Title: Customer Satisfaction mngmnt Content
1Customer Satisfaction mngmntContent
- Customer Satisfaction
- An introduction
- Measurement and evaluation
- Measurement system
- Importance of CS and relationship to loyalty
- Customer Loyalty
- Measures
- Relationship bonds
- Customer Relationship Management
- Marketing objectives and loyalty
2Customer Satisfaction mngmntContent
- Customer Satisfaction
- An introduction
- Measurement and evaluation
- Measurement system
- Importance of CS and relationship to loyalty
- Customer Loyalty
- Measures
- Relationship bonds
- Customer Relationship Management
- Marketing objectives and loyalty
3- Customer perceived value (CPV) is the difference
between the prospective customers evaluation of
all the benefits and all the costs of an offering
and the perceived alternatives. - Total customer value is the perceived monetary
value of the bundle of economic, functional, and
psychological benefits customers expect from a
given market offering. - The key to generating high customer loyalty is to
deliver high customer value. - The value proposition consists of the whole
cluster of benefits the company promises to
deliver, it is more than the core positioning of
the offering. - The value-delivery system includes all the
experiences the customer will have on the way to
obtaining and using the offering.
4Satisfaction and loyalty
- Satisfaction is a persons feeling of pleasure or
disappointment resulting from comparing a
products perceived performance (or outcome) in
relation to his or her expectations. - Loyalty is defined as a deeply held commitment
to rebuy or repatronize a preferred product or
service in the future despite situational
influences and marketing efforts having the
potential to cause switching behavior.
5Antecedents and consequences of CSthe basic
model
- Disconfirmation paradigm
- Expectations
- Perceptions
- Dis/confermation
- Satisfaction/ Dissatisfaction
- Satisfaction ? perceived performance
expected performance - Overall satisfaction satisfaction for individual
attributes - Satisfaction repeat buying, w-o-m,
cross-buying
6Measurement of CS -a few basic facts
- Satisfaction is determined by the comparison of
perceived performance with expectations - Expectations take very different forms will,
should, ideal, fair - There is an area of tollerance around desired
and adequate expectations - Overall satisfaction is determined by the pooling
of satisfaction for each attribute - Satisfaction effects repeat buying, positive
w-o-m, cross buying
7Evaluation of CS -a few basic facts
- Measures of satisfaction have to be evaluated in
relative (and not in absolute) terms - The gap between perceptions and expectations
shows a non-linear relation with satisfaction - Each attribute plays a different role and has a
different impact on global satisfaction - At times, asymmetries and interaction come in
(hygienic/ motivating factors)
8Analysis of CS
- Identify attributes
- Measure overall satisfaction
- For each attribute, measure
- Importance
- Satisfaction
- For each attribute, calculate the impact on
overall satisfaction - Measure intention to repeat buying, w-o-m,
cross-buy - Calculate the most important attributes
9Standard Quadrant priorities
10Modified Quadrant priorities
11TRM analysis
12The Kano Approach
- For each need, answer the following two
questions, using the Kano Table - How would you feel if the need is met?
- How would you feel if the need is NOT met?
- I would like it that way
- It must be that way
- I am neutral
- I can live with it that way
- I dislike it that way
13The Kano Approach Types of Needs
- Must Have No matter how well the product meets
that need, the customer simply accepts it as
something that is expected. However, it the need
is not met, the customer is very dissatisfied. - E.g., Coverage in big cities for Cell Phones
- Linear Satisfier The better the product is at
meeting the need, the better the customer likes
it - E.g., Clarity of sound
- Delighter the delighter is not expected, so its
absence does not cause dissatisfaction. If the
need is met, however, it will increase customer
satisfaction. - E.g., Design elements
- Indifferent Quality Element Produces neither
satisfaction nor dissatisfaction in the customer,
regardless of whether it is met in the product or
not - E.g., Text messaging
- Reverse Quality Element The implies that either
the questions being asked are not correct, or
that this trait is undesirable to the customer.
14CS measurement methods
- Survey on CS
- Mystery shopping
- Complaint analysis
- Lost clients analysis
15Customer Satisfaction mngmntContent
- Customer Satisfaction
- An introduction
- Measurement and evaluation
- Measurement system
- Importance of CS and relationship to loyalty
- Customer Loyalty
- Measures
- Relationship bonds
- Customer Relationship Management
- Marketing objectives and loyalty
16Importance of C.S. a few facts
- Satisfaction and business performance
- Satisfaction and profitability
- Satisfaction and purchase
- Costs of acquisition and maintenance
- Positive and negative word-of-mouth
- Effects of dissatisfaction
- Loss of clients
- Duration and value of relations
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18Customer Satisfaction and Loyalty
High
Local telecom
Hospital
Aviation
No competition
Loyalty
PC
High competition
Automobile
Low
High
Low
Satisfaction
19Customer Satisfaction mngmntContent
- Customer Satisfaction
- An introduction
- Measurement and evaluation
- Measurement system
- Importance of CS and relationship to loyalty
- Customer Loyalty
- Measures
- Relationship bonds
- Customer Relationship Management
- Marketing objectives and loyalty
20Overall relationship value
- Future revenues (as is) by duration
- Added revenues from
- Upselling (penetration within category)
- Trading up (migration towards richer offers)
- Cross buying
- Added revenues from word-of-mouth
- Other added revenues (reputation, knowledge)
21Measures of loyalty
- Behaviour (transactions)
- repeat buying
- Share of category requirements
- Behaviour (relation)
- Churn rate
- Duration of relation
- CLV
- Attitude
- Intention to rebuy, recommend
- Intention to cross buy
22- Customer Lifetime Value (CLV)
- describes the net present value of the stream of
future profits expected over the customers
lifetime purchases. - Customer Equity
- describes the combined discounted customer
lifetime values of all the companys current and
potential customers.
23Customer Relationships
- Loyalty and retention programs build
relationships and may feature - Financial Benefits (incentives)
- EX Frequency marketing programs
- Social Benefits (affiliation)
- EX Club marketing programs
- Structural Ties (lock ins)
- Focus is on relating directly to profitable
customers, for the longterm.
24Customer Relationship Management
- The overall process of building and maintaining
profitable customer relationships by delivering
superior customer value and satisfaction. - Acquiring customers
- Keeping customers
- Growing customers
- Customer relationship management (CRM) is the
process of managing detailed information about
individual customers and carefully managing all
customer touch points to maximize customer
loyalty. - Database marketing
25The 80/20 Principle in CRM
Q
1. Where is the boundary in your company? 2.
Where are those 20? Do you have reliable
information about the customers?
3. Who are those 20? Does your company know
them? Who is providing service for them? 4. Can
you provide appropriate Promotion Schemes to
those 20 so as to build deeper relationship with
them? 5. What are the 80 revenue? 6. How can
you maintain the continuous growth of the 80
revenue?
26Process of up-grading
- Suspect
- Prospect
- First time customer
- Repeat customers (core or large, moderate, low or
samplers) - Advocates
- Partners
27Customer Satisfaction mngmntContent
- Customer Satisfaction
- An introduction
- Measurement and evaluation
- Measurement system
- Importance of CS and relationship to loyalty
- Customer Loyalty
- Measures
- Relationship bonds
- Customer Relationship Management
- Marketing objectives and loyalty
28Marketing objectives and customer satisfaction
- Sales, MS, profitability, shareholders value,
market power, - Market share market penetration or coverage
(horizontal penetration), repeat buying (vertical
penetration), usage intensity - Overall marketing approach
- Offensive marketing
- Defensive marketing
- The phenomenon of double jeopardy
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