|
A basic and effective baseline
customer satisfaction survey program should focus on
measuring customer perceptions. How well does your company
deliver on the critical success factors and dimensions
of the business as defined by the customer? For example,
is your service prompt and is your staff courteous?
How responsive and understanding of the customer's problem
are your representatives? The findings of company performance
should be analyzed both with all your customers as well
as by key segments.
Sometimes an organization's
customer service personnel are included in the survey
so that a gap analysis can be performed to determine
differences in perceptions between the service providers
and the customers.
In today's highly competitive
environment, companies need an extra edge to enhance
and build upon their relationships with customers. Many
of our clients find that high quality customer service
can make the difference in winning and retaining customers
or losing them. Research shows that organizations
that employ customer satisfaction research that goes
beyond customer satisfaction, loyalty and retention
measurements to identify and measure perceived customer
value can deliver much more return on their research
investment.
By determining which factors
produce the highest perceived value by customers, research
can provide the knowledge to both correct deficiencies
in today's customer service and assist in building high
value strategic, customer service offerings for the
future. Special sets of questions can built into surveys
to learn about the perceived value of services and how
a company stacks up against its primary competitors
in delivering on the critical value factors.
- Section 1. Overall
dimension rating questions
- Section 2. Ratings
by service dimensions and specific service factors
- Section 3. Respondent
demographics
Section 1. - Overall Rating
Questions
This first part of the survey
(or the first part of each dimension rating section)
will typically have an overall rating question for each
major customer service dimension plus one or two related
open-end questions at the end of the dimension's section.
Scale and question examples:
(5 point scale - Excellent, Good,
Average, Fair, Poor)
(5-point scale - Very Satisfied, Satisfied, Neutral/Not
Sure, Dissatisfied, Very Dissatisfied)
Please rate ABC's customer service
overall.
Please rate ABC's customer support
overall.
Please rate ABC's technical product
training courses overall.
Please rate ABC's documentation
overall.
Overall, how satisfied are you
with ABC's customer service?
Overall, how satisfied are you
with ABC's customer support?
Overall, how satisfied are you
with ABC's customer technical product training courses?
Overall, how satisfied are you
with ABC's documentation?
In addition, reference and retention
questions may be added.
Examples:
How likely would you be to
recommend ABC's customer service to a friend (or colleague)?
How likely would you be to buy
or use ABC's customer service again?
Open-end questions in section
1 allow respondents to elaborate on their overall ratings.
Comment question examples:
What did you like (like best) about
ABC's customer service (support, technical product
training courses, documentation)?
What did you dislike (dislike most)
about ABC's customer service (support, technical product
training courses, documentation)?
How could ABC improve their customer
service (support, technical product training courses,
documentation)?
Dimension factor rating questions
comprise most of the survey. Examples of service dimension
factors for the dimension of personal responsibility
such as promptness, courtesy, accuracy and thoroughness
can each be rated by your customers. The individual
factors' ratings combine to produce an overall average
rating for the dimension.
By combining these in a gap analysis,
the relative significance of performance compared with
importance can be judged.
However, this approach has several
drawbacks. It doubles the number of dimension questions,
making the overall survey longer, and that may affect
response rates. What customers rate as important
may, in fact, not be what actually affects their behavior.
They may say thoroughness is most important while responsiveness
may more likely affect their choice of service supplier.
A more reliable correlation is that
between dimension performance ratings and the overall
customer satisfaction rating or customer retention rating.
Another consideration is rating
dimension performance against your competition. While
this may be very valuable to ask in some intensely competitive
environments, it may not be valuable or appropriate
to ask in other environments - and it does add another
question per dimension.
Dimension question structure:
Though dimension questions can be structured in a number
of ways, it is best to use one question structure as
much as possible throughout your survey. Examples of
question structures:
How satisfied are you with
___________?
(Very Satisfied, Satisfied, Neutral, Dissatisfied,
Very Dissatisfied)
Please rate __________ customer
service.
(Excellent, Good, Average, Fair, Poor)
ABC provides good customer
service.
(Strongly Agree, Agree, Neutral, Disagree, Strongly
Disagree)
How often does ABC's customer
service exceed expectations?
(Very frequently, Frequently, Not Sure, Infrequently,
Very Infrequently)
To what extent does ABC's
customer service exceed expectations?
(To Very Great Extent, To Great Extent, To Some Extent,
To Little Extent, To Very Little Extent)
- Overall
customer service
- Helpfulness
- Friendliness
- Support staff that solves problems
quickly
- Provides poor support
- Very talented professionals
- All the necessary resources to
service you
- A very valuable service resource
- Competent
- Unprofessional
- People that are easy to deal
with
- I receive the support I need
from my ABC field engineer to resolve any service
problems
- Ethical
- Dishonest
- Support staff which gives you
a hard time
- Staff which is interested in
your comments and suggestions
- Phone calls returned quickly
- People answering the phone are
polite
- People on the answering the phone
are cheerful
- Knowledgeable operators
- Listening to the customer
- Attentive to customer complaints
- Close to its customers
- Unwilling to go the extra mile
for its customers
- Ignores customer suggestions
- Impossible to get satisfaction
unless you go to the top
- In tune with the needs of its
clients
- Prompt in dealing with customer
complaints
- Efficient
- Easy to get information on the
phone
- Poor customer phone support
- People who answer the phone have
clear, easy to hear voices
- It takes a long time to reach
the right person on the phone
- You are often put on hold for
a long time
- Telephone support personnel who
do not seem to have time for you
- Attention to detail
- Helpfulness
- Available support offerings fit
your needs
- Phone support quality overall
- Ease of gaining access to support
- Time to reach technical personnel
- Effectiveness of answers/workarounds
- Access to technical support
- Overall rating of the course(s)
- Courses taken personally
- Courses taken by people I supervise
- Reasons you decided to attend
a course
- Reasons you decided not to attend
a course
- Reasons you decided not to send
people to a course(s)
- Appropriate course offering to
meet their needs
- Effectiveness of the training
courses in improving employee performance
- Effectiveness of the training
courses in developing employee growth
- Do test scores influence status
of employees - (pay, promotion, etc.)
- Rate the quality of the learning
materials (individual media)
- Length of courses
- Amount of classroom time
- Amount of hands-on time
- Training facility
- Course delivery (instructors'
theoretical knowledge, hands-on knowledge, etc.)
- Instructors' presentation/communication
skills
- Encouragement of participation
- Good use of time in the class
- Difficulty of tests
- Test process
- Structure of tests
- Levels of achievement
- Knowledge your (various positions)
have of ABC products
- Skills your (various positions)
have to administer, operate and service ABC products
- ABC courses are a good educational
investment considering the tuition/travel cost
- ABC courses are well presented
- Knowledge gained has had a direct
impact on my (my business) performance
- Skills gained have had
a direct impact on my (my business) performance
Tracking Dimensions:
- Compared to one year
ago, is ABC's customer service (any dimension):
(Better, Worse, Same)
These questions provide the
ability to analyze results by respondent segments and
sub-segments. For a customer service satisfaction survey,
demographics may include a variety of variables which
would classify customers. For example:
- Geography/location
- Type of business
- Position title
- Function/role-responsibilities
- Types of product(s) used
- Types of service(s) used
- Frequency of product/service
use
- Spending range on products/services
- Sex
- Age range
- Income range
- Highest education level
|