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Atricle Dump - Is Your Survey Worth My Time?
Add Extra Value to Garment Export Business! That’s a long list to choose from. Pick the questions that work for you and use them! (A blank ‘comments’ field on your existing form just doesn’t cut it!)Globalization has put forth India’s business community in the international market. Various foreign trade policies and investment policies have been framed to facilitate foreign trade and increase the profitability of the Indian garment manufacturers. The advent of liberal trade policies in textile and garments sector have made it possible of usage of modern technologies and international methods of manufacturing clothes. This sector of garments is one of the most successful and important in terms of foreign exchange generation and employmen Third, promise – and then take – immediate action. Tell customers how quickly their comments will be read, and how fast the changes will occur. Ask them: ‘May we reply to you personally about this? If so, please check here.’ Now it’s obvious that you are reading every comment, you are listening to the customer, you are committed to making changes every day. Key Learning Point In today’s busy world, your customer satisfaction survey must be so interesting and worthwhile that customers are glad to fill it in. If your survey is not engaging and attractive, customers will ignore it. Action Steps Look How To Realistically Set Your Fees - Part 1 A manufacturer complains that his customers rarely return the satisfaction surveys he sends out.Calculating Billable Hours Myth Vs. Reality We all know there are 52 weeks in a year and 40 working hours in a week. Therefore, we can bill 2080 hours per year, right. Wrong. Too often this is the trap that many new service businesses fall into. The first step in calculating your billable hours is to define a realistic working year. If you were employed elsewhere, you would expect or want at least two weeks vacation time, one week sick time, one week personal time and paid holidays. So, where does that leave us - 52 weeks min A leading resort gets back just 30% of the comment cards left for guests inside their fancy rooms. One government agency had a response rate of only 6% when they sent out an 11-page survey. What’s going on here? Why is the response rate so low? Why don’t customers complete and return customer satisfaction surveys? The problem, as I see it, is twofold: First, the format of many satisfaction surveys has taken on the language of academics and the structure of statisticians. Asking customers to rate the relative importance and performance, both perceived and expected, of 17 categories on a scale from 1 to 10 is a bit like asking someone attending the theater to evaluate the parking, lighting, sound system, seating, air conditioning, restrooms, refreshments and ushers – and, oh, by the way, did you enjoy the performance? If your questionnaire is too complex for customers to understand at a glance, it’s just too complex. If your survey is too long for them to complete in a few quick minutes, it’s just too long. If your response form is loaded with jargon, scales and numbers, it’s so filled up with your ideas there’s no place left for your customers to speak their minds. A statistical sampling of customer opinion can make sense. A quantitative monthly or quarterly survey may highlight where you’re slipping, climbing or simply standing still. But don’t ask every customer to reply ‘by the numbers’, or the majority will stop thinking about your survey, before they even start! That leads to the second point: Customers learned long ago that ‘standard surveys’ yield a ‘standard company response’ – which in many cases is nothing. If I complete your survey, how can I be sure you’ll take action on my comments? There’s little guarantee of action in a long list of detailed questions, tiny little boxes and columns of numbers. If you want to increase the quantity and value of customer comments you receive, if you want to make your survey really work hard for you, here are three things you can do: First, make it clear at the top of your survey that your customer’s comments are not just collected, they are truly valued. ‘Customer Satisfaction Survey’ is about as interesting as gray paint. ‘Your Voice Counts!’ sounds much better. ‘Tell us what you want!’ is appealing. ‘We are listening to YOU!’ is a promise I’d reply to. Second, design your form to gather qualitative input you will study and act on. Ask for subjective impressions and ideas with questions like these: ‘What did you like? What didn’t you like? What would you like? What do we do that you wish we didn’t? What would you like us to change? What did you appreciate the most? What should we provide that is missing? Did anyone or anything let you down? How can we serve you even better? What do we have to do to justify raising our price by 10%? What does no one in our business do that you think everyone should do? What should we start doing, stop doing, do more of, do less of, do immediately?’ That’s a long list to choose from. Pick the questions that work for you and use them! (A blank ‘comments’ field on your existing form just doesn’t cut it!) Third, promise – and then take – immediate action. Tell customers how quickly their comments will be read, and how fast the changes will occur. Ask them: ‘May we reply to you personally about this? If so, please check here.’ Now it’s obvious that you are reading every comment, you are listening to the customer, you are committed to making changes every day. Key Learning Point In today’s busy world, your customer satisfaction survey must be so interesting and worthwhile that customers are glad to fill it in. If your survey is not engaging and attractive, customers will ignore it. Action Steps Look c Increase Product Awareness by Becoming an Expert luate the parking, lighting, sound system, seating, air conditioning, restrooms, refreshments and ushers – and, oh, by the way, did you enjoy the performance?While many consumers buy products and use the services of others on a daily basis, few stop to think about why they chose one brand or person over another. The power of print, advertising, and images from television and film often have more of an effect on consumer choices then they may admit.With a product or service to sell, you have likely already investigated the costs and demographics of various traditional venues for advertising, however it is likely that you have missed a key to selling and an easy way to gain attention for you If your questionnaire is too complex for customers to understand at a glance, it’s just too complex. If your survey is too long for them to complete in a few quick minutes, it’s just too long. If your response form is loaded with jargon, scales and numbers, it’s so filled up with your ideas there’s no place left for your customers to speak their minds. A statistical sampling of customer opinion can make sense. A quantitative monthly or quarterly survey may highlight where you’re slipping, climbing or simply standing still. But don’t ask every customer to reply ‘by the numbers’, or the majority will stop thinking about your survey, before they even start! That leads to the second point: Customers learned long ago that ‘standard surveys’ yield a ‘standard company response’ – which in many cases is nothing. If I complete your survey, how can I be sure you’ll take action on my comments? There’s little guarantee of action in a long list of detailed questions, tiny little boxes and columns of numbers. If you want to increase the quantity and value of customer comments you receive, if you want to make your survey really work hard for you, here are three things you can do: First, make it clear at the top of your survey that your customer’s comments are not just collected, they are truly valued. ‘Customer Satisfaction Survey’ is about as interesting as gray paint. ‘Your Voice Counts!’ sounds much better. ‘Tell us what you want!’ is appealing. ‘We are listening to YOU!’ is a promise I’d reply to. Second, design your form to gather qualitative input you will study and act on. Ask for subjective impressions and ideas with questions like these: ‘What did you like? What didn’t you like? What would you like? What do we do that you wish we didn’t? What would you like us to change? What did you appreciate the most? What should we provide that is missing? Did anyone or anything let you down? How can we serve you even better? What do we have to do to justify raising our price by 10%? What does no one in our business do that you think everyone should do? What should we start doing, stop doing, do more of, do less of, do immediately?’ That’s a long list to choose from. Pick the questions that work for you and use them! (A blank ‘comments’ field on your existing form just doesn’t cut it!) Third, promise – and then take – immediate action. Tell customers how quickly their comments will be read, and how fast the changes will occur. Ask them: ‘May we reply to you personally about this? If so, please check here.’ Now it’s obvious that you are reading every comment, you are listening to the customer, you are committed to making changes every day. Key Learning Point In today’s busy world, your customer satisfaction survey must be so interesting and worthwhile that customers are glad to fill it in. If your survey is not engaging and attractive, customers will ignore it. Action Steps Look Emotion - The Brand of Youthful Exuberance Uncontained top thinking about your survey, before they even start!Have you ever wondered why the other guy gets attention?Could it possibly be that youthful exuberance and faith his client will buy his product shines across his face at the appearance of a live breathing body in his presence?Just watch as a new marketer faces the challenge of selling his product to the first prospect. It’s obvious, he expects to sell a product. By the time he’s heard the forth or fifth excuse for not buying he’s lost part of his exuberance. His face isn’t as lively. His voice quiets. His deme That leads to the second point: Customers learned long ago that ‘standard surveys’ yield a ‘standard company response’ – which in many cases is nothing. If I complete your survey, how can I be sure you’ll take action on my comments? There’s little guarantee of action in a long list of detailed questions, tiny little boxes and columns of numbers. If you want to increase the quantity and value of customer comments you receive, if you want to make your survey really work hard for you, here are three things you can do: First, make it clear at the top of your survey that your customer’s comments are not just collected, they are truly valued. ‘Customer Satisfaction Survey’ is about as interesting as gray paint. ‘Your Voice Counts!’ sounds much better. ‘Tell us what you want!’ is appealing. ‘We are listening to YOU!’ is a promise I’d reply to. Second, design your form to gather qualitative input you will study and act on. Ask for subjective impressions and ideas with questions like these: ‘What did you like? What didn’t you like? What would you like? What do we do that you wish we didn’t? What would you like us to change? What did you appreciate the most? What should we provide that is missing? Did anyone or anything let you down? How can we serve you even better? What do we have to do to justify raising our price by 10%? What does no one in our business do that you think everyone should do? What should we start doing, stop doing, do more of, do less of, do immediately?’ That’s a long list to choose from. Pick the questions that work for you and use them! (A blank ‘comments’ field on your existing form just doesn’t cut it!) Third, promise – and then take – immediate action. Tell customers how quickly their comments will be read, and how fast the changes will occur. Ask them: ‘May we reply to you personally about this? If so, please check here.’ Now it’s obvious that you are reading every comment, you are listening to the customer, you are committed to making changes every day. Key Learning Point In today’s busy world, your customer satisfaction survey must be so interesting and worthwhile that customers are glad to fill it in. If your survey is not engaging and attractive, customers will ignore it. Action Steps Look Why Service Makes the Real Difference In Business Success nt. ‘Your Voice Counts!’ sounds much better. ‘Tell us what you want!’ is appealing. ‘We are listening to YOU!’ is a promise I’d reply to.Not too long ago I was booked into a hotel which treated the guests as though they should be grateful to be able to stay there. The service left much to be desired, despite their great Citizen's Charter which was paraded everywhere and I made a mental note, as well as passing the word along, about not staying there in the future. Stuck in my room feeling cross and unhappy, I suddenly remembered a wonderful summer I spent in Stratford, Canada, a few years before and the warm cosy atmosphere of the guest house I stayed in; a quaint little hous Second, design your form to gather qualitative input you will study and act on. Ask for subjective impressions and ideas with questions like these: ‘What did you like? What didn’t you like? What would you like? What do we do that you wish we didn’t? What would you like us to change? What did you appreciate the most? What should we provide that is missing? Did anyone or anything let you down? How can we serve you even better? What do we have to do to justify raising our price by 10%? What does no one in our business do that you think everyone should do? What should we start doing, stop doing, do more of, do less of, do immediately?’ That’s a long list to choose from. Pick the questions that work for you and use them! (A blank ‘comments’ field on your existing form just doesn’t cut it!) Third, promise – and then take – immediate action. Tell customers how quickly their comments will be read, and how fast the changes will occur. Ask them: ‘May we reply to you personally about this? If so, please check here.’ Now it’s obvious that you are reading every comment, you are listening to the customer, you are committed to making changes every day. Key Learning Point In today’s busy world, your customer satisfaction survey must be so interesting and worthwhile that customers are glad to fill it in. If your survey is not engaging and attractive, customers will ignore it. Action Steps Look How To Write Your Resume and Market Yourself for an International Assignment That’s a long list to choose from. Pick the questions that work for you and use them! (A blank ‘comments’ field on your existing form just doesn’t cut it!)Do you dream about working abroad? Do your short or long-term career goals include an international assignment? Maybe you want to practice your ability to speak multiple languages. Perhaps you completed coursework or a degree in international business. Or maybe you just want to broaden your corporate qualifications with a more global perspective and multicultural experience.With an increasingly diverse workforce and global economy, international business experience -- whether that involves frequent international business trips, short- Third, promise – and then take – immediate action. Tell customers how quickly their comments will be read, and how fast the changes will occur. Ask them: ‘May we reply to you personally about this? If so, please check here.’ Now it’s obvious that you are reading every comment, you are listening to the customer, you are committed to making changes every day. Key Learning Point In today’s busy world, your customer satisfaction survey must be so interesting and worthwhile that customers are glad to fill it in. If your survey is not engaging and attractive, customers will ignore it. Action Steps Look carefully at the design, format and length of your current customer satisfaction survey. Does it capture your customer’s interest? Does it promise fast response and action? Should you change the name? the length? the questions? the design? Can you afford not to? Your survey might be the last thing your customers see when doing business with you. Are you creating the right ‘last impression’?
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