The Ultimate List of Net Promoter® Best Practice Tips

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Net Promoter was launched in 2003 and since then many, many organisations have used the methodology to drive change in their business. With so much time invested, lots of lessons have been learned.

So you don’t have to re-learn those lessons the hard way I’ve pulled together this massive list of Net Promoter best practice tips.

Note that these tips pretty much apply to any Voice of the Customer or Customer feedback (but not market research) process. So regardless of whether you are using Customer Effort Score, Customer Satisfaction or NPS® you can apply them to your business.

To come up with the list I mined our own extensive experience in implementing Net Promoter for our customers. I also asked some of the leading people in the customer feedback and Net Promoter community for their very best ideas.

Here are the experts who also provided input to this list:

Here is the list:

1. Remember NPS is an Operational tool Not a Market Research Tool

NPS is an operational tool and should not be run by market research.

A customer feedback program should be viewed not as ‘market research’ but as an operational management tool. @FredReichheld. [Tweet This]

Market research is a great tool and allows businesses to understand their market and design new and appropriate products and services but it is not an operational tool.

Net Promoter is mostly focused on helping you to understand and improve the day to day operations of the business, reduce waste and improve the customer experience.

Don’t try to use Net Promoter as a market research tool because it’s like trying to use a hammer to drive in a screw: it might work but not very well and you’re very likely to bang your thumb in the process.

As a corollary to this tip: don’t have your customer feedback program report report in via the Market Research group. They have different cycle times and a different focus.

2. Be Humble and Accept That You Need to Change (Tomas Duarte)

For the success of the NPS, consider the humility to recognize the flaws and fix problems quickly. We have to eliminate the distance between the customer wants and what the company is doing.

My two cents: This is a great point from Tomas. Too often we are quick to reject feedback from customers as wrong.

I know you’ve been in the same meetings as I have. When faced with a negative comment from a customer, the business representative says: “the customer doesn’t understand the process” or “that was a one off”.

When running an NPS program your first instinct should be “how do we improve” not “how to we prove the customer wrong”.  [Tweet This]

3. NPS is Not Just a Metric. (Annette Franz)

The beauty of using the NPS approach for your organization is everyone becomes focused on the customer and the customer experience… as long as you don’t make it about the metric.

Use the system to get employees focused on Promoters and doing what it takes to keep them… and understanding why you have Detractors and how to move them to become Promoters. I can’t express enough that it’s not about the metric. It’s not about gaming the system to move the number. It’s about improving the customer experience.

Frederick Van Bennekom goes further to say:

Don’t corrupt the use of NPS as an operational improvement tool by using it for performance measurement. NPS — or any measurement — can’t serve both purposes. Using NPS for performance measurement will ensure that those being measured will manipulate the survey processes.

My two cents: I’m not sure I agree completed with Fred on this (he already knows) but he makes a very good point. You must be very careful when assigning goals against the feedback your receive. More on this later.

4. Engage you Employees (Bill Quiseng)

You can’t satisfy customers with disengaged employees. Start there first. [Tweet This]

How often do you ask your employees the NPS question? What are you doing about improving that score?

My two cents: Bill is spot on here you must have engaged employees to make the process work. The good news is that if your the customer fededback process effectively it will also drive employee engagement so you have a win-win on your hands.

5. Nobody Raves about Average (Bill Quiseng)

Today satisfaction is expected.

Merely satisfying the customer along the experience journey map will not get that customer to tell their friends. Build in “surprise and delight” opportunities within the experience that employees can offer the customer. What would be your company’s version of your bank offering lollipops for children or treats for dogs at the drive-through windows.

6. Involve Customer Facing Employee in the NPS Process (Bill Quiseng)

Without involvement there is no commitment. Involve customer facing employees in the NPS improvement process. [Tweet This]

They know 100% of the customers concerns or complaints because customers tell them every day. Work to eliminate those potential dissatisfiers with the help of your employees.

My two cents: Staff already know lots of the issues that are occurring in your business and we hear this all the time when we roll out transactional NPS systems. Front line staff will point to the comments made by customers and tell their managers: “See I told you [x] was a problem.”

7. Personalize the service (Bill Quiseng)

Use the customer’s name. Dale Carnegie said, “Remember that a person’s name is to that person the sweetest and most important sound in any language”.

While that may seem common sense, is it common practice? The last five times you used your credit card for a purchase, how many times did the cashier use your name in giving it back to you?

8. Relentlessly improve your customer experience (Bill Quiseng)

Never sit on your laurels. Your competitors are just as intent on improving their NPS as you are. What may be exceptional service from you today may be repeated by your competitor tomorrow.

