Forrester reports Apple rated highest on customer surveys ranking the usefulness, usability and enjoyableness of their interactions with PC makers Apple, Compaq, Dell, Gateway and HP. All showed room for improvement, however, as the PC industry as a whole received a poor rating, ranking below banks, credit card providers and even airlines.Apple leads and Dell lags, was the summary of an April 17
Customer Experience Index (CxPi) 2008 Snapshot from Forrester
Research.
The Snapshot took a took a closer look at how five PC makersApple, Compaq, Dell, Gateway and Hewlett-Packardfared
within its CxPi, which polled 4,600 consumers about their interactions
with various companies across 12 industries, gauging usefulness,
usability and how pleasant the interactions were.
Forresters overall verdict for the PC makers? Poor.
While customer experience is important for PC makers to cultivate
loyal customers, they arent doing a very good job, wrote Forrester
analyst Bruce D. Temkin.
As a group, these firms received a poor rating for their customer
experience, coming in ahead of only ISPs, TV service providers and
health plans.
On individual ratings, Apple scored a Good rating of 80 percent.
Under the Okay category, Gateway was next in line, with 66 percent,
following by HP with 64 percent and Compaq with 63 percent. Dell, with
a 58 percent rating, fell under the Poor category.
Across all three areas studied by Forrester, Apple led its competitors
with double-digit gaps, the largest of these being the easy to use
category, in which Apple rated 17 points higher than Gateway and 28
points higher than Dell.
Our research shows that good customer experience correlates with customer loyalty for PC manufacturers, writes Temkin. PC shipment numbers in the U.S. reported by IDC on April 14 and Gartner on April 15, however, both counted HP in first place, followed by Dell. Acer was third in the United States, with Apple and Toshiba behind it.
Temkin went on to write, though, that current economic conditions make
it difficult to know what the business impacts of customer experience
improvements will be.
Temkin and his coauthors, William Chu and Steven Geller, offer four
pieces of advice for PC manufacturers thinking about customer
experience in these turbulent times.
Good word of mouth can help. The analysts say that while there may
not be many growth opportunities, customer experience improvements can
certainly cut down on losses. The old adage of the restaurant business
applies here: A good experience is shared with one friend, but a bad
one is told to 10.
[Dont] give customers a reason to regret their purchase and share those thoughts with their friends, states the report.
Remember that its a journey. PC manufacturers need to think of their
customers' experience as a long-term asset. To build momentum in an
economic downturn, the report suggests, focus on several areas,
including prioritizing moments of truth, seeking usability
improvements and increasing communications with employees.
Maintain an outside-in approach. The analysts recommend manufacturers
get to know their customers better and better incorporate their voices
into future planning.
Keep an eye on the long term. To maintain a long-term road map toward
what Forrester calls Experience-Based Differentiation, or EBD, PC
makers should obsess about customer needs, reinforce their brand with
every interaction and treat customer experiences as a competence, not a
function.
As a whole, the PC manufacturing industry received a score of 64
percent on the Forrester CxPi, with credit card providers (scoring 68
percent) and even airlines (65 percent) ranking ahead of them.
Consumers rated their interactions with retailers most favorably, with
an average score of 81 percent, followed by hotels (79 percent ) and
insurance providers (73 percent).