Do the following statements describe your company's approach to gathering customer data?

We ask customers to comment only on what they have experienced firsthand because we need reliable data, not guesses.

We collect customers' views shortly after they have interacted with the company, while the event or activity is fresh in their minds, because people forget and we need to address service issues promptly.

The teams that do the work receive data about their performance because they comprise the people who need to understand and improve the way service is delivered to customers.

We report customer data alongside financial data because we know that customer loyalty improves financial performance.

If you answered yes to all of the above, you are a very rare breed.

Our experience suggests that most companies use a crude approach to gathering vital customer data: Periodic, often annual, surveys that are disconnected in time from the events they are purporting to measure are the norm.

We call them the Annual ''Do You Love Us?'' Survey, and it has many pitfalls.

One of the biggest mistakes is thinking that measuring customer satisfaction is the goal. Though that is nice to know, what companies need to know is how well they perform in those activities that customers think are important.

Customers don't want to be satisfied; they want companies to perform well on things that matter to the customer.

Because companies collect feedback so infrequently, their surveys attempt to collect too much information at once. Customers receive lengthy surveys with questions that are irrelevant to them and are about things they have had no direct experience with.

Many surveys end up in the trash. Those who do complete them get question fatigue and guess at the questions about which they lack firsthand experience. The resulting data is of questionable reliability.

Periodic surveys limit the opportunities for data-driven improvement. An annual survey means only one data-driven learning and improvement opportunity each year. In a competitive market, can you wait a year for an opportunity to improve?

Even a monthly survey schedule means that data can be out of date, particularly when the capture and processing of that data adds weeks to the cycle. If a customer is dissatisfied (and, remember, most don't complain—to you), how long can you afford for that customer to be walking around with a grouse?

Identifying and addressing unspoken complaints is an effective way to improve loyalty, but speed is of the essence.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

David Jackson is a founder and the managing director of Clicktools, Ltd. (www.clicktools.com), a technology-based solutions provider of products and services for measuring and improving customer experience.