or simply by requesting reviews. The sales team can also collect feedback by providing an avenue where users can easily share their compliments, complaints, or comments.

However, there are situations where some customers may be reluctant to provide reviews about the product or service they receive. Whether due to inconveniences or busy schedules, some might even provide wrong information or become skeptical about the questions.

It is therefore important to understand how to request and get honest information from your customers.

How To Ask For Customer Feedback The Right Way: Methods And Examples

  • Send a follow-up email 

A common method of requesting feedback from customers is via email. This method involves sending an email after a service has been rendered or a product delivered. You may have received an email requesting your feedback if you have ever bought a product online or visited a hotel which required you to leave your email address.

This process can be automated through different email automation providers, which will guarantee that relevant emails are sent through the most appropriate channel to your customers.

  • Conduct Customer Interviews

Top brands or market research teams aren’t the only ones in need of customer feedback for their products and services. Most loyal customers would be happy to provide their opinion irrespective of your company size, since they are invested in your business.

Seek out customers that would happily provide honest opinions about your business if you want to increase the success of your product. You should also make sure a real person reaches out in order to make them feel recognised, as this will boost retention and the possibility that the review you will get will be valid and accurate.

  • Analyze Recorded Sales Calls

Prominent brands usually have outbound sales teams that make thousands of calls every day. Calls like this can also be used to gather valuable information about your product, and leads generated by these sales teams can provide a more direct opinion about your product even if they haven’t made a purchase since they have nothing to lose.

Analyzing this feedback or recording calls for analysis can be very important in overcoming any challenge that could potentially be discouraging potential customers from purchasing your product.

  • Record Website Visitor Sessions

Session replays can be beneficial in discovering how your website is used, and can reveal the possible reasons you are not generating sales. It can provide information helpful in overcoming this challenge and increasing your conversion rates.

You can use providers such as Yandex and Hotjar to record user sessions, and to discover customers’ activities such as what they click on, interact with, or view. This method can help in generating feedback that will make you see from the consumer’s eye. You will know how they view your website, the distractions they encounter, and other possible challenges.

  • Monitor Social Media Channels

Social media has become a cheap and effective method of interacting with your target audience. Customers are already actively participating in groups or communities on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, and it is vital for your business to become part of this conversation. Respond to comments, send direct messages, and engage with your audience to see how people really feel about your brand.

Ensure that you provide a rapid response to your customers whenever they voice out something negative about the product or service they received. Active social media users are expecting a fast response, so you have to dedicate a resource to each channel. Closely monitoring your social buzz is an easy and efficient method of tracking the latest events and trends that could have an impact on your business.

  • Include Post-purchase Feedback

It’s crucial to discover the feelings and motives of your customers as well as their experiences, especially If you’re running an e-commerce website. But there are also situations where including a survey can distract customers from the ultimate goal of visiting your website –  to make a purchase. You don’t want to lose a potential sale because feedback ends up leading your customers away from making a purchase on your website.

This situation can be avoided by displaying your feedback options after they have made a purchase. After concluding a sale, the customer will be less distracted and is more likely to be interested in providing feedback. This method is very useful when your customers make a huge financial commitment or purchase something large such as buying an expensive item.

  • Delay Asking For Feedback

Although it is good to get a rapid response from your feedback, it is better to receive valid and accurate information that will be useful for improving your products or services. Customers might have a hard time remembering their experience or have a specific viewpoint about the product they purchased. Requesting feedback immediately might only make them provide half-baked answers and not the experience they got in the long run.

Once you begin to discover inaccurate feedback from your customers, you can wait for about one or two weeks before requesting feedback from them. This will give them enough time to have a complete idea about your product or service. You will discover the major problems they face in the long run as they begin to use your product or service.

  • Use Feedback Monitoring Sites

Rather than requesting feedback from your customers, you can simply track what they are saying about your products on popular social media networks. For example, you can use tools such as Yewt or Google Alerts to receive notifications on comments or posts about your business. This will help you discover valid and honest reviews about their experience, especially the ones your sales team might not know about. It is very important to effectively track posts and comments about your brand considering the many online communities and social platforms that are launched every day.

Conclusion

It is important to collect honest information from your customers to know how your product or service is impacting the lives of your customers, and to integrate different methods of improvements that would ensure that you are meeting their needs.

