Posts Tagged ‘customer experience’

Creating and Sustaining Interest in Mystery Shopping

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

There are many factors that work together to make a mystery shopping program successful. However, no matter how much support your program receives from management, it will not be sustainable, consistent and successful without the full participation of your frontline staff.

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The 4 Myths of Mystery Shopping

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

Mystery shopping programs are an excellent way to measure frontline staff performance, recognize those who are providing stellar customer service and uncover potential services issues that need improvement before they become big headaches. However, a mystery shopping program can be sunk before it even starts due to misaligned expectations.

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Mystery Shopping Market Size

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

The MSPA (Mystery Shopping Providers Association) commissioned a study in 2005 to quantify the mystery shopping market. The study conservatively estimated the U.S mystery shopping industry at $600 million and growing (The MSPA now estimates the number to be closer to 800 million), with mystery shopping companies growing at an estimated 11.1% between 2004 and 2005

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What a Customer Experience Management Companies Can Do For You

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

One of the reasons mystery shopping has gotten a bad rap is because of mystery shopping providers who simply don’t provide programs that speak to the total customer experience.

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IVR Versus Mystery Shopping

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

A comprehensive mystery shopping program uses a combination of components that work synergistically to develop the vital data store managers need to effect change. One of those components is IVR (interactive voice response).

Unfortunately, some IVR vendors have chosen to position IVR surveys as a replacement for mystery shopping. This is erroneous, since these approaches provide different types of data, one based on subjective recollection and the other based on objective observation.

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Combining Mystery Shopping with Customer Opinions for the Best Data

Friday, February 13th, 2009

As we’ve talked about before, the best users of mystery shopping programs offer additional methods to capture data that can be used to make necessary improvements. The reason why these different strategies work together to create such a comprehensive program is because they offer a variety of perspectives that, when combined, give great insight into the total customer experience. For the most part, mystery shopping programs look at the customer experience from the viewpoint of the customer and that of the store staff.

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What’s Really Bugging Your Customers

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

Once upon a time, you could enter a store and expect to be met by a friendly, helpful sales associate. Today, in many cases, you’re lucky if you can even find a sales associate to ask a simple question.
In a study conducted by STORES/BIGResearch, 19% of shoppers believe rude employees are at the core of poor customer service. With the next overly-indulged generation of sales associates about to come of age, today’s customer service is not likely to improve.

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Four Warning Signs Your Program Lacks Integrity

Thursday, June 7th, 2007

Integrity is a big word when it comes to mystery shopping programs. In terms of the shopper, the data and of course the provider. A program’s success is directly linked to the “buy in” from associates. If they do not believe in the program; How can the program work?

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Five Mistakes Companies Make When Choosing a Mystery Shopping Provider

Thursday, May 31st, 2007

Choosing a Mystery Shopping Provider can seem like a daunting task. There are many to choose from who all seem to offer more or less the same services. What are the best criteria to use when making your choice? Are there specific points to consider? Of course there are. Here are the top five mistakes many companies make when choosing a provider.

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Modifying Surveys to Match the Store Environment

Tuesday, May 29th, 2007

While some people may say retail is retail, there’s actually a marked difference between outlet stores and traditional retail stores in terms of traffic, customer relationships and frontline staff performance.

The typical outlet shopper isn’t as much interested in assistance from staff as they are in finding the good bargains. They’re more willing to search through merchandise for good deals and don’t expect to receive the same level of personal attention as when shopping in a retail location.

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