Key Learning from 15 Years of Net Promoter Stats
Colin Shaw
LinkedIn 'Top Voice' & influencer Customer Experience & Marketing | Financial Times Award Leading Consultancy 4 Straight Years | Host of 'The Intuitive Customer' in Top 2% | Best-selling Author x 7 | Conference Speaker
Did you know Netflix’s Net Promoter Score (NPS) is higher than the cable companies? It is, and it is one of the reasons we see growth in Netflix and continued dissatisfaction with cable companies.
I love Netflix. It is simple. You can start and stop it when you want. My recent experiences with my cable company have been the complete opposite. This poor Customer Experience is one reason I now use Netflix more than my cable company.
For those of you that don’t know, Net Promoter Score (NPS) represents the likelihood a Customer would recommend your product or service to other people (i.e., the higher the score, the greater the likelihood they will recommend).
The NPS score has been around for years and has seeped its way into business vernacular. It has become a standard metric used to determine if your Customer Service and Experience improvements are effective. Harvard Business Review called it “The One Number You Need to Grow” way back in 2003. One of the frequent questions I get is, “Our NPS is XX. How does that compare with the rest of the market?”
Well, there is a simple way of finding out the answer to that question: Speak to the man that knows!
Brendon Rocks is that man. He is the Head of Data Science (self-described as Chief Statistics Wonk) for Satmetrix, a company devoted to combining their software, data, and Customer Experience (CX) expertise to help organizations achieve Customer-Centricity. In their 15th annual Net Promoter Benchmark Study, he gave a great presentation of some really interesting stats on NPS.
So the question is, what can we learn about what works for Customer Experience by looking at trends in NPS? Quite a lot, it turns out. For example, Rocks has discovered that brands that have made providing a simpler Customer Experience their priority have performed “especially well” with regards to NPS. So perhaps the most important thing we can learn is:
Simple experiences are king when it comes to NPS.
Simplicity is part of the reason that Netflix has fared better in NPS trends than cable companies. According to Rocks, the following brands do simple to success:
- Boost Mobile: They have the highest NPS in the mobile service study, performing 33 points higher than Sprint, who own Boost and provides their infrastructure.
- Tesco Mobile: The UK-based mobile firm has a larger base of loyal Customers than O2, the telecommunications provider that Tesco rebrands for their Customers.
- First Direct, a phone and online retail bank in the UK, scored the highest in the UK study, 61 points higher than the HSBC, the bank that owns them.
Looking at the data, Rocks explains, “Technology companies have been superb at offering smooth customer experiences, and increasingly consumers want and expect to do business online. Comparing scores from Netflix and the cable companies' in recent years has been interesting, especially in the context of cord cutting, and the PR war over Net Neutrality. It doesn't look like the cable companies are winning.”
Simple is important to your Customers. Really Important.
What we can learn from this data is that Customers don’t want much hassle these days. They want it easy; they want it accessible; they want it smooth. There are many reasons for this, but perhaps the biggest is the concept of cognitive depletion.
Cognitive depletion refers to the amount of energy you have left to think about something, which, as the name implies, isn’t much. There is intuitive thinking, that doesn’t require a large amount of energy to do and rational thinking, which does require a lot of energy to do. complicated Customer Experiences do not appeal to the intuitive part of one’s thinking, and instead, require the less energy-efficient thinking of one’s rational mind. If a person is cognitively depleted (Read: tired), then they are far more likely not to participate and look for an easier path of resistance (read: your competition’s experience).
Who doesn’t feel cognitively depleted from time to time? And who hasn’t abandoned a purchase (online, via mail, in a store) because the next steps were just “too much?” We all feel like this from time to time, and when we do, we appreciate easy. It’s why more and more people resort to ordering groceries online for delivery. It’s the reason people like setting up an Apple computer for the first time over a PC, and it’s why we prefer to bank online instead of going to a branch. We are a society of people who just want it simple. And the proof is in the NPS data.
Rocks and I will be presenting more information from Satmetrix’s 15th Annual Net Promoter Study in the upcoming webinar: “15 Years of Tracking Net Promoter: What Have We Learned?” on September 24th at 12 p.m. EST. Rocks will share his insight on simple experiences, as well as other interesting trends and discoveries Satmetrix has made over the years. Please CLICK HERE to join us for the Webinar.
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Colin Shaw is the founder and CEO of Beyond Philosophy, one of the world's leading Customer experience consultancy & training organizations. Colin is an international author of five bestselling books and an engaging keynote speaker.
Follow Colin Shaw on Twitter & Periscope @ColinShaw_CX
Customer Service and Customer Experience Expert | Keynote Speaker | NYT Bestselling Author | Shep helps companies deliver AMAZING customer service experiences!
9 年I’m a big fan of NPS (Net Promoter Score) and how that simple questions can give us insight to our customers’ opinions of us. It’s one thing to know what a customer thinks of us, but another to learn how that compares to the rest of the market and what we can learn from it. Great suggestions here on how to take advantage of this powerful information.
General Manager , Australia and New Zealand @ Zensai | Advisor & Director
9 年Good article Colin. NPS has come of age for sure and has been adopted by a large number of companies. But how many? who and where are they? where is the global benchmark database for NPS? Satmetrix themselves don't hide their frustration that there hasn't been more done to bring NPS data together for the benefit of the community as a whole. Just this week I attended Brendon Rocks session at the NPS conference in London. The data he has on North America and parts of Europe is not too bad, but seek out insights in South America, Asia, Africa and Middle East and it soon becomes patchy. I don't know how we fix this problem but I'm keen to play a part in solving it. What I can bring to the party is the global benchmarking study we do each year. Over 900 organisations participated last year. We've been doing this survey for 18 years. There are a couple of NPS questions in it, but I'd be keen to expand this if we could get some help form others in the community to encourage as many as possible to participate. This year's survey is just about to open and remains open until November. We'll publish the results free of charge to everyone who participates. Come on - let's create a global NPS Index from the NPS Community! Colin, you'd be a great champion and sponsor for this too if you're up for it!
Salgssjef - Sales Manager at Invo AS
9 年Saeid Mirzaie og Paul Vuijsters
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9 年I absolutely love the Net Promoter Score. It is so brilliant in concept and gives a clear picture of how the market feels at any given time. Another Great Article by Colin Shaw