Integration of Employee, Customer, and Financial Data
It is well known that high employee satisfaction contributes significantly to
high customer satisfaction, which drives intent to return, and therefore, financial
results. High employee satisfaction expresses itself as enthusiasm in one's
work, which directly impacts the experience of the customer. Likewise, high
customer satisfaction expresses itself as enthusiasm toward a particular
organization, its products or services, which directly impacts the intent to
return rate. It is a short leap, then, to understand how a high intent to
return rate among customers impacts financial results. But with so many variables
affecting employee and customer satisfaction, how does one determine those of
greatest importance, so that interventions aimed at increasing satisfaction are
of maximum effectiveness? The answer is in
the NBRI Root Cause Analysis derived
from employee and customer survey data.
We begin by acknowledging the fact that we are assessing 'human perceptions' when we conduct customer surveys
and employee surveys, and
that to each person, perceptions of the way things are create a personal
reality. Right or wrong, Perception = Reality. In addition, some perceptions
dominate and propel ('drive') other perceptions, and perceptions as a whole
determine human behavior. The NBRI Employee Root Cause Analysis is designed to
identify those perceptions in the employee population that drive the greatest number
of other perceptions to the greatest extents, because it is those core, or
root, perceptions that are driving employee behavior. With appropriate interventions
to the root perceptions, or root causes of employee behavior, we change the
perceptions and therefore, the behavior.
The NBRI Root Cause Analysis involves high-level statistical analyses, such as
correlations, stepwise linear regression analyses (modified, proprietary), and
psychological path analyses. We require a confidence level of 99.99% and a sampling
error of less than 1% in these analyses. From this process, we are able to identify
the one, two, or three overriding perceptions commonly held by each population that
are driving behavior, and with appropriate interventions to just these one to three
issues, Clients experience increases in 40% to 80% of all issues addressed by the
employee survey.
The same is true of Customer Surveys. The
NBRI Customer Root Cause Analysis can
assess the perceptions of customers and identify those that drive customer
behavior. From the correlations, regressions, and path analyses, we identify the
one, two, or three overriding perceptions commonly held by each customer population
that are driving behavior. With appropriate interventions to just these one to
three issues, Clients experience increases in 40% to 80% of all issues addressed
by the customer survey.
The 'third leg of the stool,' so to speak, is to identify those employee
attitudes, opinions, or beliefs (perceptions) that drive employee behaviors
directly impacting customer intent to return. This analysis process is
similar, although all employee data is correlated and regressed against only the
customer data relating to intent to return. These root causes are almost always
different from those driving employee satisfaction.
So, Clients are now armed with extremely powerful means of simply and directly
impacting Customer Intent to Return, and therefore, Financials:
- root causes of employee perceptions that will increase
employee satisfaction (and indirectly increase customer satisfaction),
- root causes of customer perceptions that will increase
customer satisfaction and intent to return, and
- root causes of employee perceptions that will increase
customer intent to return.
Each Root Cause Analysis, whether Employee or Customer or Both, is unique to the
Client organization. No two RCAs are the same. As Organizational Psychologists, we
understand that these all-important employee and customer perceptions are a
function of the culture, climate, management style, communication styles, and
other dynamics within each unique organization. In addition, as targeted
interventions improve certain organizational dynamics, root causes will change. It
is imperative, therefore, that action be taken quickly in order to attain the
intrinsic dramatic gains of the process, and that the momentum of continuous
improvement be ingrained in the psyche of the organization, beginning with Senior
Management.
When NBRI recommendations are followed, the Total Organization Scores from the
Employee and Customer Surveys will each increase a minimum of
five (5) normative percentiles within
6 months, which represents a statistically significant
difference, i.e., not due to chance, but rather, caused by direct
intervention. The increases in employee and customer satisfaction of NBRI Clients
are resulting in revenue increases in the billions of dollars. Needless to
say, this research pays for itself, and the majority of the Institute's Client
Membership recognizes it to be an essential best practice of business management.
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