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>We Can’t Reduce User Experience To A Single Number This is the crux of the issue - CEOs do need a simple metric to summarize performance in each of their business units in order to evaluate performance and prioritize company resources. Metrics are only useful for decisions if they are easy to understand, and consistently measured. Just as Earnings is used to measure profitability, and Revenue is used to measure growth, NPS is the best they've come up with so far for customer experience. Of course none of these 3 metrics is perfect, but they still need to be measured and complimented by more detailed reporting. To better understand Earnings you look at changes in the component parts, revenue and cost. To better understand NPS you look at the mix of scores (1s, 2s, 3s, etc) and follow up questions like actual referrals, which differ by business (unlike NPS which can be applied more broadly). The author devotes most of the article pointing out that there are areas where follow up questions would give a richer understanding of customer experience, which of course all NPS proponents would agree with. What he could do a better job of is trying to convince us why executives shouldn't even attempt to summarize their company's performance in customer experience, just like they summarize lots of other complex activities to report to shareholders. Too many companies focus only on hard metrics like revenue and profits, which is why they find NPS a helpful way to steer the company's focus back to the customer. |
He would tell you that NPS is only like earnings or revenues if we allowed either to have 50% or more of their data filled with arbitrary numbers, not audited data collected from state-licensed specialists who would lose their job if it was discovered the data was manufactured whole cloth.
The author would also tell you that NPS is easily gamed and there's no checking on whether that is or not. He wrote extensively in the article the various techniques that folks can game the numbers. If this is a number reported to shareholders, shareholders should insist (No, Demand!) that the numbers be corroborated by a neutral third party that will accept liability for any errors. (No surety insurer will guarantee such a liability, for the risk of error or misrepresentation is way too high.)
As you stated, most use follow-up questions to get a richer understanding of the customer. What the author would tell you is that it's clear the NPS recommendation question taints those followup questions and diminishes their validity and inherent value. If the true goal is to learn a richer understanding of customer experience, there are many better ways to achieve it.
In other words, the author believes if executives want a simple metric that is better than NPS, a random number generator is the fastest and cheapest way to achieve it. Why bother with customers at all, if all you're going to do is squander your interaction with them on such a foolish metric.
— The author.