Should You Listen to Your Customer?


by Mike T. Davis - Date: 2006-12-09 - Word Count: 505 Share This!

Try the key phrase "voice of the customer." What do you get? More than 530,000 hits. What about the phrases "customer" and "focus group"? 15.9 million. "Customer" and "interview"? 21.7 million. "Customer" and "survey"? 30.4 million! Every management consultant and marketing professor will tell you to listen to the customer. Should you? And if you do, will you learn something meaningful? A recent study by Professors Dan Horsky, Paul Nelson, and Steven S. Posavac published in the Journal of Consumer Psychology provides some interesting answers (Horsky D., Nelson P., Posavac SS. Stating Preference for the Ethereal but Choosing the Concrete: How the Tangibility of Attributes Affects Attribute Weighting in Value Elicitation and Choice. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 2004, Vol. 14, No. 1&2, Pages 132-140).

The study asked a group of 41 participants to rank the relative importance of two attributes: Prestige and Price. Then the study asked the participants to buy one of two brands of wine: Macon-Vilages, a high-prestige, expensive French wine, and Columbia Crest, a low-prestige, inexpensive American Wine. Now, wouldn't you expect that the participants, who said that prestige is more important, will buy the high-prestige Macon-Villages wine? And the participants, who said that price is more important, will buy the inexpensive Columbia wine?

The results show that 12 participants said that prestige is more important than price but chose the low-prestige/low-price brand, and 3 participants said that price is more important than prestige but chose the high-prestige/high-price brand. A total of 37% [(12+3)/41] of the participants said one thing and did another thing!

37%! And this flip-flop occurred in a very simple situation. How many customers will show such inconsistency in a situation with many attributes and many brands? 50%? 90%? 100%?

Now suppose that you are a retailer that paid for this market research study and you are planning to use the results to improve your business. According to the study, 63% [(14+12)/41] of the participants said that prestige is more important than price. So you open a wine store that specializes in prestige wines. When you open the door you discover that your potential market share is a little more than half (54% or 14/(14+12)) of your initial estimation. Devastating. As it turns out, 46% [12/(14+12)] of the customers just cannot be trusted. They say one thing in market research settings, and do something totally different in real life.

Summary: So, should you listen to your customer?

It depends. No, if you only listen. Yes, if you measure the psychological intensity, or psytensity, of every idea communicated by the customer, and use the few ideas with high psytensity to construct the story hidden in the customer's words. If you are not measuring psytensity, if you take the customer's words at face value, be prepared to face some nasty surprises.

On a broader scale, should we listen to our own inner voices? Maybe not. Remember the story of the fisherman and the gold wish? Remember the fisherman's regret? Let's be careful of what we wish for. We might not be as introspective as we think we are.


Related Tags: survey, market research, marketing research, consumer research, customer research, customer behavior

Mike T. Davis, Ph.D., SCI, Rochester NY

We are the inventors of Computer Intuition™, a psycholinguistics based program that analyzes the language that people use to describe themselves and their environment, and "converts what they say into what they'll do"™. We use the Computer Intuition program to uncover the hidden story, the underlying psychological framework that produced the text, but is not found in the text. When clients hire our services, they send us their qualitative data. We input the data to the computer, which calculates the psychological intensity, or psytensity, of every idea found in the text. The ideas with the highest psytensities are most suggestive of the hidden story. We then document these ideas, the hidden story, and our recommendations in a report called "Do this, do that"™. SCI's clients include many Fortune 500 companies, such as Apple Computer, Sears, Chrysler, Citibank, IBM, Eastman Kodak, Hewlett-Packard, Anheuser-Busch, and many smaller ones. More reports are available at http://www.computerintuition.com/Reports.htm

Your Article Search Directory : Find in Articles

© The article above is copyrighted by it's author. You're allowed to distribute this work according to the Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs license.
 

Recent articles in this category:



Most viewed articles in this category: