Book Image

From Voices to Results - Voice of Customer Questions, Tools and Analysis

By : Robert Coppenhaver
Book Image

From Voices to Results - Voice of Customer Questions, Tools and Analysis

By: Robert Coppenhaver

Overview of this book

Voice of Customer (VoC) is one of the most popular forms of market research that combines both quantitative and qualitative methods. This book is about developing a deeper knowledge of your customers and understanding their articulated and unarticulated needs. Doing so requires engaging with customers in a meaningful and substantive way – something that is becoming more and more important with the rise of the increasingly connected world. This book gives you a framework to understand what products and features your customers need, or will need in the future. It provides the tools to conduct a VoC program and suggests how to take the customer input and turn it into successful products. This book also explains how to position and price your products in the market, and demonstrates ROI to the management team to get your product development funded. By the end of this book, you will have a thorough understanding of the relevant stages of a VoC project. It will show you how to devise an effective plan, direct the project to their objectives, and then how to collect the voice of the customer, with examples and templates for interviewing and surveying them.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
From Voices to Results – Voice of Customer Questions, Tools, and Analysis
Credits
About the Author
Preface
Epilogue

Using the Kano model as part of your VoC process – Kano questionnaire


Now that you understand the Kano model and the Kano questionnaire, no doubt you are asking: how does this tool relate to the VoC work we have done thus far, and how would one incorporate the Kano model into a VoC program?

As you may have already guessed, we can easily leverage the output of our requirements from the process we discussed in Chapter 7, Understanding the Customer's Voice and use it as a basis for our Kano survey. Before we do that, however, we must decide how we will administer our survey. As would be expected, the preferable method for administering a Kano survey is by conducting additional customer interviews—either by going back to the customers we interviewed previously, engaging with different customers, or a combination of the two. If that is not an option due to budget constraints, you can also send out a mail or email survey to your customer base. As you can imagine from our previous discussions on...