| MARKETING: Listen to voice of the customer, Pt. 2 |
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How to hear—and act on—what they're "saying"
These steps--mapping the customer journey and gathering data at each touchpoint--lay the foundation, guiding banks to map the customer journey and then gather data at each key touchpoint.
Once banks begin gathering data from each channel, it is time to analyze what the data reveals. Banks can use text analytics programs to discover themes that provide a more complete picture of the customer's experience. Analytics programs are the most efficient way to sort, filter, and evaluate thousands or millions of data points. Analytic tools use natural language processing (NLP) to automatically capture the main ideas from customer comments. The bank can augment NLP with business knowledge and terminology specific to each line of business within the company. The next key to effective analysis is to classify the key issues based on the main ideas captured by natural language processing. These themes ensure accurate meanings are assigned to comments about various experiences. Banks can confirm accuracy over time as the business and the customers evolve. Whenever we update the classification engine, we can test the effects by comparing old and new findings to ensure the most accurate outcomes. To effectively take action to improve the customers' experience, banks need an accurate read on where and when to focus efforts. Increase the power of your Voice of the Customer program by translating findings into specific, measurable projects that can improve the customer experience. Analysis should drive strategy. For example, after analyzing feedback from call logs, email support data, and social media references, a bank might identify a key pain point regarding confusion over how to navigate the bank's online and mobile banking offerings. This VOC data can help the bank design different support strategies that eliminate the roadblocks and help strengthen the customer relationship. No program can be successful if the bank does not understand what success looks like. VOC programs should align new initiatives with measurable outcomes. To confirm the business value of your VOC efforts, consistently track the impact of any improvements made. Define metrics and leverage analytics dashboards to create progress reports that management can share with the board. As an example, by regularly monitoring customer feedback, a large financial services organization was able to quickly detect a high-risk issue with bank statement errors. By capturing early feedback from call center transcripts and online banking email, they were able to quickly take action with reassuring communications and corrected statements. Additionally, the bank measured the effectiveness of their actions by tracking customer responses over time, confirming that the volume of negative feedback dropped dramatically. In the age of nearly limitless customer data, banks have no excuse for not understanding their customers' experience. Those banks that can most successfully use that information to build better customer experiences will benefit from not just longer-lasting relationships, but more profitable relationships as well.
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[This article was posted on November 5, 2012, on the website of ABA Banking Journal, www.ababj.com, and is copyright 2012 by the American Bankers Association.] Set as favorite Bookmark
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