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Net Promoter Community > Richard's and Laura's Blog > Tags > b2c
 

Richard's and Laura's Blog

2 Posts tagged with the b2c tag

"All the women are strong, all the men are good looking, and all the children are above average."

Garrison Keillor, Lake Wobegone Days

 

Most performance measure in business are relative. Market share, growth rates, earnings. We benchmark against others all the time. But with NPS, many companies don't really know where they stand, and where they stand could be the ultimate measure of performance.

 

Several years ago, Bain and Company did some great research to understand how profit pools got divided up by industry, and how NPS played a role in that. They found that every industry had a “bright line”, an NPS score which separated winners from the pack, and that those who entered the winners circle (so to speak) enjoyed a disproportionate share of the profits in their industry. This shouldn't surprise anyone; in most industries profits are not linearly correlated to size or even market share. It's not a fair game - it turns out it's rigged in favor of NPS leaders.

 

What's really interesting to me, however, was that the bright line that separated the leaders was not uniform across all industries or geographies. Rather, it varied significantly by industry. This should come as no surprise: we usually see that Business to Business NPS results are often significantly lower and less variable than Business to Consumer. We also know that customers compare and formulate perspectives based on their expectations, which can vary according to prior experience and price. We teach customers what to expect in our industry, then we give them relative pricing to help set their expectations around our role as discounters or premium players.

 

Companies spend precious little time thinking about issues of comparable performance, which seems odd given its importance. After all, knowing what your score is only matters if you have some sense as to what it should be. This disconnect ripples through the corporation in multiple ways. Companies without a clear sense of NPS “situational awareness” will struggle to set appropriate goals, compensation metrics or process. I'd even go as far as to say that measuring NPS without a clear sense of target is worse than not measuring at all.

 

Part of the problem is the challenge around getting good benchmarks. We do publish benchmark data, so for those industries we cover, you can get an accurate sense of where you should be (and an independent view of where you are trending). But that data will never be detailed enough for some, so they often find themselves doing specific benchmarking studies. Others tell me that they make a benchmark of the data that is published in the book. While I agree it's aspirational to try and reach USAA's lofty NPS goals, it's probably neither feasible nor even desirable, assuming you are not a major insurance provider. Nor is it practical to simply target the top quartile and straight line trend your own NPS towards it as a goal setting technique. You are pretty much assured of falling short initially as NPS just doesn't improve in a straight line.

 

If you are determined to avoid detailed target setting and outside benchmarks, there is still hope. Stack ranked employee, or region or segment performance provides you with the opportunity to challenge the lower performing segments to raise their game to the average. That alone improves your score and starts moving you in the right direction; although it doesn't help you understand if your entire organization is on track for financial success.

 

One other thought. Absolute NPS does matter in one important way. Industries with low "threshold NPS" - a low target that gets you in the winner's circle - have fewer absolute promoters than those where only a high score wins. The absolute number of promoters can be thought of as word of mouth capacity, so their absence reduces the overall positive effect for industry participants and the industry in general. By all means, out-run the other guy for success, but to get real organic growth you still need an army of promoters.

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It’s often the conclusion amongst product companies – and Silicon Valley companies doubly so – that Net Promoter is a soft science that engineers don’t align with. So it was pretty interesting to see Logitech use NPS as a significant part of their product development and improvement culture. Take heed product – centric companies, these guys know how to make this work.

 

logitech.jpg Logitech is the $2+bn company whose products are right in front of you every day. I’m typing on a Logitech keyboard but it was the mouse that roared for Logitech – they dominate the computer mouse market and split hairs around segmentation. I counted 30 mice on their website alone, and that doesn’t include OEM product. Perhaps less well known are their totally cool products around home audio and video under the Harmony and Squeezebox brands – of which my home is littered. A strategy of selective technology acquisition has broadened the product line and reach of the company and, notwithstanding the recent bumps we are all feeling – has resulted in a story of near unmitigated success.

 

From an NPS standpoint, two approaches stood out for me. First, they look at product line NPS and can stack rank the performance of their products. This has the benefit, especially in the mouse line, of being able to quickly identify which products are gaining market acceptance and which are not connecting with customers (excuse the subtle pun). Engineers and product managers responsible for lower performing products move quickly to identify root cause, but the ultimate action might be to cut the product completely.


The second innovation for them was the creation of a customer experience gate through which any new product release must pass. Before any product goes out to market the customer experience team must sign off on it, with prior NPS root cause data as a good basis for predicting its acceptance. And of course, they have blocked product from launch in the past as a proof point that they take the process seriously.

 

Seeing products through a promoter creation lens helps engineers think differently about creating the best possible overall experience. The company has invested in software technology for their webcam products as they realized that, to create a great webcam experience, you needed to have more than just a good hardware device. Logitech has learnt those lessons quicker than most now they are in close dialog with their customers.

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