| Volume 5, Issue 4 - April, 2006
In business, we generally measure customer satisfaction by our sales or market share. It seems fairly obvious that if
a customer doesn’t like what we have to offer, why would they buy our product or service?
In a sense, hospitals are in the same boat. If a patient isn’t happy with how they have been treated, they can find another hospital. But
the truth is that hospitals go a step further and maybe there is a lesson there for business.
Press Ganey Associates, Inc. has developed a national database of comparative
satisfaction information for the health care experience. It has become the standard of the healthcare industry and provides a means for clients to
benchmark their results with peer organizations.
There is a focus that comes with measurement that invariably produces improved results. As part of the work I have been doing as a contributor
to an upcoming book about best practices in healthcare, it has become apparent to me that those organizations achieving high scores in patient satisfaction
have a thing or two to teach us about improving customer satisfaction and at the same time improving employee engagement.
Before an entire organization can be the best in it’s field it requires each participant in the organization to be their best individually.
As a firm believer in the Appreciative Process, it makes sense to enlist each person to report on a daily basis what they have done today to make
their place the best place to work with a fill in the blank statements like:
Today I made a difference in an fellow employee’s life by:
Today I made a difference in a customer’s life by:
Today I made a difference by:
Getting people in the organization thinking positively is a critical first step and sharing the positive comments is an action that will foster
more positive comments. This can also become a vehicle for encouraging initiative.
The next step is to develop a clear cut outline of expectations and then a measurement system for those expectations. Maybe those expectations
could be covered by 4 major categories including: Safety, Quality, Productivity and Cleanliness. Each category can have multiple subcategories with
a scoring system for each culminating in a score for each major category. Each employee must understand the system and what their score is presently.
In addition to the daily “make a difference” reports, each employee could establish their own goal for scores in the major categories.
A weekly review of actual scores against goals could point out areas where the supervisor could provide support to the employee to help them achieve
their goal. Department heads need to review the reports for employees and supervisors at least on a quarterly basis.
This is just the tip of the iceberg for a process to engage employees in improving performance, employee satisfaction and in turn, customer satisfaction.
Wouldn’t it be great then to have a vehicle for customers to rate the performance of companies and make that available to employees so that
they could see how their performance affects the company ratings.
When you think about how this might apply to business, you might want to begin with a look at the feedback system in place on Ebay or the book
review section on Amazon and envision how it might work for businesses. What might it look like if there were mutliple categories to rate the buying
experience that might include: quality of product, shipping, terms, information provided, packaging, purchase experience, service, and much more.
P.S. This insight came from some research I have been doing for a chapter in an upcoming best practices in healthcare book. Look for Masterpieces
in Healthcare Leadership: Lessons from the Field to be published by Jones & Bartlett early next year.
Cannon Advantage was our first website and is home to “Taking Aim.” Late
last year, we added Marketing New Product which is home to The
Inventor’s Coach. Just this past month, we added Decision-Making Today
as another approach to helping manufacturers achieve a competitive advantage in the fight for survival with competition from low cost, foreign producers.
Watch for the upcoming Special Edition of “Taking Aim” where I will explain how we help organizations in a little more detail.
If you have a subject that you would like to see covered in future issues of “Taking Aim,” please send me an email at aim@CannonAdvantage.com.
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Robert E. Cannon
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"Feeling gratitude and not expressing it is like wrapping a present and not giving it."
William Arthur Ward
"One day at a time - this is enough. Do not look back and grieve over the past, for it is gone: and do not be troubled about the future, for
it has not yet come. Live in the present, and make it so beautiful that it will be worth remembering."
Ida Scott Taylor
"There are no hopeless situations; there are only people who have grown hopeless about them."
Clare Boothe
"Never continue in a job you don't enjoy. If you're happy in what you're doing, you'll like yourself, you'll have inner peace. And if you
have that, along with physical health, you will have had more success than you could possibly have imagined."
Johnny Carson
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