Content marketing is more effective and efficient than other marketing strategies, and costs less for a greater return. For example, content marketing costs 62 percent less than outbound marketing and generates more than three times as many sales leads. Yet, according to Altimeter, 70 percent of marketers lack a consistent or integrated content strategy. This is shocking when you consider how crowded the market is, how quickly changes take place and how difficult it can be to engage readers in new ways that convert.
In this blog post, we look at five ways to use customer feedback to inform cohesive, strategic and integrated content marketing strategies.
http://www.customerexperienceupdate.com/?query=customer%20feedback&open-article-id=5940869&article-title=5-ways-customer-feedback-can-improve-your-content-marketing-strategy&blog-domain=visioncritical.com&blog-title=vision-critical/
Are you a startup in search of new avenues for growth? Then you’ll want to keep reading…because we’ve got the low-down on which types of growth hacking techniques you’ll need to achieve this growth. Each technique serves a different purpose and to achieve this purpose, your business will need the right tools in place.
https://mopinion.com/6-growth-hacking-techniques/
If you would like to see your business grow and prosper, customer satisfaction is not only important but also necessary. Understanding how customers view your products, services and company is invaluable. It is only after you understand their point of view that you know your strengths and weaknesses.
http://www.customerexperienceupdate.com/?open-article-id=8239065&article-title=6-industry-approved-channels-to-collect-customer-feedback-efficiently&blog-domain=customerguru.in&blog-title=customer-guru/
All entrepreneurs know that customer insights are invaluable to product design and continued improvement. However, acquiring and organizing useful feedback is easier said than done and developing a strategy can be a daunting task. But it needs to be done.
https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/247671/
Online customer reviews can make or break your business. Entrepreneurs find it a priority to learn to react to people’s feedback, both positive and negative.
http://customerthink.com/7-effective-ways-to-respond-to-customers-feedback/
If you run your own business I know you do your best to please your customers, satisfy their needs, and eventually to keep them loyal to your brand. But how can you be sure that your efforts bring desired results? If you do not try to find out what your clients actually think about your service, you will never be able to give them the best customer experience. Their opinions about experience they have with your brand is helpful information that you can use to adjust your business to fit their needs more accurately.
https://blog.startquestion.com/7-reasons-why-customer-feedback-is-important-to-your-business-28e99c00eba7/
Obtaining feedback isn’t only for B2C companies, but B2B companies as well. Whether you’re offering a product, a service, or even both, knowing how your customers feel will allow you to course-correct problem areas and gain an understanding of where you’re struggling and succeeding.
https://www.impactbnd.com/blog/7-survey-tools-for-getting-valuable-customer-feedback/
An angry customer is a business nightmare, right?
Wrong.
An angry customer is a business opportunity.
If you handle your complaints process right, you can transform an angry customer into a brand advocate and a high-value return customer. Marketing professors Michael McCullough and Sundar Bharadwaj talk about something they call the service recovery paradox, which they define as:
The result of a very positive service recovery, causing a level of customer satisfaction and/or customer loyalty even greater than that expected if no service failure had happened.
Your customers come to you to get their problems solved, and a customer with a complaint is handing you a golden opportunity to show how you excel at that.
Here’s how to make that happen.
https://www.livechatinc.com/blog/turn-customer-wrath-into-wins/
“Your most unhappy customers are your greatest source of learning.” -- Bill Gates
Negative feedback from customers can be a hard pill to swallow. It often feels unjust, unhelpful and inaccurate. Even the most professional business owners can be defensive and emotional in the face of criticism. And while business owners may intellectually know negative customer feedback is critical to improving their business -- a 10-percent increase in Net Promoter Score (NPS) can correlate with a six to seven-percent increase in revenue -- the hard bit is constructively incorporating it.
https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/254553/
As an employer, you need to provide oodles of feedback to employees to ensure they know what they’re doing, what they’re supposed to be doing, what they’re doing well and what they could be doing better. Bad feedback from employees and customers alike provides a way to prevent little annoyances from becoming reasons for good people to leave you.
http://www.customerexperienceupdate.com/?query=customer%20feedback&open-article-id=8026285&article-title=bad-feedback-is-the-best-feedback--are-you-listening-for-it-&blog-domain=360connext.com&blog-title=360connext/