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Ching
Chiew Lian
Director, ACNielsen
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ACNielsen Asia Pacific
Companies on a cost-reduction
mission must be relieved to know that they can build consumer
satisfaction and loyalty without “over-servicing”
them. This seems to contradict the common belief that “Consumer
is King!”
In a study that
compares consumers of four mobile phone service providers
in two culturally different countries, we analysed consumers'overall
evaluation on their respective service providers along with
their overall satisfaction and loyalty (continuity and recommendation
intentions) in 4 incremental levels. The analysis led us to
some interesting findings:
- The overall performance of each service provider, measured
using the eQ index, increases with increased satisfaction
and loyalty. This reassures organisations' performance-based
approach in building consumer satisfaction and loyalty.
- Loyal customers are forgiving and they do not immediately
consider leaving or tell their friends and relatives to
stay away even though 7% have experienced below average
services.
- Maintaining a high service level and delivery consistency
remains a priority. Consumers without a clear intention
to stay and are less than satisfied, experienced low service
levels that are 3 times more.
- The threshold of tolerance is estimated to be 10% of ratings
in below average performance levels. This is when consumers
would start to look for alternatives.
- Highly satisfied and loyal consumers' eQ index hover around
80. This suggests that when a business sets an improvement
target of 80, it has a pretty high success rate in cultivating
a healthy pool of consumers to sustain its business.
- As satisfaction and loyalty levels increase, the eQ index
increases at a decreasing rate. Therefore, driving improvement
from a lower performance level that increases the index
from 60 to 80 yields a higher rate of loyalty returns than
increasing the index beyond 80.
- Consumers' overall evaluations are more stable at higher
levels of satisfaction and loyalty. This shows that maintaining
a strong eQ index of 80 would result in a stable level of
consumer retention.
- On the other hand, consumers' overall evaluations differ
by as much as 40 points (eQ index range from 30 to 70) at
levels of dissatisfaction and low loyalty. Therefore, a
company that appears to perform better would still be at
risk of losing its consumers, especially when performance
is below 80. The findings also reveal that there are non-performance
related factors influencing consumer attrition.


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