Welcome, Guest Login Register
loading...
Net Promoter Community > New York Conference Blog 2010 > Tags > services
 

New York Conference Blog 2010

5 Posts tagged with the services tag

“The quicker you can drive Net Promoter data into the tools your sales people use every day, the more successful you’ll be,” advised Sandy Anderson, VP Sales Operations at Experian. Integrating customer feedback from Net Promoter surveys into regular processes has aided in engaging the sales organization at Experian.

 

Sandy Anderson.JPG

 

Sales employees are able to see scores, open-ended comments – the good, the bad and everything in between. Sandy’s shared her motto “All feedback is good. It gives us the opportunity to make a change."

Once the surveys are complete, Experian shares the results broadly within the organization. Each area must create action plans based on their customers’ feedback.

 

They’ve even begun sharing these action plans with clients. Clients learn about the client loyalty program – what it is, why Experian is doing it, how they’re using the feedback.

 

They share the results with the client and don’t hold anything back good or bad. It sounds like a very candid conversation:

 

“Here’s the items you told us we’re failing on and here’s what we propose to do about it. Does this sound right?”

 

Now…I know these conversations can’t always be easy. But, I imagine that Experian is becoming a very trusted partner for these clients.

 

Download presentation

0 Comments Permalink

The tellers at Wright-Patt Credit Union check their email religiously at 3:00. Why, you ask…that’s when the Exceptional Service emails are sent each day. Employees, or partners, that provided an exceptional experience to members interacting with the credit union the day before, receive special recognition through these “thank you” notes. This is just one component to the credit union’s Net Promoter program.

 

Amanda Minehart.JPG

 

Amanda Minehart, Service Quality Manager at Wright-Patt Credit Union, shared their experience with beginning their Net Promoter journey. “At the credit union, we measured everything…how many transactions we did, how many errors, call times, the list went on and on. But, we never measured what happened next. What about when the member left? How did they feel about their experience? What is the story they’ll tell. That’s when we decided that we needed to create a Net Promoter program.”

Now the credit union sends daily post-transaction and quarterly relationship surveys to gather member feedback to help them answer these questions. This feedback is collected and reported via online dashboards, monthly and quarterly meetings, and the partner intranet.

 

Member Centers, or branches, post boards that track how many Exceptional Service emails each partner receives. Employees receiving the most emails are recognized with Star Promoter awards and other small awards are given out. They’ve also been participating in weekly competitions called the Net Promoter League. Each week Member Centers “play” each other for top NPS for the previous week’s transactions. This all culminates in a NFL-style playoffs and Super Bowl. What does the winner get? A huge trophy and bragging rights…till next season.

 

At Wright-Patt, you have one of two jobs:

 

  1. Serving members
  2. Serving someone who serves members

 

So, in October, Amanda rolled out the Service Excellence Ambassador program as a way to engage the second group, back-office partners. The Service Excellence Ambassador (a cute orange cartoon, cardboard cutout) is passed from partner to partner to recognize staff for providing great service to each other. He arrives with a note that thanks them and describes why they were chosen. The partners love to take photos with him – he’s even been to an Ohio State football game – and post them on the Service Excellence Ambassador blog page.

 

Download presentation

0 Comments Permalink

Olivier Mourrieras – Customer Insight & Advocacy

 

Oliver Mourrerias.JPGBuilding a customer loyalty program is about business transformation. Building the right strategy, access to resources and obtaining buy-in from across the organization are just a few of the many challenges that most executives and program managers face when building out (or expanding) a customer loyalty program. This afternoon Olivier Mourrieras of Orange Business Services shared with us their journey to build stronger relationships within their strategic top accounts.

 

Orange Business Services is a leading global telecommunications provider. Orange employs over 30,000 within their B2B segment and service over 6,000,000 business customers. Over 90% of OBS’ annual revenues come from approximately 300 strategic accounts.

 

While Orange has had a customer loyalty program in place for 6 years, the first couple of years with the program were not without their challenges. Some of the initial challenges highlighted by Olivier included:

  • No understanding or insight into the end-to-end customer lifecycle
  • A fragmented and siloed business organization
  • Fragmented and siloed approach
  • Limited employee mobilization
  • More “spectators” than “doers”
  • Lack of executive sponsorship and leadership around the customer experience

 

Through Orange’s partnership with Satmetrix, they have embarked on a journey which has taken over four years to implement but has reaped considerable benefit to not only Orange customers, but to Orange’s bottom line. By using principles of the Net Promoter Operating Model (NPS model), Orange had developed a transformation program which consisted of the following themes:

  1. Development of  a transformational program which has taken advantage of Orange’s global business strengths while improving upon weak areas that have had a negative impact on customer loyalty
  2. Development of a customer centric approach based on a variety of satisfaction feedback surveys and other listening posts including customer loyalty boards and user groups.
  3. Pragmatic prioritization which drives actions prioritized on root causes and loyalty drivers
  4. The tying of customer loyalty results to variable compensation.  CLI accounts for 20% of all variable compensation!