The satisfaction of your customers should be a top priority of every department in your organization, and should not be the responsibility of the sales team alone. Once your customers are satisfied and happy, they will remain loyal, return to make more purchases, and tell others about the wonderful experience they are having.

The methods described above for generating feedback are not only cost-effective, but will also boost customer retention and loyalty for your brand. This can help your marketing team focus their attention and budgets on other promising and new outreaches.

Customer Signals that Product Managers Need to Listen to

Utilizing Customer Signals for Success

We are in the age of consumer empowerment, with the consumer, and their wants, needs, future desires, aspirations, and other factors all now squarely in the center of any contemporary commercial concern. The older days of looking at the customer as a static data point, hopefully a consistently malleable one unbeholden to such things as quality issues, social reactions, or customer satisfaction scores, and sequestering interactions with them professionally within the realm of “customer service” are long over.

Signaling and Customer Reaction

These days, it’s less that the customer is always right now, and more let’s take a real look at who our customers are, who we are as a business or enterprise or offerers of any specific service, and how we can make that entire web of connections flow harmoniously and for long periods of time. Your customers and their decisions will make or break your firm or endeavor, so listening to them and the signals they convey becomes of the utmost importance.

Customers and Feedback

To that end, one of the most important concepts and nodes of commercial data one can utilize for their business remains simply and firmly customer signals, or the messages contained in feedback from consumers, whether in direct response or any other data point that can indicate a customer or consumer’s state of mind. These signals can take place across any number of mediums or touchpoints. Responding to them thoroughly and effectively requires strategy.

What Are Customer Signals?

Customer Signals

So what do we mean, really? What are these customer signals, and why are they so instrumental in the success of any product, service, or commercial concern in general? And following that, how can product managers identify these points of data that illuminate what consumers are thinking and feeling about their products, and their brands at large? Is it all in the sales numbers? The consumer base’s social reaction to a new and polarizing launch? How do the customers react around quality issues as they arise with any given company? Should product managers be talking directly to the consumer base, or otherwise interacting with them? Is there any simpler way to figure out just what the consumer wants?

Customer Signals: Social Reactions as Knowledge

The answer to all these questions all comes down to essentially the same thing. Should we listen and engage where possible with our customer base, and listen to what they’re explicitly saying, or otherwise signaling, if we want to stay in ongoing mutually beneficial and profitable partnership with them? The questions and answers may seem rhetorical, but they are pointing to very real changes in how we understand the classic business relationship between firm and client, business and customer, product management and consumer base. The answer we believe is firmly yes.  

Customer Signals, The Pulse of Now

Customer Signals represent the present and what drives it. Beyond simply collecting static data points from customer satisfaction surveys or whichever customers can be cajoled into staying on the line with a representative, customer signals represent the much fuller picture of engagement and reality as pertains to any product or launch. This list of 6 key customer signals serves as a useful reference point for what a more holistic and arguably more meaningfully engaged system of engagement with a firm’s customer or client base should be based off of.

The Important Questions on Customer Signaling

Firstly, what are customers saying about your product? What directions are the reviews swinging? The classic data points, but they are only the start. How are they comparing your product to your competitors? Your pricing? How is reflected in sales, another major signaling point of data? Whether they rise or fall, tell a tale of quality issues or positive social reaction, each point offers useful data, is a clear signal that can be followed to future clarity and likelier successes.

Human Signals

Our current marketplace offers further and newer yet still fully established nodes of signaling, places where your product and your customers are giving you data you can use to make better products, acquire more and or better customers, such as social media. Are the influencers on your side? Do they know you exist? If they do, how are they talking about you? How do they score you? For that matter, going back to your customers, how are they scoring you?

Signal for Success

The questions seem to often start and end at the same place, but that is part of the nature of what we now understand business and engagement to be, a more human and rounded experience. If you can listen to your customer signals, you stand a far better chance of actually responding to their needs and wants, and creating products that work and succeed in every conceivable sense. 

Customer Signals and Real Life

The new age of business and product marketing and selling demands that we approach relationships with the customer as we would with anyone in our life. We must listen actively and with the greatest possible engagement. We must be able to tell different stories to different audiences, even for the same product or brand. Finally, we must be willing to make tough decisions, and stick with them. As intro to college composition teachers love to point out, ethos, or one’s character and moral and intellectual being taken into a whole, must count. 

