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Archive for the ‘Customer Retention’ Category

Survey Monkey Provides an Easy Way to Create Surveys

Friday, August 28th, 2009

Create surveys, collect responses, generate data – Use Survey Monkey’s features to generate the information you need to increase revenue.

Survey Monkey Logo

Survey Monkey is a tool that helps build online surveys. Survey Monkey provides many different options that allow you to choose the way your questions can be answered including drop-down answers, multiple choice, rating scales, and tick boxes. Also, you can choose to make certain questions required or randomize the answers to eliminate bias. You can customize the look of your survey as well by changing the color, size, or style of any of the elements in the survey.

Collecting surveys is also very simple. After you have created your survey, you will be given a link that you can then post wherever you want. You have the option of stopping the collection of surveys once you have reached a set date or amount.  If you do not want to do it that way, you can also use Survey Monkey’s list management software. This will send a survey invitation to everyone you include on your e-mail list. It will then track who has already responded and allow you to send out follow up reminders. It takes care of all opt-outs for you.

When all results have been collected, Survey Monkey also has the ability to analyze the results for you. You can view them as graphs and charts, or look into individual responses. You can also choose to only show some results. Downloading your results into multiple formats is also among Survey Monkey’s capabilities. You are also able to securely share your results.

Survey Monkey is the perfect way to discover people’s opinions. Surveying customers or potential customers will not only show people that you are genuinely interested in their opinion, but it can also be used to enhance customer service, improve operations, or even help you decide whether or not to undertake new business ventures. Basing business decisions on surveys can help increase profit and customer loyalty through unbiased feedback.

To learn more about this product, visit http://www.surveymonkey.com/

Kampyle Collects Instant Feedback from Website Visitors

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Kampyle collects customer feedback to help you increase conversion rates, reduce customer attrition, and improve customer satisfaction and loyalty.

Kampyle is a feedback management software that helps you collect, analyze, and manage your website visitors’ feedback. The site is well organized and very easy to navigate. It allows you to place customizable, branded feedback forms on your website that are easily accessible; customers just need to click on the survey. After submitting feedback, users have the option of including their email addresses for follow up. Nearly 60% of these people leave their valid email addresses. Customers can tell you what they like, what needs improvement, and if there are any glitches in the site.

Website owners are now able to communicate with customers who leave feedback. Many people choose not to participate in feedback surveys because they are typically issued a generic “we appreciate your feedback” message at the end. With Kampyle, business owners can collect feedback, allow the Kampyle system to analyze it, see what changes need to be made, and make them. Afterward, you are able to contact the people who participated in the survey and tell them the changes you have made.

Kampyle is a budget friendly (prices ranging from free to $999/month), easy to use program. At their site, you choose the fields you want added to your survey as well as customizing the look and feel and then copy and paste the code that Kampyle creates into your website template. It has real time reports that let you analyze data and make necessary changes. Additionally, with a built in response system, you are able to efficiently communicate with customers.

Website users are frequently frustrated by giving feedback and having nothing come of it. Kampyle makes users feel like providing their opinions was worth their time.

To learn more about Kampyle, visit http://www.kampyle.com/

12 Steps for Implementing a Successful New Business Development Strategy

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

1. Write down where you want to be. Set targets for customer growth, revenue, profits, sales to existing customers and employee attrition.

2. Take a factual look at where you are at in each of the areas listed in step number one.

3. Look at the gaps that exist from where you are at to where you want to be. Analyze the gaps the gaps using an adaptation of an old method developed by Dale Carnegie:

i. What is the gap?
ii. What are all the causes of the gap?
iii. What are all the possible solutions?
iv. What is are best solution(s)?

4. Clearly understand the impacts to the organization by closing the gaps that exist between desired outcomes and current results. Identify the benefits and measure impacts in terms of revenue and profit. Identify how desired results provide long term stability to the company and its employees.

5. Set short-term, intermediate and long-term goals and establish evaluative criteria and evaluation times. You must know what you want to hit, when you want to hit it.

6. Clearly establish inspection intervals for evaluation and corrective actions when needed. Know what key performance indicators you are going to measure and how you are going to measure it. Establish how you are going to evaluate company and individual performance and how often you are going to inspect results.

7. Write down all of the critical organizational actions necessary to achieve your business development objectives as outlined in step one.

8. Involve Employees. You must determine your initial program roll out and on-going progress communication methods and intervals to employees. Let them know what you are doing, why it is important to them (people are always more interested in how something impacts them) and how you are going to measure results. Discuss rewards to the business and its employees, if rewards are part of your program. Communicate consistently to employees at frequent intervals concerning program progress. Tie results to employee compensation and bonuses whenever possible.

9. Implement the program. Nothing happens without action. Usually things get worse with inactivity.

10. Monitor the progress of your program and adapt your practices based upon measurement and actionable analysis.

11. Communicate your results to critical stakeholders.

12. Ensure that new customer acquisition in profitable ways becomes an integral part of your business culture and practices. Make it a focal part of all new employee orientation. Include it as part of your regular management and employee meetings. Tie program objectives into employee compensation plans.

 
  
 

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