In order to align the right level of support to spearhead these themes, Orange needed to obtain proper executive sponsorship.  With the proper positioning and diligence, the program team was successfully able to enlist the support of their CEO.  Having this level of advocacy has been critically instrumental in the adoption and growth of the Orange program.  Since Orange’s core program team consists of only 5 full time individuals, a “top-down” strategy was necessary to ensure success.

 

As the program has taken root and built critical mass, Orange has integrated the Net Promoter Operating model within their sales and account management organization through the development of the following key initiatives:

 

1. (One to One) - Development of an integrative closed loop process which includes individual customer service improvement plans to be established and reviewed periodically.  This process includes an initial internal review meeting, development of individual action plans and an account team meeting with the customer to review feedback results and agree to a documented action plan.

 

2. (One to Many) – Use of feedback in aggregate to analyze the varying needs across Orange’s broad base of customer segments.  Given the diversity across Orange’s business, this process mitigates from “one size fits most” approaches to improving customer experiences.  After all, not every customer or customer segment can be treated identically.

3. Development of a Customer Management Model (CMM) based on key components of the Net Promoter Operating Model.  This included the establishment of:

  • A clear governance and communication structure
  • Clearly defined and documented escalation paths along with effective coordination to manage the Orange/Client relationship
  • To ensure trustworthy data and to mitigate against gaming, requiring the Customer’s validation of the survey sample.  This process required that all survey contacts must be validated by the most senior customer interface so that optimal penetration has occurred.

 

So now that Orange has spent 4+ years and considerable effort in rebuilding and strengthening their program, what’s the ROI?  The ultimate test was the development of a close linkage and positive correlation between sales pipeline and CLI trends within their top 200 strategic accounts. Through this study, Orange has identified  a 6-month lag between CLI and pipeline revenue growth. In one particular customer account the CMM process identified service management issues, dissatisfaction with delivery expectations and a lack of a strategic approach. This insight was instrumental in developing an action plan with the client which consisted of quarterly strategic reviews and more proactive expectations setting. CLI scores with this client improved from 6.5 to 8.5 in one year while pipeline revenues increase 300% in this same period.  From 1H09 to 2H09 Orange also saw 42% total revenue growth with this client. Now that’s putting money where your mouth is!

 

Download presentation

0 Comments Permalink

Rob Markey of Bain & Company hosted this compelling discussion of customer loyalty in the financial services sector, with three well-known companies that are actively using Net Promoter to get closer to customers and reposition for customer-led growth following the tumultuous events of the past 18 months.


Rob opened with a sobering description of the run-up to the late 2008 financial meltdown. I won’t recount the gory details, because I’m sure most of us remember it all too well. What I heard yesterday, which was new for me, was a view of the amazing pressure and challenges that was taking place within the industry.
With that “pressure cooker” context, Rob turned the discussion to the customer. What happened with customer relationships?

 

rob_markey_panel.JPG


I have summarized below some of the key turning points and guiding principles that each of these leaders used to help their companies maintain a focus on the customer when it was perhaps the hardest environment for this.


Susan Sobbott, American Express OPEN


Susan described their step by step escalation of cost controls and credit availability, in reaction to the major shifts they were tracking in the market. Their base of customers had traditionally been very unlikely to default, but many of these customers who had a lot of assets (such as multiple homes) were suddenly in a very different credit position. So they were forced to take credit back from some of these customers.


The good news is that Amex was able to avoid cuts in customer-facing staff. They understood who their best customers were, and put a fence around them to protect them. In addition to their in-house models of creditworthiness, they also did a manual reviewed on every one of our their key customers to make sure they were being as fair as possible. We also were very protective of their rewards programs, since this is so central to their value proposition.

 

When it came to NPS, Susan described an interesting dilemma. Her organization had traditionally focused customer feedback and Net Promoter on the feedback of their most important target segments. But as the economy changed, more and more customers moved into the high credit risk categories, skewing their segmentation approach. Were these customers just temporarily out of their target? What they learned was that they needed to go back to this segment and understand how the relationship had changed when credit lines had to be reduced. They also improved the speed of their feedback loop…moving from quarterly to monthly surveys, which has increased the value of the feedback they are getting. They learned that these customers cared a lot about their relationship with the company, and that the customer wanted to protect that long-term relationship.


How could they work with their customers for the long-term? One interesting example Susan gave was in their outreach to help small businesses figure out how to grow in the difficult economic climate:


“We were lucky to have built a social network for small business prior to the downturn. So we were able to leverage that, since no one else was providing information for small businesses. We were able to step into that role as an information resource.”


Susan believes the actions they took to reduce risk, while painful at the time, have now put them in a better financial position to extend credit as the economy improves, especially for their best customers.

 

Isabelle Conner, ING


Isabelle described the far reaching nature of the recent financial events for her industry, and her company. For the first 18-and-a-half years of ING’s 20 year history they were growing and profitable. Then, almost overnight, they found themselves in a similar boat to many other financial institutions, struggling with massive changes in the market.


When it came to customer relationships, they made no changes across the board that would impact the customer negatively. Instead, they understood that as a highly decentralized organization, each unit had to make prudent decisions about extending credit. They had to balance their desire to support long-term customers with additional credit, and the financial reality of the market situation. As Isabelle put it, “Each business looked inward and had to figure out how to get through it.”


