Welcome, Guest Login Register
loading...
Net Promoter Community > Fred Reichheld's Blog > Tags > rackspace
 

Fred Reichheld's Blog

2 Posts tagged with the rackspace tag

At the upcoming Net Promoter Conference in San Francisco, Rackspace CEO Lanham Napier will discuss how his firm has utilized NPS to pursue greatness. During our recent CEO Roundtable* Lanham explained:

 

For us, NPS is a greatness metric. It’s a value statement about what our company wants to become.   We have lots of metrics for our business but most all of them measure bigness—how big our revenues are, how many employees we have, how many servers we have in our datacenters, how big our profits are, how big our market capitalization is. But to achieve our aspirations, what we really need most is a measure of greatness.  Net Promoter tells us how often we are delivering what we call Fanatical service—service so great that our customers lives are enriched and their businesses generate better results.

 

Too many companies these days never go beyond those traditional measures of bigness. They attach budgets and bonuses to the measures, so employees naturally come to believe that growth alone is what really matters. By focusing innovative energy on bigness rather than greatness, companies eventually fall into the trap of bad profits and bad revenues. Growth inevitably stalls as customers search out better alternatives.

 

Ironically, when a company focuses on greatness, it usually grows bigger. Rackspace, with its emphasis on achieving greatness, is growing at more than 30% per year and has become the leader in its target markets. The firm’s market capitalization has increased more than fivefold since its IPO in 2009. By focusing on greatness (through the lens of Net Promoter), it has outpaced the competition.

 

In 2009, I joined the Rackspace board of directors and have had the privilege of observing Rackspace’s journey toward greatness up close. One of the lessons I’ve learned is that simply measuring Net Promoter at the corporate center to generate aggregate metrics for senior execs, the board and big investors is not the key to greatness. Rather, the real key is distributing that measurement capability to each front-line team so that team members can track how close they are coming to greatness each day—and then make the appropriate course corrections. 

 

A good analogy is the way that global positioning systems (GPS) have expanded their impact on our lives as the technology evolved from central control to a distributed model.  In its early days, GPS was revolutionary, but it was limited to centrally controlled missions. For example, NASA used GPS to guide missiles, and naval operations could use it to provide navigational aid to captains of aircraft carriers.  Today, GPS is available through millions of smart phones and inexpensive consumer devices. Just about anyone can determine their current location, the distance to their destination, and the best route to take—not just aircraft carrier captains, but lone kayak paddlers, drivers, and joggers.   

 

Think of NPS as your company’s GPS for greatness. It lets each individual team discover how close they come to greatness—as measured by 9s and 10s from the customers they touch each day, each week, each month. Through closed-loop feedback, they can determine the adjustments required to “recalculate” and home in on their destination. That is the real power of NPS; that is how companies like Rackspace are revolutionizing the quest for greatness. NPS provides a guidance system that can transform the pursuit of greatness from a theoretical conversation about heroic leadership into a practical grass-roots effort. 

 

*Rob Markey and I hosted the CEOs of Rackspace, Intuit, Schwab, Bain, and eBay for a Roundtable discussion about their experience with NPS. We will be releasing shortly a series of videos from that session.

0 Comments Permalink

During the recent London NPS Conference, a number of companies reported creative methods of delivering “Wow!” experiences to customers in an economically responsible fashion.

 

David Speakman of Travel Counsellors, for instance, described the “Golden Habits” that his most effective agents employ—inexpensive but thoughtful acts of kindness such as thank-you notes and welcome-home phone calls. By building these frugal wows into its IT systems, the company makes it easy for all of its counsellors to remember and implement the practices. Where a typical travel agent touches a customer several times each year, the Golden Habits help Travel Counsellors’ agents touch their customers far more frequently, and in ways that bring delight.

 

Rackspace does some similar things. One Racker described the company’s practice of sending a mini-Racker T-shirt to customers who are welcoming a new baby into the family. Another Racker said that, when a customer is pulling an all-nighter, someone from Rackspace will call a local restaurant and have a pizza delivered, so that the night is a little less arduous.

 

Listening to these creative ideas for wowing customers, I got to thinking about my daughter Jenny’s recent experience when she moved to a new city. We had long been loyal Lexus customers, and I advised her to stop into the local Lexus dealer whenever she had problems with her car. It turned out that the first problem she faced was the transfer of license plates. One of the screws that our own Lexus dealer had used to attach the old Massachusetts plate would not budge.

 

The new dealer told her that fixing it would be no problem, but that the cost would be $200. Jenny gave me a call because she was astonished—think negative wow—by the price. I agreed that it seemed outrageous, and advised her to grab her new plates and get out of there. She then drove to the corner garage that her new roommate had recommended. When the mechanic saw the situation, he assured her that there was a simple fix. He drilled out the old screw and had the new plates installed in a matter of minutes. When she offered to pay him, he refused to accept any money. He told her that he just wanted to welcome her to the neighborhood.

 

She was so pleasantly surprised that she has told this story dozens of times to friends and neighbors.  And you can imagine how much of her business—and how much of her friends’ and neighbors’ business—will be going to that garage compared to the Lexus dealership. In fact, after buying six Lexus autos in a row over the past decade, we recently defected to Audi. That distant bad experience may have been the last straw for us.

 

Anyway, back to my daughter. By investing just a few moments with her, that mechanic created a memorable and welcoming wow experience. And he built the foundation for a long and profitable relationship.

 

The question that I hope more business leaders will be pondering is this: How can we ensure that front-line employees are constantly looking for innovative ways to wow customers without spending too much money? When they do that, it energizes a company’s growth. Frugal wows are not only highly profitable, they are also inspirational, for customers and employees alike.

5 Comments Permalink

Actions