9. Create a CSI (Customer Service Improvement team) (Bill Quiseng)

Like a CSI team, identify, thoroughly analyze and remove all the potential dissatisfiers that could kill a customer from doing business with you again.

My two cents: Later in this list I’ll talk about continuous improvement processes and how valuable that are in Net Promoter. Bill is right about this; to make it work you have to have a cross functional team tasked with driving change.

10. Brand your NPS program (Donna Drehmann)

Give it a tagline, a logo, ensure that your program is recognized internally.

My two cents: This works very well. For an example have a look at what CCH Australia did in branding their process. It’s best practice.

11. Make it Visible at the Top (Donna Drehmann)

Insert your Net Promoter Score on Executive dashboards. It should be visible to the top.

My two cents: The score should be visible but so should the actions that are being taken to change the business. Try not to make the score the only element of the process that gets wide coverage or it may be the only thing that people talk about.

12. Close the loop

You must close the loop with your customers whatever sort of feedback you receive.

If you are running a transactional survey then implement service recovery to turn around unhappy customers. You should also be reaching out to high scoring customers to thank them for their support.

When using relationship surveys in a B2B company, use an account management approach where you collect the feedback and then review it with the decision makers in your client’s company.

In the early months of a new Net Promoter roll-out closing the loop is the most important driver of cultural change in the business so make sure that you implement it early on.

13. Survey Consistency is Vital

Small changes in the survey process can create large changes in the customer feedback score so keep your survey as consistent as possible.

Over time you will probably want to change some of follow-up questions in your survey so make sure that the Net Promoter question is the first question that you ask. Even if you change the later questions, the NPS will be consistent because it is the first response provided and so will not be skewed by the other questions.

Consistency also applies to the method of asking (internet/telephone/face to face interview) and when you ask (transaction, relationship, same day, a week later).

Try to have a consistent process so you don’t misread changes in the skewing of the score to be real changes in the business.

14. Get a Representative Sample of Responses

If you only survey web customers or buyers of one product type it will not be representative of your overall business.

Whenever ever possible try to get feedback from all types of customers and try to make the volume of responses similar to the volume of that type of customer in your business.

15. Automate – To Reduce Cost and Failure

You don’t want your survey process to break every time that Harry is operations is off sick for the day.

Automate as much of routine survey process as possible: invite sending, data collation and reporting.

This both lowers your overall cost and reduces the chance that the process will fail because a manual process somewhere just doesn’t get done.

The easiest way is to implement software that is NPS aware.

16. Launch it Properly

You launch your new products properly.

You make a big hullabaloo about the sales kick-off for the year.

You talk far and wide about the new brand identity just created by marketing.

So why would the launch of an important process like Net Promoter be any different?

If you want to be successful you need to launch this new process with the same fanfare and attention as any other big change in your business.

Make sure to apply solid change management principles to the rollout. For many organisations Net Promoter will be a completely different way to think about using customer information and if you don’t bring staff along with the process it will fail in the medium term.

17. Re-Launch It Periodically

Our research shows that you need to re-launch the whole process about a year after the initial launch to keep it moving.

This is backed up by what our customers tell us they need to do. It’s not enough to launch the process and promote it in the company newsletter once.

You need to tell people and then tell them again and again, in different ways and at different times.

18. Understand Sample Size and Margin of Error for NPS

The statistics for NPS sample sizes and margins of error are different to normal surveys because of the “Net”. You generally need larger samples to get the same statistical significance for NPS than simple customer satisfaction.

In order to ensure you don’t make false positive errors (detecting changes when none exist) you should get a good handle on exactly what changes in your NPS are significant and what are not.

19. Don’t Bother Benchmarking Your Score Externally

…unless you are going to do it right

Apparently I’m a bit famous for being anti -NPS benchmarking.

It’s not that I don’t think it’s useful. It’s just that that 99% of companies think it’s as easy as grabbing a score from some published “benchmark report” and looking up companies in similar industries to compare to their own score. It’s not.

If you do NPS benchmarking right you’ll be fine but if don’t want to make that investment, just benchmark against your own score last month or quarter. Doing it that way will get you most of the value of benchmarking for a fraction of the cost.

Frederick Van Bennekom expands on this idea (see I’m not the only one):

The only valid comparison of NPS is to your past trend. Cross-company comparisons are sheer folly.

But if you must compare — and we know the C-suite will do it — you must use the “standard” scale, anchor choices, and administration mode. Different scale lengths, anchor choices, and admin mode — along with the placement of the NPS question in the survey instrument — will all affect the responses.

20. Read all the Qualitative Responses

Running a transactional NPS process generates a LOT of data and there can be a tendency to not read all of the text responses from customers.