Signals and the Future

Firms that are honest, that engage with their client or consumer bases with honesty, integrity, and a desire to know more so that the relationship can be improved, and that are willing to make the mature decisions that define any mature agent in any given system or transaction, those firms are responding to the business demands of the present and future. 

Who’s the Boss?

We are entering an era where product design, marketing, and retailing no longer occurs in a vacuum. We no longer tell the customer what they want, offer the product, and tell them to take it or leave it. That was the past, which carried with it necessary and fatal inefficiencies across the board, but especially when it came to companies and their brand managers assuming the market’s desire. This led to them pushing forth products that, as the saying goes, worked on paper.

Successes and Failures in Customer Signals

Failures to Listen, Failure to Design

CMSwire notes the famed example of the notorious Ford Edsel, though more modern examples like Nokia’s N-Gage abound as well, with Newegg noting that it was “doomed from the first pitch meeting”, for reasons including but very much not limited to “such bad design it became part of the phone’s legacy”, including, most infamously, the requirement to take out the battery to switch out for new games. Such lurid failures, still commemorated in pop cultures decades or even half centuries later, represent the stakes for not listening to one’s customer base seriously, for ignoring reactions from new campaigns, and failing in general to take customer signals seriously. 

Signal Paths to Victory

Indeed, the future can be glimpsed in both the recent responses to successful product launches like the X-Box Series S and X, two systems borne of listening to consumer sentiment. Much of the discussion around the gaming marketplace has revolved around scarcity borne of multiple factors, namely the pandemic, related supply chain shutdown issues, and increased demand borne of locked down populations and consumer bases. Finding the flagship models for the two leading brands, Microsoft or Sony, has proven a nightmare for consumers, but a clear winner emerges.

Signaling and Delivering

Unlike Sony, who put all their future platform eggs in one product basket, the nigh unattainable if well powered Playstaion 5, of which the common speculation has formed as such that you cannot get one, and it arguably might as well not exist. It is by no means a failure whatsoever, but there is a failure in Sony’s ability to meet its consumers needs, as noted by their recent stock drop as well, also borne of Microsoft maneuvers in their shared and competed for marketplace. Microsoft was able to build more consoles, get them to more customers, and, most importantly, when it came to what customers signaled they wanted, more games, better pricing and access around them, and a console to actually play them on, Microsoft was able to deliver, and create a seamless customer experience.

Good Design and Offerings from Listening to Customer Signaling

Products like Microsoft Game Pass seem almost laboratory designed as perfect examples of customer signals being heeded, with the attendant benefits and rewards. Customers made clear, via feedback on product pages and landing sites for specific games on online storefronts, what they wanted, the kinds of games and gaming experiences they wanted, and followed through with sales to back it up. Microsoft in turn knew how to properly parse and analyze these different channels of feedback. 

Listening to Customer Signals Closely

Microsoft knew that not every fourteen year old commenting angrily on an ingame message board that can host feedback as well is the same as their parent who bought the console for them as they write a somewhat more sober message on Amazon or Google shopping. Such nuance is key, as Microsoft can then understand and know who when they write what will actually be buying such. Their sales numbers seem to tell a story of successful signal following and then successfully translating what those signals were saying into the products and services offered as well. 

The Stakes of Signals in One Market

So much of what we are seeing from Microsoft’s successes in the latest generation of the console wars can simply be pegged to Microsoft actually appreciating what it was seeing, taking in all the signals across all channels, and gearing up their offerings accordingly. Also accordingly, it seems like much of the future of the $86B video game industry is in their hands. Such are the rewards of respecting customer signals. 

Signals At Every Scale

Now, not everyone is going to have the scale or resources of a Microsoft, to say the least, or at least as much as any number of antitrust lawyers in the nineties did, but really, the lessons and imports of customer signals, and their ramifications for business, scale up or down to anyone and their concerns. Your firm or product may not have several layers of message boards, or feedback pages, or teams of trained customer service professionals to follow out on each individual client, but that does not in any way shape or form mean the intuitive and market-borne insights and truths of customer signals holds no value for one smaller or much much smaller than any home name brand.

