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Fred Reichheld's Blog

2 Posts tagged with the intuit tag

The Love Metric

Posted by FredReichheld Aug 18, 2011

Rob Markey and I had the pleasure of speaking with Intuit CEO Brad Smith this week in preparation for our upcoming NPS CEO roundtable. (The roundtable will be taking place in late September, so keep an eye out for video highlights shortly thereafter.) We asked Brad if he could comment on some of the benefits Intuit has achieved with the Net Promoter system. His response warmed our hearts.

 

"In my 25 years of experience in business, I have never seen a more powerful approach.“ Brad explained why it’s so powerful for Intuit: “NPS breaks down the silos and organizational boundaries so everyone can focus on the customer. From the board of directors and external audiences all the way to product engineers and frontline phone reps, NPS helps drive our culture toward our True North. It helps us stay on mission—to be a growth company that improves people’s lives.”

 

Rob and I had read an article in the June 2011 Harvard Business Review by Roger Martin, dean of the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management, entitled “The Innovation Catalysts.”

 

Dr. Martin wrote, “Intuit’s transformation arguably began in 2004, with its adoption of the famous Net Promoter Score . . . developed by Fred Reichheld, of Bain & Company.”

 

So we asked Brad if NPS had indeed played a role in Intuit’s accelerated innovation process. Brad replied, “Our product guys have completely embraced Net Promoter, but they don’t usually call it that. They call it the love metric. They use it as a threshold to determine if a product design is good enough. Will customers love it so much that they will recommend it to friends?”

 

I can’t wait to hear more from Brad about the love metric at the September CEO roundtable. In the meantime, I hope readers will visit our website to learn about the other exciting developments that will be taking place around the September 20th launch of our new book, The Ultimate Question 2.0. In particular, I recommend viewing a brand-new three-minute video in which we provide a sneak preview of the book’s contents.

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One of my partners at Bain & Company asked me to summarize the most important lessons I learned at the San Francisco Net Promoter Conference. That was a tough request because there were so many impressive sessions, so many insightful case studies, and so many examples of barriers encountered and problems solved. Distilling everything down into a succinct summary of a few key lessons required some time to reflect.

 

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Now that I have had time to ponder, I would say that the most important lesson is the remarkable level of progress that can be achieved with NPS. Walt Bettinger, CEO of Charles Schwab, showed us that his firm achieved a 50 point improvement in NPS between 2004 and the end of 2008. In that same period, Schwab’s retail business moved from a position of negligible growth—indeed, it was one of the weakest performers among large brokerage firms—all the way to top of the industry. In 2008, Bettinger added, Schwab’s net new assets exceeded the combined net new assets for all of its major competitors. Now that is impressive progress!

 

John Heyman, CEO of Radiant Systems, described how his company transformed its culture through its implementation of Net Promoter. Radiant Systems supplies retailers and hospitality firms with automated cash registers and related front-of-shop systems and is the leader in its industry. Heyman described how his team managed to improve NPS from negative 37% in 2005 to plus 38% in 2008, while growth accelerated to more than 25% per year. We heard similar stories from senior execs at Zappos, Logitech, and Intuit, among others.

 

What did all of these success stories have in common?

 

  1. The CEO owned the NPS initiative personally and made sure it became a top priority for the entire leadership team.
  2. A process for closed-loop learning was established for front line teams. Executives engaged directly in conversations with detractors and promoters to fully understand root causes and likely solutions.
  3. Bad profits were identified and eliminated.
  4. Reliable measurement processes were developed to establish accountability for front line teams and for executives.
  5. Net Promoter implementation was viewed in terms of transformational change management, not simply a process for continuous improvement
  6. NPS became more than a report card for the customer experience; it became the practical scorecard for how well the firm was living up to its core values.

 

Yes, the most important lesson I learned in San Francisco is that when leaders follow these rules, they can generate remarkably impressive results.

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