Title: Linda Sease
1Beyond Behavior
Understanding Reader Satisfaction
Linda Sease The E.W. Scripps Company
2- Traditional customer satisfaction metrics do not
necessarily measure customer loyalty or predict
company growth.
3- Customer loyalty and satisfaction is about much
more than repeat purchases.
4- A customer who buys again and again from the same
company may not necessarily be displaying loyalty
they may be trapped by inertia, indifference,
or exit barriers erected by the company or
circumstances. - Conversely, a loyal customer may not make
frequent repeat purchases because of a reduced
need for a product or service.
5- Traditional measures of customer loyalty (such as
customer retention rates) are complicated
measures that may relate to company profitability
but not growth. - Conventional customer satisfaction measures often
lack a demonstrable connection to actual customer
behavior and growth.
6- The Net-Promoter Score (NPS) metric was designed
to offer an effective measure of customer
loyalty, one that predicts company growth. - Survey responses from 4,000 customers matched to
actual behavior over time - Fourteen case studies built
- Resulting data determined which survey question
had the strongest statistical correlation with
repeat purchases or referrals
7- One question effectively predicted the behaviors
that drive growth
8- A customers likelihood of recommending a company
to a friend or colleague captures the essence of
customer loyalty. - Measured by how often a customer talks up a
company to family, friends, and colleagues.
9- When customers act as references, they do more
than indicate they have received good economic
value from a company. - Their own reputation is on the line
10- Customer loyalty and satisfaction can be measured
by asking, How likely would you be to recommend
Company X to a friend or colleague?
Not At All Likely 0
Extremely Likely 10
Neutral 5
1
2
3
4
6
7
8
9
Promoters
Detractors
Passively Satisfied
11- Defining the three customer clusters
- Promoters have the highest rates of repurchase
and referral. - Passively Satisfied customers stay witha
particular company more due to inertiathan true
loyalty. - Quickly use a different company if presented with
a better deal - Detractors spread negative word-of-mouth
comments about the company. - Negatively impacts companys reputation, ability
to attract newcustomers and employee morale
12Promoters Detractors Net-Promoter Score
13- Strong correlation between a companys growth
rate and the percentage of customers who are
Promoters. - Getting customers enthusiastic enough to
recommend a company appears to becrucial to
growth.
14- Companies with the most enthusiastic customer
referrals have Net-Promoter Scores from 75 to
more than 80.
15- NPS provides a measure of customer loyalty linked
to customer behavior and ultimately, to company
growth. - In order for a company to experience true
growth and good profits it must have customers
that are both profitable and satisfied. - Customers are profitable when they make repeat
purchases, are less price-sensitive, and show
interest in new products or brand extensions. - Customers are truly satisfied if they refer the
company to friends and colleagues.
16- Promoters are generally profitable and satisfied
they usually buy more and actively refer
friends and colleagues. - A company will experience long-term and
sustainable growth only if the percentage of
Promoters is greater than the percentage of
Detractors.
17- NPS enables companies to gather simple, timely,
and actionable information. - Keep customer surveys simple and gathertimely
information that is easy to act upon - Data obtained by the NPS metric is actionableand
easy to interpret and communicate - Allows for tracking and comparing NPS over time,
within a company, and against national averages,
as well as against direct competitors
18- In most industries there is a strong correlation
between a companys growth rate and the
percentage of its customers who are Promoters. - Airlines strong correlation between NPS and a
companys average growth rate
- Rental cars Enterprise Rent-A-Car enjoys the
highest rate of growth and highest Net-Promoter
percentage among its competitors
19- Guidelines for using NPS to motivate company-wide
change - Be sure that everyone in the company knowswhich
customers theyre responsible for. - Make your scores transparent throughoutyour
organization. - Create a sense of urgency by tying rewardsto
score improvement.
20- The NPS metric can be applied to the newspaper
industry to provide insight into readership
behavior and satisfaction. - Traditional readership studies help illustrate
behavior but do not gauge reader satisfaction - NPS allows for a new level of accountability,
actionability, and urgency to address readers
needs and expectations
21- Scripps Readership Survey
22- Scripps Readership Survey Goals
23- Scripps Readership Survey Requirements
- Current readers of Scripps newspapers
- Read at least one time in the last monthor
visited the website three to four timesin the
last month - Ages 18 to 54
- Sample to reflect market in age, gender,and
race/ethnicity - Actionable and customer-focused questions
24- Of 8,838 total respondents, almost 60 were
current Scripps newspaper subscribers.
Respondent Buying Behavior Total Scripps Markets
Read Online 3
Read Someone Elses 16
Current Subscriber 59
Buy Single Copy 22
N 8,838
25- Across Scripps markets, one-quarter of
respondents read both the print and online
versions of the newspaper.