One thing that was consistent for her, throughout the financial crisis and still today, is the customer experience that they need to deliver. She summed it up nicely by saying that customers want it to be “easier” to do business. This theme of making ING easier than ever to interact with is at the core of their strategy, and their efforts with Net Promoter.


Now that the firm is looking toward the future, her main focus is on re-engaging their 120,000 employees across the business. Helping them to make “easier” part of their mindset and the way they behave every day. As Isabelle put it:


“For about a year we were in denial. But we are getting a lot of new engagement around what customers really want, which is for it to be easier to do business with us. Customers want transparency and they also want trust. And what we’ve learned is that by making things easy, you also build trust.”


John Marcante, Vanguard


John explained that, on one level, his firm was fortunate because they don’t hold investments. Therefore, the crisis caused less of a cash concern for Vanguard than for some other financial players. But there were huge challenges to manage when it came to customer loyalty and perception.

 

For example, when the market went down 45% in March 2009, they were faced with tons of people calling in with great concern. Their response was to invest a lot of time in increased customer outreach. The last thing they wanted was for people to overeact and make a bad short-term decision. As John put it, “If you weren’t being proactive about reaching out to customers, you were likely to lose them with portfolios moving in a negative direction.”


John explained how they experimented with one change that, ultimately, impacted customer relationships too much, and they had to reverse course. They had historically provided their most important high net worth clients with short-term coverage for check overdraws. As John explained, “we had never had someone who didn’t pay us back.” When they stopped this courtesy practice, it only took them 2 weeks to realize this was the wrong direction to go. “We saw it show up in the NPS, and realized it was an issue. The survey came back and people were saying, ‘Now that times are tight, you are running away.’” They understood quickly that they needed to stay focused on the long-term customer relationship.


Rob asked John what Vanguard is doing to position itself for success as things improve.


John described their aggressive approach to retaining customers, since it’s so much more effective to retain customers than to acquire new ones. Much of this is focused on coaching the front line on how to provide excellent service, no matter what the situation. He told an amazing story about a 2 hour call with a husband and wife couple, where the husband was getting ready to go in for brain surgery. Their goal was not to cut the call short. Instead, the entire team celebrated that call, because ultimately, it’s times like that when the way you act truly matters.


As John put it, their end goal is to activate their Promoters. “Ultimately, if we can help customers share their stories, we believe it will come back to us in good ways.”

0 Comments Permalink

Oliver Bendzsa - Export Development Canada

 

I’m very pleased to see that this year’s conference is making the split between B2B and B2C, allowing us more time to focus on the unique challenges we face in a B2B environment.

 

Oliver Bendzsa.JPGOliver’s case study of a governmental financial services organization certainly resonates in today’s context of low confidence in the efficiency of many of those institutions. EDC is Canada’s credit agency dedicated to helping exporters and investors develop their overseas business. What’s unique about EDC in their domain is that they operate on commercial principles. Highlighting how advocacy has driving growth during EDC’s journey towards ‘Customer Centricity’.

 

Oliver commented on the key benefits from their program:

 

      • constructive feedback has allowed them drive diversification of their portfolio and broaden their offer
  • they’ve been able to validate that customers are repurchasing more and buying more of their wider portfolio
  • they’ve seen a strong boost in customer referrals. Previously 20%, the referral rate has now reached 50% allowing EDC now to be more selective and effective in their marketing efforts
  • employees love working with Promoters. Employee moral has grown sharply, attrition rate is down and EDC is now consistently one of the top 100 employers in Canada.

 

Likening it to snowball effect where employee engagement has grown rapidly, EDC found that putting the information in the hands of employees plus liking it to employee compensation has strongly supported their engagement. However, Oliver cautioned that the link with compensation can in some cases push people to focus too much on the validity of the measure and not enough on the actions.

 

Looking at the main action areas we heard about several key initiatives at EDC that has resulted in a progressive growth of ~ +40 points during the 3 years since launching the program:

 

  • speed was identified as a key driver for the exporters; being able to get a fast answer from EDC is critical for their ability to catch market opportunities. Adoption of ‘Lean’ methods helped to optimize EDC processes and remove the ‘wasted space’.
  • multiple legacy systems often obscured the real customer picture causing inefficiency and inconsistency in following-up the feedback. Oliver highlighted that ‘cleaning’ the customer database has to be a priority so that you can be clear on who you are talking with. A dedicated project to implement unified CRM helped EDC a lot there.
  • recognizing that EDC’s initial sample approach wasn’t working (250 accounts but only 25 responded) Oliver migrated to a census approach guaranteed a more representative picture that could really be used to drive the right actions.

 

Oliver ended on a very interesting note. We heard from him that closing the loop means more than calling back detractors (which they do, of course). It also means thanking customers for taking the time to give their feedback. Oliver ran a short video message, prepared by EDC’s senior leaders, that will be shared shortly with their customers. It seemed a great way to demonstrate the sincerity of the company to really act on their customer’s valuable feedback.

 

Download presentation

0 Comments Permalink