Don’t give in to that tendency because:

  • 1 in a 1,000 customer survey responses is the gem of a business transforming idea – you don’t want to miss that right?
  • 4% of responses ask you to take an action for the customer, including providing a quote for more business – again not something you want to miss.

The customer invested their time providing the response, the least you can do is spend a few seconds reading it.

21. Share Qualitative Responses Widely (Donna Drehmann)

Share the customer verbatim comments with the entire organization – your next great idea can come from anyone.

My two cents: The idea of transparency of this data across the organisation is key. See later for a best practice in this area.

22. Keep the Survey Short

Although Net Promoter is most well known as the “the one number you need to know” the survey needs to have more than just one question.

On the other hand don’t go overboard. You should able to collect all of the information you need in a just a few questions and certainly no more than 10.

Check out the perfect Net Promoter score survey for more information on how to structure your survey.

23. 0 is a Special Number so Act on It.

1 may be the loneliest numbers but in NPS, 0 is a special number.

Our analysis indicates that, typically, there are more zero responses than you would expect. In addition, people who score you a 0 are generally still engaged with your brand so you can use a good service recovery process to turn them around.

So, don’t ignore the people that give you zero. Reach out to them as they are still engaged and, if treated right, can become you most ardent supporters.

24. Link Net Promoter to a Continuous Improvement System.

Net Promoter is a great way to collect information about your business but you need to turn that information into action. Partnering the Net Promoter process with a quality system is a great way to do that.

There are several different varieties of continuous improvement system: 6 Sigma, Lean , TQM. etc. It really doesn’t matter which approach you use as they all use the same basic premise. Just make sure that you pick one and apply it to the data you collect.

25. Report At Least Monthly

It’s a simple thing but our research shows companies that report at least monthly on customer feedback data have more successful programs than those that don’t.

So make sure that you share data at least every month.

26. Link to Remuneration but Take Care.

Staff know that sales are important because you link commission payments to them.

They know costs are important because you have targets for ongoing cost reduction in the business.

So, if you don’t link NPS to staff incentives it will be clear to them that it is not important.

However, you need to be very careful putting in that link to ensure that you don’t create a culture of score begging.

Staff need to view the feedback as a way to improve and that will only happen if management use it constructively.

27. Instrument the Customer Journey

Transactional surveys are very useful.

In your business you already know a lot about the impact of internal tasks on your company. You know how much it costs to make your widget, how much your retail location cost per square metre (or foot), and the average sales that each person makes. What you often don’t know is how your customers perceive your business.

However, by instrumenting your customer journey using transactional NPS you can get a deep understanding of how customers perceive each and every interaction with them in your customer journey.

Tim Tyler goes on to say:

Not all interactions are simple, or completed in a short time frame (unlike a grocery shop or a flight for example). If your customers interact with you several times to complete a task (premier travel agents, financial advice), it is best to

  • start with a map of their journey through the process
  • in this map identify the moments-of-truth that are important to the customer – can cause drop out or ensure success
  • at each Moment of Truth (MoT) determine the key drivers of satisfaction, where the data to trigger a feedback request will come from and the best channel to present that request
  • Sample customers at each MoT

The NPSs along the complex journey will allow you to not only diagnose the overall performance, but where you are doing well / poorly and the relationship between one touch point success and the likelihood the customer will move to the next. If you only survey those customers who complete the whole journey, you have a sampling error that excludes customers who drop out and you are likely looking at artificially high scores.

28. Ignore Press Releases From Competitors

We’ve all seen press releases that start: “Company X Is Pleased to Announce Their NPS is 98″

Ignore them. The data is almost certainly not a valid comparison to your business – see benchmarking above.

29. Be 100% Transparent With the Information

When launching a customer feedback program there can be a reticence by some managers to share the information deeply and widely within the organisation. This is justified in a variety of ways including protecting staff from negative feedback. Push through that reticence and make all data publicly available to anyone in the organisation who wants to see it.

The experience of our customers in this area is clear: if you are completely transparent in the sharing of customer feedback you staff will value the process. If you hide some of it you will lose their trust and engagement.

Sure there will be negative customer feedback and you will need to counsel staff in how to respond and positively interpret that data but overall the benefits of complete transparency far outweigh the costs.

30. Implement Service Recovery

Make sure that service recovery is one of the very first processes that you implement as you roll out NPS.

It is invaluable for two reasons:

  1. You win back customers and they are more loyal than ever.
  2. You demonstrate to everyone that the program is driving change

31. Do Something with the Data

Maybe this doesn’t seem like a Best Practice tip, more like stating the obvious, but you’d be surprised how many organisation set up their data collection systems and report like crazy but never actually make a change in the business.

If you do not use the information to make changes in the business, shut down the whole process because it is just a waste of time and money.

