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In this article, we’ll share a ready-made action plan to increase your NPS score; an indicator that your customers are happy. The strategies discussed in this plan have helped our team at NetHunt to increase our NPS at 32% in half a year. We’re happy to share our results.
Let's dig in with the basics and then dive deeper into the strategies marketing, sales, and product teams need to use to develop company growth whilst increasing NPS score.Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a metric that tracks how a company's product or service is being perceived by their customers. As a direct indicator of growth and customer satisfaction, it's already regarded as a primary KPI for customer success teams to monitor.But we believe this particular metric can be more widely used.A top NPS score results from an aligned effort of the development, marketing, sales, and customer service departments. Only their combined knowledge of feature development, audience, correct messaging, lead nurturing, and timely customer service, used together, can result in a high NPS score for a business.
How likely is it that you would recommend [Organization/Product/Service] to a friend or colleague?
Answers should be given rated on a linear scale from one; not likely, to 10; definitely. It looks a little something like this.NPS = % of Promoters - % of Detractors
There are no set-in-stone rules for NPS scores, but you can generally consider anything above 30 to be okay. It's all relative, and the best gauge you can get on a current NPS score is by comparing it with one from a previous time-frame. Similarly, you can try to find an industry-standard NPS score as a . Finding out you're outperforming competitors is always a pleasant surprise.
Some thinkers believe that any NPS score higher than 0 is good since an NPS score can be in the negatives. Whilst it's always good to stay in the positives, I'd recommend not setting your bar this low. The higher your NPS score, the better.
The road to an entirely satisfactory NPS score is long and winding; many people say it is infinite. Industries constantly evolve, user needs and expectations are always increasing.However, this isn't the downside for NPS score collection; it's just part of the journey. The downside of NPS scoring is that it often brings many false-positive results, so you should take it with a pinch of salt.
Again, there are no rules. NPS score frequency changes based on variables such as differences between transactional and relationship-driven business models, user lifecycle, and product update frequency. Many companies choose to run their NPS surveys every six months, but it's up to you.
Here is our recommended NPS survey interval pattern👇
As customers ourselves, we don't formulate our opinions based on a product alone. It's all parts of equal branding, customer service, and value delivery that have the desired influence on customers; customer centricity should be the foundation of every department's customer-facing activities. The marketing and design teams, to sales and customer service employees, and of course, the developers should all be working towards the same, collective NPS-driven goal.
The Marketing Team
The most significant impact the marketing team can have on an NPS score is by ensuring the perception of product value for a client is the correct one.The marketing team should create open lines of communication and messaging that resonates with a business's ideal customer profile (ICP). They need to make sure that this messaging addresses relevant pain points and they should guarantee that a user's post-registration experience is as they would expect it to be.
Example: Imagine the marketing team made a point of a client being at the centre of everything they do. Then, a customer has a problem with their purchase, and for whatever reason, it takes a week to get it fixed. Similarly, if you shout about a product's functionality whose release date isn't due for another year… to acquire more, slightly disappointed, leads. Both scenarios affect your NPS score, and worse, your brand-consumer trust.
We need to make sure marketing output is transparent and pays attention to our clients' emotional needs. Use accurate wording to ensure that any user or potential user feels safe, valued, and understands the value the product is giving them.
The marketing team maintains an extensive product knowledge-base.
At NetHunt, each marketing team member passes a training program once they have joined our company. Going further, they spend some time with the Customer Success Department, listening to demo calls and internal discussions to understand the product further. After the world went remote in 2020, the marketing team joined demo calls online to understand customer questions and to learn how to speak a customer's language.
The marketing team needs strictly personalised messaging. The days when 'customer personalisation' meant inserting a customer's name into the email subject line are behind use. Everybody's at it, and it barely registers with our customers anymore. We use proper tools to segment our customers and apply a personalised experience across our customer engagement activities. We send our customers educational content based on their preferences and needs. Similarly, when we run any promo campaigns, we send our customers personalised offers. These offers are based on the product features they use most.
Example: If you can see that a customer uses email campaign functionality in your CRM system a lot, offer a discount on email search functionality. The customer is provided with something valuable, which increases their odds of being upsold to.
The marketing team should actively engage with promoters. While we believe that the product team should work with detractors, we believe that the marketing team should work with promoters to the same extent. You've got an incredible, loyal audience, who are ready to provide a case study for your website and write reviews on websites like G2 and Capterra. Use it. It's bound to positively influence potential buyers who are shopping around for a product like yours.