Customer Signals, Past and Future

As we said earlier, these insights often model the contours of good human behavior and relationships, a positive inverse of when trained psychologists sought to exploit human nature and behavior for commerce during the postwar eras. Anyone, any firm can properly and sensitively listen to what their customers are telling them, in all the varieties of ways that those signals can be heard and understood. Customers make it very clear via their signals how they feel about things now, what they didn’t like about the past, and what they want and dream of for the future. 

Conclusion

Customer signals tell this story, and firms that are successful read them clearly, at any scale, for any transaction. It simply requires the hallmarks of human maturity, be it engaged listening, and or simply character, the courage to not do what first appears brave but really is easy, like releasing an unfinished or poorly designed product, but to give your customers what they really want, indeed, what they have signaled to you. Meeting that challenge requires a courage all its own, and signals are the tools any firm or business will use. Successfully meeting the challenge is really just locking down the future for any given firm or product. Those that heed customer signals consistently, thoroughly, and carefully will inherit the commercial future accordingly.

7 Ways To Improve Customer Feedback Analysis

Information is power, so you’ll have a huge competitive advantage if you know how to interpret feedback from customers and use the analyzed tips that can be generated from it. Customer feedback analysis is a powerful tool that helps you take feedback from your audience and turn it into something useful, a clear target for improvements that you can make and complaints that have been made.

Remember, while not all feedback is going to be negative, consumers are far more likely to leave feedback over a negative experience than a positive one. Therefore, don’t be discouraged if the majority of your feedback data is negative: it’s a chance to learn how to be better!

Below you’ll find seven of our best tips for improving analysis of complaints and compliments and how to interpret feedback in the workplace to form a better idea of what the consumer desires.

1. Check and separate the type of feedback you’re getting

When you’re analyzing feedback forms, it’s often just as important to check who is leaving feedback as what is being said. After all, the most important pieces of insight will come from long-term customers who have much more experience with your brand than the average consumer.

However, you shouldn’t be fooled into thinking that newer customers have no insight into things. Pay attention to how much the customer has used your products rather than the length of time they have done so for. Remember that your feedback analysis relates to the study of determination of sales performances and potential, you want to ultimately be looking at what will bring in more revenue.

When checking your feedback, it’s also important to keep in mind that the two ends of the scale (e.g. 1 and 5 in a 1-5 rating) are going to be more populated than the middle, as it’s just human nature to act on strong positive or negative feelings. Because of this fact, you can separate your feedback into the positive and negative kinds which will tell you different things about your customers’ experiences. Want to focus on improvements? Complaint trend analysis is your friend. Want to think more about refining the positives? Glowing reviews that give positive feedback for customer service can help there.

2. Categorize your feedback

If you’re wondering how to improve analysis, one of the best first steps is to take your data and categorize it (and subcategorize). How this might be done is up to you, but one of the best ways of doing this is to look at each step in the customer journey and place the feedback into categories that represent said steps. That way, you’ll have an easier time getting your data analysis and interpretation of customer satisfaction right — there’s no use trying to make improvements if you don’t know what your customers want, after all! You can find market feedback analysis templates and similar online if you’re not sure where to begin.

You can also categorize your data by type if you’re using multiple methods of collection (are you calling customers for feedback, or simply leaving forms with their purchases), by date if you want to analyze the effect of a new change in procedure etc., or by how useful you think it is and how detailed a piece of information it contains. When you’re categorizing feedback a lot of it will go into the non-useful categories, junk or generic reviews that give no actual information being two of them. While it’s always heartwarming to see someone leave a comment saying “I love your brand,” it isn’t very useful in this context so you should filter it and comments like it out so you can focus on customer feedback results that you can extract useful data from.

3. Automated tools and software

If you’re a small business that turns over relatively few products, you might be able to go through all of your reviews by hand and sort them into neat little piles. In the digital age where reviews can be left en masse this approach isn’t very feasible, with reviews for even small brands numbering in the hundreds or thousands. This can be aided with software or AI filters that screen feedback and separate it into categories automatically, doing in seconds what it would take a human all day.

Some automated tools that you can use include text analysis which reads the text present and sorts based on words that are within, and sentiment analysis which uses more nuanced algorithms to try and figure out the meaning of the words and sort appropriately. Of course, neither method is 100% effective as the nuance of language is a tricky thing even for humans, but it should vastly reduce the workload when thinking about how to summarize user feedback in a useful way.

