Two years ago I wrote post here about the importance of Action Management to customer feedback processes. It was titled: "Turning customer feedback into action is the number one challenge for customer strategists." The article referenced some work done by Walker Information Systems and pointed at an article written by them (click here to read my earlier post and the link to Walker's article).
The point: Customer Feedback is a lot more useful if it is immediately actionable.
One of QuestBack Essentials' main advantages is that it makes customer feedback immediately actionable.
Kudos to QB for thinking that way as far back as 15 years ago. Their Essentials product uses a couple of different process mechanisms to make feedback actionable immediately. One of them is the equivalent to Walker's "Hot Alert" process. QuestBack calls it a "Notification", simply an e-mail that is automatically triggered to a given person based on criteria (a response profile) coming through the customer feedback instrument, which could be an e-mailed survey, a feedback form, a pop up survey or any other QuestBack created feedback instrument. Other process mechanisms include, all responses and manual inspection / selection of response to be acted on. As a result, QB Essentials is very flexible in how it helps organizations create action on received feedback.
Kudos to QB for thinking that way as far back as 15 years ago. Their Essentials product uses a couple of different process mechanisms to make feedback actionable immediately. One of them is the equivalent to Walker's "Hot Alert" process. QuestBack calls it a "Notification", simply an e-mail that is automatically triggered to a given person based on criteria (a response profile) coming through the customer feedback instrument, which could be an e-mailed survey, a feedback form, a pop up survey or any other QuestBack created feedback instrument. Other process mechanisms include, all responses and manual inspection / selection of response to be acted on. As a result, QB Essentials is very flexible in how it helps organizations create action on received feedback.
In any case, the main issue most organizations have when trying to implement action processes on feedback is determining the combination of "feedback to be actioned" and "how to action it". In other words, hot-alerting feedback for action only works if the "action takers" for that feedback are empowered to act on it in ways that help with the issue. This simply is not the case in most scenarios. So businesses continue to struggle with applying action management on their feedback, even when they have great tools to use like QuestBack.
So what's different now? Well, QuestBack is different. Action Management has been improved in QuestBack Essentials and combined with a Case Management capability to allow customer feedback "issues" to be Highlighted, Status-ed and Actioned - all within the QuestBack Essentials platform. This capability allows new issues to be highlighted, internally discussed and disseminated, decisions to be made and actions determined. All within short periods of time (minutes or hours potentially vs weeks or months today) To my mind, this is really cool stuff and very valuable potentially to call centers, sales forces, hr teams, etc. Really, any group of people in a business who have to react to the concerns of another group of people. And, it has "hot-alert" automated actioning too. This combination allows an organization to standardize action taking on certain kinds of issues, while manually intervening on other issues and inspecting / organizing for yet additional kinds of issues - all at the same time.
Combined with QuestBack's Dashboarding capabilities, this lets companies inexpensively seek feedback, organize and implement follow-up actions and processes, report on feedback and actions, and Manage that feedback effectively based on surveys they do using QuestBack Essentials.
I think anyone looking to implement a closed-loop customer feedback process today would do very well to consider QB Essentials and its action management tools.
Stewart Nash
www.linkedin.com/in/stewartnash/
I think anyone looking to implement a closed-loop customer feedback process today would do very well to consider QB Essentials and its action management tools.
Stewart Nash
www.linkedin.com/in/stewartnash/
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