Picture of Sarah Moore for the Rethink Marketing podcast where she talks about acting on customer feedback

Rethink Marketing Podcast: Acting On Customer Feedback

In this podcast episode, Sarah Moore, Act-On’s senior customer marketing manager, offers actionable tips for acting on your customer feedback.
Article Outline

In this Rethink Marketing podcast, Sarah Moore, Act-On’s senior customer marketing manager, offers actionable tips for acting on the customer feedback you’re receiving, both good and bad.

Most companies claim to be customer-centric. But to be truly customer-centric means soliciting from your customers, listening to that feedback, and then acting on it in some meaningful way. That is incredibly hard to do, and requires the buy-in from the entire organization.

Every experience from every interaction between your company and your customers matters. So what are you doing to make it a positive experience?

In our interview, Sarah discusses the value of relationships with our customers, ways to solicit feedback from customers, as well as ways to take action on that feedback. She also talks about how you can use marketing automation platforms, like Act-On, to activate and close the customer feedback loop.

Welcome to the podcast, can you tell me more about what you do at Act-On?

I manage Act-On’s Customer Marketing, which means I get to communicate with customers every day, nurture those relationships, listen for and solicit feedback and identify our most enthusiastic advocates.

Can you tell us about the value of relationships with our current customers?

Developing and nurturing relationships with customers is fundamental to creating customer loyalty. Customers, myself included, want to feel valued, heard and prioritized. The more we can connect with customers in real-time and respond to their needs, the better.

It takes effort to earn customer loyalty and is easy to lose if you’re not careful. But, if you have earned a customer’s loyalty and make a mistake, they are much more likely to forgive. So get to know them and solicit their feedback regularly and at key points in their customer journey.

Can you level set me on what is NPS and what the scores mean?

NPS stands for Net Promoter Score and is a management tool that can be used to gauge the loyalty of a company’s customer relationships.

It measures customer perception based on one simple question:
How likely is it that you would recommend Act-ON to a friend or colleague?

Respondents give a rating between 0 (not at all likely) and 10 (extremely likely) and, depending on their response, customers fall into one of 3 categories to establish an NPS score:

  • Promoters respond with a score of 9 or 10 and are typically loyal and enthusiastic customers.
  • Passives respond with a score of 7 or 8. They are satisfied with your service but not happy enough to be considered promoters.
  • Detractors respond with a score of 0 to 6. These are unhappy customers who are unlikely to buy from you again, and may even discourage others from buying from you.
    To calculate your NPS score -you subtract the percentage of Detractors from the percentage of Promoters.

What are some ways to solicit feedback from customers, and how should we listen to take action?

Opportunities to connect and gather feedback abound. Be sure you’re actively listening and soliciting feedback. Here are some ways to get feedback from your community: 

  • User communities
  • NPS surveys
  • Social media
  • Frontline customer support
  • Account management/customer success
  • User groups
  • Customer advisory board

What is the role of marketing automation and NPS tools?

It’s what you do with the feedback that matters most. Most important is to get the feedback into the hands of the people at your organization that can act on this intelligence

Taking action – Value of responding in a personal, high-touch way; what are you going to do with the feedback? Use tools and automation for convenience and to respond quickly but don’t take the human out of the equation; know when to reach out 1:1

    1. Identifying and activating advocates
    2. Understanding what would improve the experience of passives
    3. Addressing concerns of detractors; enable customer service to rescue a customer who’s at risk of churning.
    4. Determine the most appropriate people in your org to take action and respond

Segmentation and personalization

Marketing Automation allows you to deliver the right message to the right person at the right time.

  • Marketing Automation allows you to segment your customers based on their feedback and nurture them with automated programs geared towards their needs
  • Nurture tracks/drip programs
  • Specific campaigns
  • Specific outreach from the most appropriate teams/team members
  • Automated workflows and personal responses; use automation to touch everyone but know when a 1:1 personal interaction or follow-up to the automation is best

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