Customer Happiness Blog

Improve Customer Loyalty Using CES

4 min read

Who wants to increase customer loyalty by 22%? That’s a 22% longer increase in customer lifetime value. 22% more repeat purchases, 22% less churn. Sounds good, right? If you’re using CES, moving clients who answer 1 on their survey response to a 7 has been found to increase customer loyalty by at least that much.

CES or Customer Effort Score asks the customer how easy it was to resolve their issue on a scale from 1 (very difficult) to 7 (very easy).

So how do you make that jump? Follow along as we go through a month of CES-driven support improvements and see how you can get the most out of your survey responses. If you’re not using CES yet, you’ll still find a few useful ideas!  First up, analyze the dataDon’t stress, if you don’t like analytics, we’re going to keep this simple. (It also gets much faster the second month on.) At the beginning of the month, you need to pull all the scores you’ve received with a score of 5 or less. These are the low scores you want to focus your attention on to get the biggest increase in customer loyalty.

You can make pivot tables for any segment you like: agent, product type, custom fields, etc.! Determine the low hanging fruitAfter looking at the data, we can probably come up with 100 different tactics to target the concerns of customers experiencing high effort experiences. How can we possibly implement all of them? We can’t – we need to be smart about it. To prioritize improvements, we borrow a page from Baremetric’s marketing playbook. At any one time, they may have 100 items on their to-do list … but they will never get to all of them. Instead, they rank their ideas by effort and impact to determine where they can make the biggest difference with the least amount of effort.We’ve got a master list of ideas to target the biggest concerns our customers are talking about. In order to determine which one we work on next, we:

Execute: Increase customer loyaltyAll right, once you’ve identified your best ideas (easy and impactful), you’ll need to put them into action. Working with the wider organization, commit to executing 2 or 3 ideas a month. Here are some suggestions for the types of projects you might embark on: Problem: Difficult to navigate Help Center

Problem: Difficult to find contact information

Problem: It takes too many replies to get a resolution

Problem: Unresolved bugs or product issues

Continue measuringHopefully, you’ve picked the right projects to work on, and the next month will show improvements for the drivers of effort you identified. By keeping the way you measure effort consistent, you’ll be able to demonstrate which areas your projects has had an impact on. However, remember! It’s a marathon, not a sprint. Keep improving month over month, and you’ll see solid returns on your customer loyalty growth.

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