As a business owner, how can you make sure that your customers are loyal and likely to recommend your business to their friends and family? There’s an easy way for businesses to measure customer loyalty: Net Promoter Score (NPS). 

Net Promoter Score allows businesses to monitor customer satisfaction and loyalty.  Here’s what we’ll be covering in this article.

What is Net Promoter Score? 

Net Promoter Score is meant to be a gauge of overall customer experience. The higher your NPS, the more satisfied your customers are with your business. 

To determine Net Promoter Score, customers are asked how likely it is that they’d recommend your business to family and friends on a scale from 0-10. Based on their response, they are sorted into three categories: Promoter, Detractor, and Passive. Let’s go through all three. 

Promoter

A promoter is a customer who rates your business as a 9 or a 10. These customers had a great experience and are likely to act ask brand evangelists, telling friends and family about to visit your business.

Detractor 

A detractor is a customer who rates your business from 0-6. These customers were not satisfied with their experience and would not recommend your business. It’s possible that they might even spread negative word-of-mouth and drive potential customers away. 

Passive 

A passive is a customer who rates your business as a 7 or an 8. While these customers might not have a negative view of your business, they’re not likely to actively recommend your business to others either. 

What is a good Net Promoter Score?

A good Net Promoter Score indicates more promoters than detractors. Typically, a score higher than 0 is considered positive, showing that a company has customers who endorse it than those who criticize it. Scores of 50 or higher are seen as excellent, demonstrating customer loyalty while scores of 70 or above reflect exceptional customer satisfaction, often observed in top-tier companies. It's worth mentioning that the definition of a "good" NPS may differ depending on the industry.

How to calculate Net Promoter Score?

To calculate your Net Promoter Score, simply look at the percentage of promoters you have and the percentage of detractors you have. Subtract the percentage of detractors from the percentage of promoters to find your Net Promoter Score. 

Net Promoter Score calculation

How net Promoter Score helps retain and acquire customers

Once you know your Net Promoter Score, you can understand how well your business is doing at building loyal customers. A high Net Promoter Score shows that your business is doing a great job delighting customers. Meanwhile, a low Net Promoter Score shows that there are steps that you could take to improve your customer experience. 

According to Bain & Company, there’s a direct correlation between Net Promoter Score and increased revenue. Industry leaders outgrew competitors by a factor of 2x. Effects are even stronger when you have a lot of competition. After all, when customers have a lot of options, they will naturally gravitate to the best business. 

Estimating Net Promoter Score with online reviews

Just a couple of decades ago, it was a lot harder to know how customers actually felt about your business. The logistics of actually conducting a random survey on your customer base in the days before the Internet was pretty difficult for most businesses.

Luckily, finding your business’s Net Promoter Score is now easier than ever. Here are some easy ways a business can see how well they’re doing at engaging their customers. Today, real customers are sharing their opinions on your business and millions of others on the hundreds of review sites online.

Most review sites have reviewers rate businesses on a scale of 1-5.

In order to convert this into the NPS scale, just multiply by two. A 1-star rating is a 2 on the NPS scale, a 2-star is a 4, and so on. 

Competitive benchmarking with reviews

Of course, your competitors’ online reviews are publically available as well. You can use their review data to estimate their Net Promoter Score. By doing this, you’ll be able to see how well you’re doing at engaging your customers compared to your competitors. 

By comparing your reviews with your competitors, you can see how well your business is performing. If you consistently have a lower NPS than your competitors, chances are that there’s something that you can learn from their business operations.

Finding Net Promoter Score with customer surveys 

Of course, you don’t have to just wait for customers to submit reviews to find your Net Promoter Score. You can also send Net Promoter Score surveys to your customers via email and/or text.  

You can keep the Net Promoter survey short and simple. Ask your customers the following. 

“On a scale of zero to ten, how likely are you to recommend our business to a friend or family member?”

If you want more detailed feedback, you can give your customers the option to explain why they left the number that they did. This can help you understand what is and isn’t working with your business operations. 

Remember, it’s important that you don’t send NPS surveys to the same customers twice within a short span of time. This can be a little too much for customers. Random samples of new customers also help to provide more accurate feedback. 

How to improve Net Promoter Score 

Of course, measuring your NPS is only half of the story. Once you’ve measured your NPS, you need to know how your business can start improving. 

The first step to improving your Net Promoter Score is making sure your business is committed to improvement from top to bottom. Make sure that your employees have access to the data and know where they can improve. 

Next, it’s important to analyze your Net Promoter Score. Dig deeper to find the areas in your customer experience where customers are experiencing the most friction. Look out for patterns in customer reviews and surveys that show you where you can start improving your business operations. 

For any change that you make, it’s important to continually track your business’s NPS. This is a great way to measure the effectiveness of any changes that you make. If you make a change that ends up actually hurting customer satisfaction, you can roll it back as soon as possible. 

So let’s talk about how a real business started tracking and improving Net Promoter Score. 

How Kona Cleaners improved NPS 

Kona Cleaners is a multi-location dry cleaner business based in Orange County, California. 

Kona Cleaners started tracking NPS with Birdeye. While the business started with an already phenomenal NPS of 84, there were some locations that were lagging behind others. Luckily, it was easy to keep track of which business locations were doing worse than others in the Birdeye dashboard. 

Keeping track of customer satisfaction data allowed Kona Cleaners to focus on improving operations for the locations that most needed help. The results spoke for themselves. Since starting with Birdeye, Kona Cleaners’ Net Promoter Score has gone up and up. 

Improving Net Promoter Score with Birdeye 

It can be hard to try to get insights from customer feedback through the vast sea of the noise of online reviews. Luckily, a customer experience software like Birdeye can help you build loyal relationships with everyone who walks through your door. 

View data from your customers and your competitors 

The Birdeye dashboard collects review data from both you and your competitors so that you can see how well your business is doing with pleasing customers compared to similar businesses in your area. You’ll be able to view data visualizations showing your Net Promoter Score against your competitors. 

Collect customer feedback from surveys 

Want to find your Net Promoter Score using surveys instead? No problem. Birdeye gives you fully customizable surveys that allow you to collect feedback easily and effectively. 

Get actionable insights from customer reviews 

Review text can provide valuable insights into what’s working and what’s not with your business. Birdeye can help you sort through this review text easier than ever. Birdeye’s Natural Language Processing engine Athena scans customer reviews to find the issues that customers care about the most. 

How Birdeye can help your business be the best business

Birdeye doesn’t just help you stay ahead of the competition. Birdeye helps you handle every aspect of customer feedback. With Birdeye, businesses can get new reviews, manage and respond to reviews from over 150 sites in a single dashboard, automatically share posts on social media, and receive actionable insights through Natural Language Processing.

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