Talk to customers directly
You can review as many calls as you want, talk to your CSMs and AMs for hours, and youâll still never really understand the customer experience of implementation and onboarding.Â
Want insight into the customerâs thoughts? Go straight to the source. Whether you opt for phone calls or a survey, you should gather feedback from customers regularly and discuss their feedback with your team.
CSAT surveys
As you gauge customer satisfaction, you should have a framework in place to get the feedback that will be most useful to your sales org. One useful method is to use a standardized customer satisfaction score (CSAT). Qualtrics, a leader in experience management, offers these guidelines for CSAT surveys:
- Ask for an overall company rating or net promoter score (NPS) first.
- Include questions with open-ended responses.
- Optimize the survey for mobile devices.
- Keep the survey shortâa majority of CSAT surveys include fewer than 10 questions.Â
- Avoid industry jargon.
Donât wait until after the sale to send your surveysâyou should be collecting customer satisfaction data throughout the sales cycle. Send the survey after important touchpoints. Your goal is to compile feedback to improve the buyer experience overall, but donât forget to address customer feedback individually too. Respond quickly and personally to customers who give you strong negative comments.Â
Net Promoter Score
In Qualtricsâ survey guidelines, they mention asking for an NPS. In short, Net Promoter Score is a popular method for measuring customer satisfaction developed by Bain & Company.Â
To calculate your NPS, youâll have to ask customers a simple question: âHow likely, on a scale from one to ten, are you to recommend this solution to a friend or colleague?â Sort the responses into Promoters (those who answer 9-10), Passives (7-8), and Detractors (0-6). Your overall NPS score is calculated by subtracting the percentage of Detractors from the percentage of Promoters.Â
Monitor customer health
Developing new leads can help grow your business, but itâs all for naught if you arenât retaining customers after the initial sale. Once your team has onboarded a customer, track their customer health score to ensure retention. Several factors, all specific to your company, play into customer health scores, which indicate how loyal your customers are.
Gainsight, a company specializing in customer success, acknowledges that an exhaustive list of customer health indicators would be ânearly endless.â They do, however, recommend some of the more important factors to consider:
- How often do customers call support?
- How long do customersâ support tickets stay open?
- Do your customers engage with your user community?
- Do customers open your emails, attend webinars, and engage with other collateral?
- Do they pay their bills on time?
- Have they bought more than one product from you?Â
- How does the value of their current contract compare to their original contract?
- Have they participated in case studies or testimonials?
Keep these questions in mind as you build out your own method for monitoring customer health.Â
Evaluate customer churn
When it comes to customer experience testing, lost customers are more valuable than won. Your goal is to shore up the buyer journeyâto identify and patch up places where you are losing customers. As you try to reduce customer churn, who better to ask than the customers you lost?
Ask these would-be customers the same questions you would in your customer satisfaction survey, preferably via phone call. If youâre struggling to get responses from these customers, consider offering an incentiveâa gift card can go a long way towards getting a candid phone interview.Â
If you use a survey rather than a call, keep it brief. Include the survey on your website at the time of cancellation or send it via a personalized email.Â
As you analyze the data behind customer churn, these questions can help you sort through the information and focus on improvement:Â
1. When are customers most frequently churning?
If customers tend to cancel their accounts or services at a certain point, thereâs probably a reason behind it. Pay attention to cancellation trends to identify points of the buyer experience in need of attention. If, for example, churn tends to occur at or around 90 days, reexamine your onboarding programâit may not be as effective as it could be.
2. How engaged were users with the product at the time of churn?
According to ConversionXL, decreased customer engagement and usage is a strong indicator of churn. This could be less time spent on the site, fewer support tickets, or a decrease in new users at the company.Â
3. Were these customers impacted by bugs and how quickly were those bugs resolved?
Itâs an inevitable reality: Most customers will likely experience bugs in a product. The severity and frequency of those bugs can contribute to a negative user experience and cause you to lose users. If bugs arenât resolved quickly, be sure to establish clear communication between customer success and product management.Â
4. How quickly does customer support respond to questions or complaints?
A high number of support tickets is not necessarily a bad signâit means users are, at the very least, trying to engage with your service. But things can quickly sour. If your team doesnât act fast to address customer questions and complaints, you may lose customers.Â