Audience Reach Total Scripps Markets
Online Only 2
Print and Online 25
Print Only 73
N 8,838
26- The sample reflected the markets overall in age
and gender
Respondent Demographics
45 to 54
Male
25 to 44
Female
18 to 24
By AgeN 8,838
By GenderN 8,838
27- but there was a higher percentage of households
with children represented.
Respondent Demographics
No
Yes
By Presence of ChildrenN 8,156
28- Education and income levels were also higher than
the total market population.
Respondent Demographics
Post-Grad
75,000
Bachelors
50,000 to 74,999
Some College/ Associates
25,000 to 49,999
HS Grad
Under25,000
Less than HS
By EducationN 8,676
By IncomeN 7,975
29- Hispanic respondents reflect the market, but
African-American respondents were slightly
underrepresented.
Respondent Demographics
Other
All Others
African-American
All Others
Hispanic
San Angelo
Evansville
TC
Naples
Anderson
Ventura
Caucasian/Non-Hispanic
Memphis
Corpus
Versus MarketsN 8,689
Sample Concentration by Market N 8,689
30- Questionnaire Structure
- Part 1 Topic importance
31- Questionnaire Structure
- Part 1 Topic importance
Topics Covered
32- Questionnaire Structure
- Part 1 Topic definitions were as specific
as possible to avoid confusion or overlap
33- Questionnaire Structure
- Part 1 Topic definitions (continued)
34- Questionnaire Structure
- Part 1 Topic definitions (continued)
35- Questionnaire Structure
- Part 1 If topic is important (8, 9, 10), then
ask
36- Questionnaire Structure
- Part 1 If NOT likely to recommend (1 7), then
ask
37- Questionnaire Structure
- Part 2 Attitudinal statements
38- Questionnaire Structure
- Part 2 Statements reflected
- Personal fulfillment/knowledge
- Connectedness to local community
- Ease of use
- Credibility/accountability
- Value
- Inhibitors
- Several were Motivator statements taken from
Readership Institute New Readers Study
39- Questionnaire Structure
- Part 3 Open-ended suggestions
- Verbatims were coded and grouped by subject for
each market.
40- Questionnaire Structure
- Part 4 Likely to recommend
Considering all the aspects of Scripps
Newspaper, how likely would you be to recommend
the newspaper to a friend or colleague as a
source of informationin general?
41- Fourteen Scripps markets participated in the
study.
42- Plotting topic importance against NPS revealed
areas of opportunity.
Topic Importance/Assessment Newspaper B by NPS
(Southern)
Median 37
High
Opportunity
Defend
Schools/Ed
Local News
Religion/ Spirituality
Other Newspaper Advertising
Family/Friends
Classified Advertising
Health
Topic Importance
Median 6.9
Community/Neighborhood
Entertainment/Leisure
Finances
Careers
PersonalGrowth
Sports
Home
Low
Net-Promoter Score
High
Low
- Religion/spirituality scored higher in importance
in Southern Scripps markets.
43- Newspaper B had an NPS of 26, with 48 of
respondents as Promoters.
Newspaper B Overall Assessment
Detractors
Passively Satisfied
Promoters
Mean 8.0
44- The topics of Health, Family/Friends, and
Finances emerged as areas of opportunity for
Newspaper G.
Topic Importance/Assessment Newspaper G by NPS
Median 20
High
Opportunity
Defend
Local News
Health
Entertainment/Leisure
Schools/Ed
Family/Friends
Finances
Community/Neighborhood
Topic Importance
Median 6.7
PersonalGrowth
Home
Other Newspaper Advertising
Religion/ Spirituality
Classified Advertising
Sports
Careers
Low
Net-Promoter Score
High
Low
- The topic of Finances moved into the Opportunity
quadrant in select Scripps markets.
45- Newspaper G had a NPS of 17, with 42 of
respondents as Promoters.
Newspaper G Overall Assessment
Detractors
Passively Satisfied
Promoters
Mean 7.7
46- Across all Scripps markets, several topics emerge
as areas of opportunity.
Gap Analysis
Topic Importance/Assessment, All Markets
Median 27
Opportunity
Defend
High
Local News
Schools/Ed
Health
Family/Friends
Entertainment/Leisure
Religion/ Spirituality
Community/Neighborhood
Topic Importance
Median 6.5
Other Newspaper Advertising
Finances
Classified Advertising
Home
PersonalGrowth
Careers
Sports
Foundational
Secondary
Low
Net-Promoter Score
High
Low
47- Several topics and attitudes influence NPS
- The more readers recommend the Scripps newspaper
for Local News, Entertainment/ Leisure,
Advertising, and Sports, the more they recommend
the Scripps newspaper overall however, improving
content in topic areas alone will be
insufficient. - Newspaper enjoyment and value are predictive of
overall recommendation ratings.
