Revenue growth and profitability are the key indices of success,
studied by every retailer. Yet both rise and fall in response to consumer behavior,
which means that you must also study your customer and your competition. Detailed
knowledge of customer satisfaction and consumer attitudes should stand behind
every important operational decision you make.
There is just no substitute for retail survey research. Some companies insist
that they don’t need to survey their customers because they are in touch
with them every day at store level. We think this is a dangerous mentality. For
every customer who takes time to complain, many remain silent. Your store managers
may know what their most vocal customers think, but what about that silent majority?
Other retailers believe that occasional focus groups and/or mystery shops provide
enough consumer feedback. These research tools have some value, but they are certainly
not sufficient. A group of eight self-selected, vocal shoppers does not provide
a reliable, statistically valid sample of your customer base. And mystery shops
provide detailed operational feedback about single shopping trip, not nearly representative
of the myriad customer experiences that happen in your stores each day.
How do successful retailers use survey research?
|