32. Calculate the Value of a Promoter

In order to invest in your customer experience you need to understand what the return on that investment will be. The only way to run those calculations is if you know the value of a Promoter and of moving a Detractor to a Neutral to a Promoter.

These calculations are not complex and can often be done in Excel with a little thought so don’t let the statistics worry you.

33. Data Credibility is Key

Whatever system (software plus process) you choose to collect and report on customer feedback you need to ensure that everyone in the organisation has confidence in the data that is reported. If there is any gaming of the system or people don’t trust the reports that are generated, it dramatically shifts focus of analysis.

If people trust the data then they are focused on identifying the root causes to drive improvement. This is the good outcome.

If people don’t trust the data then they are focused on proving that their score didn’t go down or did go up. This is the bad outcome.

Make sure your staff are focused on the right thing.

34. Market to your Promoters

Think of it this way: if I sold your marketing group a piece of software that would assign a “propensity to purchase” ranking to everyone in your customer database they would pay a fortune for the data and spend all their time marketing to the high propensity customers.

In reality this is exactly what each customer is doing by filling in an NPS survey but very few organisations actively use the information in marketing to their customers.

You need to be careful of course but if you use this information correctly you can drive some incredible marketing campaigns that will lift sales and drive new business.

35. Tell Customers You Have Heard Them

For many, most, almost all, companies, after you fill in the feedback form that’s the end of the process. You never hear anything about the survey again.

Telling customers that you have heard them and are actively considering their input sets you apart from your competitors.

The process of telling does not have to be complex. It can be as simple as a follow-up email to respondents letting them know what is being done based on the feedback collected.

You don’t need to respond individually to customers, although you can, simply roll up the ideas and changes that you are making into a more general list and send an update to all customers.

36. Implement Corporate Governance

Many people feel that governance is a boring subject and one on which they don’t want to spend any time.

However, I know from experience that organisations that do not create some type of Steering Committee or oversight process will fail to make consistent use of the information collected in the Net Promoter process.

They will not fail immediately; it generally takes 12 or more months, but fail they will.

While the whole organisation needs to be involved, if there is no one person or small group to drive the process and support the rest of the organisation, Net Promoter loses focus. It tends to become just another metric that is collected but not actioned.

Pretty soon the whole focus is on the number and not the change that it is driving; at which point the process in in danger of being cancelled as not relevant.

37. Give it Cross Functional Support

If you give the Net Promoter program cross functional support it will be very much more effective than if you make it one person or team’s task. That means that people from all across the organisation should be involved with and in the data collection, analysis and action process. If you make NPS the task of one group (Strategy, Marketing, Operations, Customer Services. etc) it will fail because everyone is expecting that group to “fix NPS”.

Certainly you need a central person or group to own the process but everyone in the organisation needs to be part of the process. If you don’t have a central process management ownership everyone assumes someone else is going to organise the meetings, etc.

We stress to our customers that they should ensure the teams working on Net Promoter be drawn from people throughout the organisation to gain the benefits of cross functional support.

Interestingly some have told us that the reverse is also the case: the Net Promoter process has helped them to break down silos within the organisation as diverse groups of employees come together to focus on the customer.

This is a double win: improving the customer experience and breaking down the silos in the business.

Republished with author's permission from original post.

1 COMMENT

  1. You’ve, effectively, offered close to 40 methods to help organizations institutionalize a metric that has both questionable and superficial actionability:

    http://customerthink.com/3-shortfalls-of-net-promoter-scores/

    http://customerthink.com/the_dark_side_of_using_nps_as_a_performance_management_tool/

    http://customerthink.com/emerging_chinks_and_dents_in_the_universal_application_and_institutionalization_armor_of_popula/

    http://www.customerdelight.nu/content/04-artikelen/06-artikel-f/anti.nps.-pdf.pdf

    http://www.xzamcorp.com/nps-net-promoter-weaknesses-customer-model-one-number/

    http://customerthink.com/customer_effort_score_and_nps_gangnam_style_metrics/

    http://www.measuringu.com/blog/nps-go.php

    Etc., etc., etc. In addition to multiple studies which question Net Promoter validity, here are scores of blogs, articles, and white papers similar to this, all pretty much disputing the viability of NPS as a way to gauge brand health, relationship effectiveness, perceived customer value, and enterprise performance.

    As a Forrester analyst noted in 2011: “The biggest concern with the formula is that there is not sufficient quantitative evidence to support a correlation between NPS and customer actions (renewals or even actual recommendations). Given its time in the field, SatMetrix should be able to show 100s if not 1000s of cases with high correlation coefficients (Pearson’s r=70%+). To date, they have only provided a totally unsupported position that “findings support the link between Net Promoter and financials.”

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