4. Finding trends

Trends are one of the most important things when it comes to analyzing feedback forms, as not only do you want to improve upon your faults but you want to do it in a way that satisfies the most customers with the resources you have. After all, customers drive your revenue. Loud voices and strong opinions are easy to fixate on, but you should keep in mind that if you have one extremely negative review and several dozen positive ones, the negative experience is far more likely to be an outlier caused by random factors than an indication of an ongoing problem.

When you’re deciding how to present customer feedback to your team and get them on board with the issues that are occurring, trends are the best way to do this. Not only are they easy to spot if you’ve got the feedback analysis format right but they’re also indicative of where problems lie and what the root causes that you’ll want to find out might be. When planning out how to collate feedback forms, knowing what categories you’re focusing on will help you know what trends might arise in that data.

5. Root causes

Following on from identifying trends, finding the root cause of systematic problems should be your final goal when analysing feedback forms. From the trends you identify, you can move to the root cause of problems and how to improve them. Of course some causes might not be immediately obvious even from lots of data, and you have things such as survivorship bias and similar psychological phenomena to take into account. Getting a second opinion from your team or from outside assistance can go a long way in rooting out the causes of your issues.

6. Context is everything

When you’re thinking about how to analyze feedback data, and even how to collate and analyze feedback itself, you’ll want to put everything into context — no review exists in a vacuum after all. While you might be tempted to cross-reference your quality reviews for different products, unless they share characteristics there isn’t much point in doing so. If you have multiple platforms or store locations, keep the reviews for each separate. Any positive feedback for customer service in one location won’t necessarily hold true for another, so you need to be careful that you aren’t making unnecessary changes, or worse, actively making the customer experience more negative. 

Of course, some things will carry over such as methodology problems and similar, so the line between relevant and not is difficult to walk sometimes. Analysis vs analyses is a key concept here, as data sets being analysed both separately vs together might reveal different things that escape notice on a smaller scale.

7. Make a plan

Once you’ve evaluated client feedback, identified trends, set them in context and figured out where the root problems are, the logical thing to do is create a plan of how you’re going to tackle them. Getting each problem tackled by someone who specialises in that area is a great way to see improvements, so don’t be afraid to take advice when you need it. You can collect your data and arrange it into a customer feedback analysis report format if necessary, which will help those unfamiliar with the base data to comprehend what’s going on (customer feedback analysis report samples can be found online) so you shouldn’t shy away from asking people’s opinions if you think they might have insight.

Seven Ways Customer Feedback Can Improve Your Product

Customer feedback is crucial in today’s market; consumers want to feel listened to and valued by the brands they interact with. Customer feedback allows you to see into the minds of your target demographics, as it provides you with precious information about what they want from you and how you might go about providing that in your products and services.

This is incredibly useful when building new enterprises and products. Of course, it’s usually not possible to fulfill the needs of every single consumer that you might come across, but general trends and patterns in feedback you receive can help greatly in providing the vast majority of your customers with a great experience.

What Is Customer Feedback and How Do You Use It?

Customer feedback is anything that customers give you after they’ve completed their journey, from idle comments to a list of grievances. It’s best utilized when you have a lot of it but smaller ranges can come in handy too, especially if they’re more detailed. Ultimately it’s all about spotting ways in which you can improve your product and in what ways to do so.

Feedback can come in many shapes and sizes; that may include online reviews on Amazon and other retail websites, or feedback that you request, such as surveys and tick-box questionnaires. In the latter, the information is easier to parse through, but it’s still a lot of data to trawl through to identify patterns. Software and automation can help there, doing things much faster than a human ever could.

How To Get Feedback From Your Customers

If you ask the average person how often they leave feedback, the answer is likely to be “almost never.” Giving feedback is something that takes time and energy, so most consumers won’t think about it unless there’s a particularly strong feeling involved — bad experiences will make up a lot of your feedback! However, you shouldn’t be disheartened by this, as customer service feedback is supposed to help you improve your customer experience (CX) after all, so take it as an opportunity to learn.

Therefore, the question is: how can you collect feedback from your customers if most won’t even think about it? The short answer is that it’s best to reach out to them.