48- Trusting the newspaper to be honest and fair and
believing the newspaper presents a broad range of
opinions also are positively correlated with
overall recommendation ratings. - NPS among respondents who had concerns about bias
were lower than those who did not share the
concerns, suggesting that the perception of bias
negatively impacts NPS.
49- Scripps had a total NPS of 17, with43 of total
respondents as Promoters.
Total Respondents
Detractors
Passively Satisfied
Promoters
Mean 7.6
50- Net-Promoter Scores ranged from 33 to -26
across Scripps Markets.
Overall NPS by Market
17
Scripps Mean
Newspaper E, F
Newspaper N
Newspaper H
Newspaper C
Newspaper A
Newspaper B
Newspaper L
Newspaper I
Newspaper D
Newspaper M
Newspaper G
Newspaper J, K
51- The topic of Schools/Education was important to
respondents, but Net-Promoter Scores were all
below 40.
Schools/Education NPS by Market
23
Scripps Mean
Newspaper E, I
Newspaper B
Newspaper M
Newspaper G
Newspaper D
Newspaper A
Newspaper L
Newspaper J
Newspaper N
Newspaper F, K
Newspaper C, H
52- Health also ranked high in importance but
Net-Promoter Scores were relatively low.
Health NPS by Market
11
Scripps Mean
Newspaper G, C
Newspaper L, N
Newspaper M
Newspaper F
Newspaper D
Newspaper J
Newspaper K
Newspaper A
Newspaper I
Newspaper E
Newspaper H
Newspaper B
53- Local News was a topic of high importance and
relatively strong NPS.
Local News NPS by Market
41
Scripps Mean
Newspaper B, C
Newspaper N
Newspaper D
Newspaper K
Newspaper B
Newspaper L
Newspaper I
Newspaper H
Newspaper M
Newspaper A
Newspaper F, G, J
54- Classified Advertising is a Foundational topic
because it is a topic that readers expect
newspapers to cover well.
Classified Advertising NPS by Market
64
Scripps Mean
Newspaper E
Newspaper D
Newspaper C
Newspaper A
Newspaper L
Newspaper F
Newspaper I
40
70
75
60
Newspaper K
Newspaper H
Newspaper B
Newspaper J, N
Newspaper G, M
55- The following judgments were used to assess the
attitudinal ratings
Newspaper Attitudes Ratings Assessment
Excel-lent
Poor
Neutral
Fair
Good
5
1
2
3
4
3.5
4.5
56- Of the 23 attitudes, Scripps newspapers generally
scored in the Fair category, suggesting room for
improvement.
Newspaper Attitudes Ratings Assessment
Excel-lent
Poor
Neutral
Fair
Good
57- Provocative Bias Findings
- Concern over newspapers being biased appears to
be an important issue for the affluent. - Reflecting minority communities accurately was
noted as an issue across minority groups.
58- Provocative Lifestage Findings
- Families are a key segment to defend and grow for
both readership and advertisers. - Schools/Education may be a way to reach them
59- Thirteen High-Priority Opportunities
- Continue to improve and enhance the core,
fundamental topic areas of Local News,
Entertainment/Leisure, Advertising, and Sports. - Extend reach and delight readers with information
on Schools/Education and Health. - Religion and Spirituality represents an
opportunity in select markets. - Newspapers identified as vulnerable need to
aggressively address their positions.
60- Several markets are in strong positions to build
on for local market dominance. - Scripps newspapers need to improve their
perception of delivering fresh news. - Explore improving ratings of overall enjoyment of
reading the newspaper and perceived value to
increase overall recommendation ratings. - Trusting the newspaper to be honest and fair and
presenting a broad range of opinions also are
worth attention.
61- Improving content in topic areas alone will be
insufficient. - Families, representing 55 of the total, are a
key segment to defend and grow for both
readership and advertisers. - Concern over newspapers being biased appears to
be an important issue for the affluent.
62- Reflecting minority communities accurately is an
important core value of the E.W. Scripps Company,
but was noted as an issue across minority groups,
most importantly among upper-income
African-Americans. - Newspapers need to do a better job in the battle
with television in local news. - Scripps newspapers need to have a proactive local
Internet strategy to complement the print
product(s).
63- Market-Level Next Steps
- Create collective initiatives to address content
areas of common interest - Share best practices at newspapers with high NPS
- Identify newspapers in need of improvement
64- Corporate-Level Next Steps
- Long-term commitment to tracking and improving
its Net-Promoter Scores. - The complete study will be conducted in odd years
in all 14 markets an abbreviated study focused
on demographics and Likely to Recommend will be
conducted in even years. - Address online needs and opportunities in Phase
II.
65Linda Sease The E.W. Scripps Company 303.484.1885
linda.sease_at_scripps.com Barbara Cohen Kannon
Consulting, Inc. 312.346.2244 bcohen_at_kannon.com