Book Image

Hearing the Voice of the Customer

By : Bill Inmon
Book Image

Hearing the Voice of the Customer

By: Bill Inmon

Overview of this book

Customer is king and hearing the voice of the customers is crucial for all businesses. This book will teach you how to listen to the customer’s voice in a world of modern technology. The book begins by explaining the importance of the customer's voice for a successful business and how to listen to the customer's voice and analyze it through various technologies such as OCR and voice transcription. You will also learn extraction processes such as textual extraction, transformation, and Load (ETL) processing, and turn the customer feedback into visualization using four major technologies. Moving ahead, you will analyze raw text using Taxonomy and analyze the customer feedback in the form of comments and surveys using textual ETL. You will study strategically and tactically techniques used by the corporations to become aware of the customer’s voice, and visualize the data in bar charts, continuous variable charts, pie charts, geographical chart and scatter diagrams. By the end of this book, you will be able to manage, build, and operate a corporate infrastructure that listens to the voice of the customer.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Introduction
14
13: Combinations
15
Index

Taxonomies

The taxonomies that are used for processing have a very strong relationship to the surveys. For example, if the survey were for human resources to discover the attitude of the employees of the corporation, the taxonomy would relate to the employees’ jobs.

Suppose the survey was for employees of the organization and that organization was a healthcare organization. The taxonomies would relate to hospitals, shift work, doctor and nurses, and patient care. Or suppose the organization was a retailer. The taxonomies would relate to sales people, stockers, cashiers, and buyers. The taxonomies used for a hospital would be very different than the taxonomies used for a retailer.

There is a close relationship between the actual survey and the taxonomies used in the processing of the survey.