Surveys and requests that are automatically emailed a short time after an online purchase are a good example of a non-intrusive way to get feedback. However, a lot of the time people will simply dismiss this kind of communication, so adding an incentive can boost your feedback numbers. Maybe it’s a chance to win a prize, maybe it’s a discount on their next purchase – a tactic which also encourages more business so it’s a win-win! Never underestimate the power of a good bribe to get consumers interested in giving you your feedback.

Seven Ways To Use Customer Feedback

Once you’ve got your feedback, analyzed it and found the patterns inside the next question is what to do with it? You need some kind of plan to utilize your newfound knowledge into the consumer mind and it’s not always easy to know where to begin. Below are a few tips and tricks for using your customer feedback effectively.

1. Improving Your Customer Support (CS)

Speed and precision are the name of the game in customer support services (CS), with increasing numbers of consumers expecting quick fixes and support staff who know their products inside and out. WIth today’s technology giving access to seemingly unlimited amounts of information at the press of a button it’s no surprise that people are impatient. Having a database of common customer complaints can help speed things up greatly, with solutions being merely a click away. Of course, not every customer is going to take the time to read such information, so having your support staff “read the manual,” so to speak, is a good shout.

2. Taking Your Customer Experience (CX) to the Next Level

A single bad step in a customer journey can often tarnish the entire experience from the consumers’ perspective. This is bad for multiple reasons but don’t fret, it’s more than possible to rectify problems. Negative reviews of your products, services, website, customer support, etc. can be utilized to make future customers have a better time. You should focus on areas where multiple reviews point out a single flaw as that indicates a pattern, and is far more likely to mean you have a flaw in your processes than a simple error or miscommunication occurred.

3. Specialization and Branching Out

Patterns in consumer desires can lead to improvements but of course not everyone is going to want the same thing, people are different after all. If you spot trends of requests or complaints that point to different areas what can you do? You’ve only got one product after all – that’s until you don’t! Specialization is about finding niche areas that you can improve on to boost interest, marketing to more than one demographic by improving your products or services to better suit the needs and desires of said demographics. Some businesses only target one demographic and specialize hard but that comes with it’s own risks and is not recommended unless you know for sure you have a market.

4. Informing Other Buyers

Advertisements were once a new and interesting thing to see, whether on television, in papers or online. Nowadays though the general public is clued into the tactics and techniques that advertisers use in order to make their products seem the best possible, and are far more skeptical when it comes to making purchase decisions based on adverts alone — they know they’re exaggerated and don’t show you the drawbacks. Consumers instead will put their trust in others of their kind, reading reviews and ratings before purchase in order to get a better idea of what quality they can expect. Making your feedback accessible and placing it in a format that’s easy to read is crucial for letting potential customers choose your brand.

5. Making Business Decisions

Feedback from your customers can inform your business decisions too, not just changes to your products or services. From the way your organization is structured to the next big change to your advertisement strategy it’s important to know your target audience, how they perceive you and how they perceive your competitors too. Evaluating the feedback you receive can offer great insights into how to best alter your day to day running in order to give customers the best experience possible, while also providing information on things that are working just fine as is by the absence of negative reviews in that area.

6. Promoting Product Changes

People like to know that they’re being listened to. You need to let your customer base know that you’re listening to them and change the way you do things according to their desires. It’s a cycle, with the reviews and feedback becoming the basis for the next changes that you make in order to improve your product or service over time. Be sure to let your customers know about the changes you’ve implemented in the latest versions, and listen to the feedback that you get on these new changes – rarely does anyone get things absolutely perfect on the first attempt! It’s an ongoing process in a lot of cases, with improvements never quite being “done”. Your launch plan for any new versions should always include responses to feedback.

7. Product Innovation

Product innovation is important if you want to survive in today’s fast-paced market. It’s based on a series of questions that you can ask yourself about your product or service in order to determine whether you’re offering something fresh or if you’ll get drowned out in a sea of look-alikes. The feedback can inform you on whether the product is relevant to your target demographic, whether it’s better than its competitors, and whether or not you can make it obvious that the first two are true. This type of feedback can help you find niches in the market that are yet to be explored! An innovative product is one that brings something new to the table, and feedback certainly helps in that regard by allowing you to spot gaps in the market or see things that your competitors aren’t offering that you could bring to the table.