Net Promoter Camp Training
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Transcript of Net Promoter Camp Training
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DDAATTAA
ActionAction
ResultsResults
EEXXCCEELLLLEENNCCEE
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Net Promoter
Camp Training
Introductions
Those involved in resident camping?
Those involved in day camping?
Others?
Net-Promoter Methodology
Delighting Participants and Enhancing Loyalty
Rapid Adoption
The Ultimate Question
How likely would you be to recommend camp to a friend, family member or neighbor on a scale of 0 to 10?
Response Groups
Net-Promoter Response Groups
• Promoters (9&10) – those who were so delighted that they are promoting their experience to others.
• Passives (7&8) – those who had their expectations met to the point that they were satisfied but were not delighted to the point that they are promoting their experience to others.
• Detractors (0-6) – those who are anywhere from very dissatisfied to not having some portion of their expectations met.
Promoters exhibit the Four Loyalty Behaviors that drive growth
• Repurchase
• Buy additional lines
• Refer others
• Provide constructive feedback
Use the Net-Promoter question framework & methodology as an over-arching indicator along with traditional evaluations.
1. Net-Promoter Question (Scale of 0-10) • How likely is it that you would recommend your YMCA
to a friend or family member?
2. Open-end follow-up questions• Why did you rate it the way you did?• What would we need to do to get a rating of 9 or 10?• What needs to improved?
3. Additional evaluation questions
Scoring
Example Response Ratingsrating % responded
9-10s: 71%
7-8s: 26%
0-6s: 3%
Net –Promoter Score: 68%
Just averaging the ratings, results in a 9.1
Call to Action
Create more Promoters and fewer Detractors!
2 Dimensions of Loyalty
Promoter ExerciseName a company that you are a promoter
for and tell us the reasons why.
Camp Promoter Exercise
What are the things you’ve heard people articulate when promoting your camp?
More than Satisfaction...Loyalty & Growth
Companies with world class loyalty
Industry Leaders
• Long distance providers - Vontage - 45%• Cellular providers - Verizon - 40%• Internet service providers - AT&T - 11%• Banking - Citigroup - (12%)• Brokerage - Charles Schwab - 36%• Technology hardware - Apple - 77%• Online search - Google - 71%• Online shopping - Amazon - 74%
Discovering Key Drivers
Super Promoters
Bad Profits
• Come at customers’ expense and drain the value out of customer relationships.
• Whenever a customer feels misled, mistreated, ignored, or coerced, then profits from that customer are bad.
• Are about extracting value from customers, not creating value.
Examples of Bad Profits
• Airlines: Change fees & baggage fees• Rental car: Gasoline refill @ 3x retail price
What are some other examples where you have experienced bad profits as consumer?
Are there any bad profits now in your camps?
Bad Profits vs. Good Profits
• Bad profits undermine growth.
• Good profits are earned with the customer’s enthusiastic cooperation.
One organization’s bad profits can be another organization’s marketing campaign
NPS -- More Than a Metric
• Provides participant data as an instrument for improvement
• Provides data for strategic decision making to grow participation
• Simple for everyone, at all levels, to understand
• Actionable by employees
Gathering Data
DDAATTAA
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Transactional & Relationship
• Transactional – measure experience following a specific event
• Relationship – measure experience periodically over the lifetime of a member
Customer Corridor
Visit Website Take Delivery Request Service
Brand image, Value, Ease of doing business
Purchase Use Product Get tech support
Move/ Change
Lodge Complaint
Camp Customer Corridor Exercise
1. Identify no more than 10 customer touch points for your camp experience
2. Identify 2 of the touch points you believe are the most critical to the customer’s perception of camp
3. For those 2 touch points, identify up to 5 important factors that matter the most to you as participant or parent
• Drive NPS as a top priority
• Ensure data segmentation
• Implement improvement systems
Key Requirements for Success
Top Priority
Top Priority
• Ensure structure follows strategy
• Integrate / Align departments & systems
• Invest sufficient resources
• Process to drive cross-functional solutions
• Ensure employees at all levels take action
Program Governance Model
Steering CommitteeDirector
Senior Staff
Program TeamRuns InfrastructureAnalysis, EducationExperts in NP
Business Function TeamMarketingITOperations/ProgramsFacilities
Alignment
Director Senior Leaders
Process Leaders
Critical Customer Touch Points
Bottom Up
• Frontline alignment & accountability
• Closed-loop process
• Front-line learning
Top Down
• Set strategic priorities
• Lead change
• Visibly show commitment
Enemies of Innovation
Ideas are easy – the toughest obstacles are developing speed and coordination.
Biggest Barriers
• Lengthy Development Times
• Lack of Coordination
• Risk Averse Culture
• Limited Customer Insight
The Smallest Barrier
Lack of Ideas
Change ManagementWhy do organizations fail?
• Operational execution of the program - number of employees that need to change
• In ability to create change – move focus from short-term to long-term
• “What gets measured gets done” isn’t sufficient, requires aligned systems
SegmentationSegmentation
Customer Segmentation
Systematically categorize customers into promoters, passives and detractors for each key customer segment
What are some ways that you would want to segment your data to better understand groups of participants
Profitability / NPS Grid
Detainees Angel Candidates Angels
Insurgents Agnostics Missionaries
Pro
fita
bil
ity
High
Low
Detractors Passives Promoters
Low NPS High
Cross Tabulations
Staff at camp have facilitated my child making friends
Strongly agree NPS 77.9%Somewhat disagree NPS 66.2%
Cross TabulationsYou received the communications you needed since the beginning of camp?
Strongly agree NPS 67.5%Strongly disagree NPS 53.3%
ImplementationSystems
Establish Operating Procedures
•Find 3rd party to drive the survey process
•Phase out current feedback systems that aren’t critical to Net Promoter
•Ensure commitment to long-term strategy among all key leaders
•Put into place a system for action planning
•Elevate NPS status and results in all staff and board reporting
NPS Communication
• Should be understood by all staff
• Should be visible to staff
• Should be communicated across the organization and to participants
NPS to Frontline Employees
• Enlist - they know the truth• Educate - share goals, decisions, results• Align goals, procedures & metrics• Customize - make information relevant to
people in their tasks• Relevant reporting - keep frequency in line
with the nature of the job• Reward - their contribution is valued
Additional Camp Assessments
Q-Checks – how well we are caring for the appearance of our facilities and equipment
Quality Standards – how well we are meeting our standards in training and program delivery
Questions