Mystery Shopping: Does It Cost Too Much?
Is cost keeping you from collecting information that leads to higher conversions? Information programs can cost much less than you’d expect– in some cases, as little as $35 per store.
Consider the following two cases:
Case 1. A national retailer recently increased its budget for an audit of its customer experience, moving from quarterly to monthly measurements because it was able to see definitive ROI from the insights it gained. Spending just $35 per store per month on its mystery shopping program turned out to be “peanuts” when information gathered allowed associate performance and sales to be improved.
$420 a year per store to increase sales turned out to be a bargain. Compare the costs of new fixtures or carpeting. What payback do they offer in comparison? Consider the cost of the 82% of your customers who walk out without making a purchase.>
Unfortunately, too many CFOs look at expenditures from a direct-cost basis without considering the net cost. They fail to see that dollars spent to improve the customer experience drive their top and bottom lines. Expenditures on improving the customer experience are investment dollars, not expense dollars.
Case 2. Another national retailer is stepping up to the plate, even in these uncertain times, by implementing customer and employee feedback systems. The retailer’s objective is to improve their shoppers’ experiences by listening to reactions from actual customers and sales associates. The retailer has commissioned an IVR-driven customer satisfaction program and a web-based employee feedback program. The cost for both of these feedback systems is less than $800 per location annually.
Combining all programs from these two retailers (mystery shopping, customer satisfaction, and employee feedback) totals about $1,200 a year per store, and gives the retailer a 360° business view, providing dramatic payback potential in the toughest retail economic climate in 15 years.
The message couldn’t be clearer. Reductions in programs and information systems leave today’s retailers vulnerable to competition and prevent an understanding of the more demanding mindset of customers. What’s needed is an aggressive commitment to continued information programs, along with complementary data services to fortify retailers for the long haul. Cutting auditing and feedback programs to shore up the bottom line will ultimately have the opposite effect. Partnering with an organization that assists you in communicating the information and in building action plans to foster system-wide improvements, as well as asking the right questions, will deliver the best experience for your customers.

Even in today’s marketplace, customers still have money, but they will become more selective – and will spend that money with retailers who offer them the better experience, no matter what.