The Sales and Customer Success Team
Technology is the best weapon for your sales and success teams.Having data scattered around different tools and programmes whilst trying to aggregate and analyse it is a nightmare.
Maintaining superior customer relations is much more comfortable with a well-implemented Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software in place.CRM was basically designed to bump up customer engagement metrics like NPS scores, it's a no-brainer.CRM helps the marketing, sales, and customer success teams identify the most effective acquisition channels, which content converts best at every stage of the buyer journey, the most efficient sales strategies, bottlenecks in your funnel, and which customers require the most attention. It can also be used by the development team to understand the ways in which customers use a tool, which features stick, and where any gaps lie between customer expectation and the tool’s reality.
CRM offers an unmatched customer experience.
1. Use Real-Life Scenarios on Demo Calls:
Potential buyers don’t remember all the buttons on all the menus in your system. However, they will remember stories you tell them about these features that might have a particular emotional impact. Our customer success team doesn’t simply open an account and walk a new client through every button. Instead, they show that new client what they can achieve with the product as a whole.Tips for successful customer success demos ⬇️2. Change from a Customer Support Model to a Customer Success Model.
If you're an enterprise-size company with enough resources to separate your technical support and customer support departments… awesome. Otherwise, when you're counting the pennies, we strongly recommend switching to a .
Customer success ensures customer satisfaction through correct product usage. It goes beyond the one-time fixes to one-time problems that a support team would usually offer.
Problem-solving is a customer success team's final resort; instead, it looks to prevent a problem from ever occurring. It adds value to the customer's experience; it is proactive, not reactive.🔥 How to implement a customer success strategy, at a glance 🔥
3. Speed up your response time.
Obviously. Answer customer queries as quickly as you can. We're shocked but grateful at the number of users who have switched to our CRM from a competitor because their response time was too slow. It's best to assume that your client's business is dependent on your product, and any difficulties they face can be critical.We don’t hide from our customers, and we’ve got loads of open lines of communication. Regardless of whether it’s email, Facebook, website chat, or in-product chat, we stick to a strictly to two minutes maximum response time for every customer. More often than not, the customer success team is ready to jump on a quick demo call to get a ticket resolved in the fastest time possible.
If a customer doesn't feel much like chatting, we'd recommend to have loads of how-to content on YouTube, blog, and in the Help Center. No stone is left unturned in getting to the bottom of our customer problems. As a result, we get loads of lovely feedback from our customers on websites such as G2.Apart from focussing on product improvement, development, and evolution, the product team needs to collaborate with the customer success team. Your customer success managers are your customers' voice, and they should translate each product challenge to the product team and make a case for any missing feature that will enable customers to gain more from the product.
The product team needs to act on NPS surveys.
We found that the response rate with detailed feedback is over 35% when the product team contacts a customer.
Once we receive NPS survey results and notice any cohort has a specific complaint or suggestion about our product, the product team itself reaches out to selected respondents to further investigate.
Our customers are contacted by multiple departments - marketing, sales, customer support; however when they see a message from the product team, the people who are responsible for product development, it makes them understand that the company means business.
The aim is for our customer to understand that we're absolutely dedicated to providing a world-class customer experience.
Along the same themes of openness and transparency, we want to share our NPS score with you. In our most previous NPS survey, we scored 33. We're incredibly proud of this considering the average NPS for other SaaS companies is 30. We improved our score by 8 points in the last 6 months, meaning we overtook Dropbox, .
Don't worry; we understand that there's a long way to go… considering Google Drive's NPS is 50!
We asked the NPS question to every customer using our product for more than three months as an in-product pop-up banner. If the customer didn't respond, we showed them the same banner one week later.We achieved a 17.6% conversion rate of those who responded to the survey, which we’re happy with.We ran the survey via TypeForm. This platform is convenient to set up and automatically calculates final NPS scores. The picture below is a screenshot of the dashboard.To wrap up, an NPS score is a fantastic way to understand and bring your business closer to your customers. It opens the door to better customer conversations and gathers valuable insights from heavy users of SaaS products. Of course, it's not the only metric with which we can evaluate product success. But rather, it measures the success of your business as a whole, being influenced by various factors such as sales team communication and missed tickets from customer support.
Only through company departments' combined efforts and a common customer-centric approach can a business build stronger relationships, achieve better numbers, and grow.Good luck!Previously published at