When deciding which law firm to hire, potential clients consult the source they trust most: other clients. Online reviews play a huge role in the client’s decision-making process. To succeed in such a landscape, legal practices must develop a deep understanding of their clients’ wants and needs, immediately address all client issues, and ensure satisfied clients’ voices get heard.
https://abovethelaw.com/2018/06/make-client-feedback-your-marketing-engine/?rf=1/
As shown in a research carried out by Capital One, only 9 percent of travelers will book a trip based on brand loyalty. Tough crowd, right? Absolutely, and the truth is, we’re all susceptible to it. In this industry, people are more inclined to just go with the cheapest option. This is why travel organisations have to be more tactical in attracting and engendering loyalty from their customers.
More forward-thinking travel organisations are taking it one step further and setting themselves apart from the myriad of competitors out there and they’re doing this by way of personalised customer experiences – better known to travel marketers as ‘personalisation’.
Here’s a closer look at personalisation in the travel industry and the power of intertwining this customer data with user feedback.
https://mopinion.com/combining-customer-profiles-with-user-feedback/
Do you collect user or customer feedback? If so, how are you using it to improve your website or online business? Reaching out to your visitors and asking them how they like your site and areas for improvement is one of the best ways to better your product or business.
http://www.addthis.com/blog/2015/09/29/5-ways-to-collect-user-feedback-and-improve-your-website/#.Wv1xt0iFPIV/
If you’re using WordPress to power your site, the good news is there’s a number of clever techniques and tools you can use to generate customer feedback.
Collecting customer feedback on your website is one of the most effective means of quickly identifying areas of your site which need improvement, with the goal of increasing traffic levels, sales and repeat visitation across your site.
https://cyberchimps.com/use-customer-feedback-improve-wordpress-site/
Earlier this month I attended Social Media Marketing World, the largest conference on social media marketing in the world. Over the last few years, customer service has shifted from traditional phone support toward social media channels like Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and others. Dan Gingiss started the Social Customer Care Track and interest has grown exponentially. The room I spoke in this year was three times larger than last year’s room, and we packed the house.
https://customerthink.com/how-to-turn-social-media-customer-service-into-a-marketing-strategy/
User experience (UX) design is the process of building relationships between products and prospects or customers through a digital or physical experience that involves engineering, marketing, graphical, industrial and interface designs. UEGroup CEO Tony Fernandes in an interview with CMSWire called UX design an “interactive brand experience that takes the place of establishing credibility and connection in the way that logos and taglines did in the past.”
https://www.cmswire.com/customer-experience/what-is-user-experience-ux-design/
Customer-centric marketing has several layers of meaning. The most popular layer means personalization of communications, toward increasing customer lifetime value. Without the other vital layers, though, much potential customer lifetime value will be squandered.
First Layer: All Customer Touch-Points. Communications is only one touch-point of many that marketing has with customers. Channel partners, alliance partners, market research, events, customer engagement and loyalty marketing are other touch-points with customers that certainly should be customer-centric.
http://customerthink.com/customer-centric-marketing-align-for-growth/
The relationship between the sales and marketing departments naturally varies from organization to organization. But at its core, the relationship is meant to be a new-business-creating one-two punch. Marketing builds up relationships with a wide base of potential clients, while sales converts those relationships into paying customers. This is clearly a massive oversimplification of the buyer’s journey, but it at least illustrates one important fact: These two departments need to work in concert if they have any hope of creating a sustainable customer pipeline. Good content can go a long way toward making that a reality.
https://www.skyword.com/contentstandard/marketing/your-content-strategy-should-include-your-entire-organization-part-iii-syncing-up-with-sales/
Unlike customer-facing teams, marketers don’t always hear directly from the people they’re speaking to. Instead, they rely on metrics and intuition to understand the end consumer. Good data and marketing chops go a long way, but they don’t tell you everything. If you’re not tapping into your audience for feedback, then you’re leaving insights (and revenue) on the table.
In this post, we’ll cover the benefits of collecting content feedback and share some tips on doing it well.
https://www.business2community.com/customer-experience/content-feedback-helps-marketers-reach-people-02026506/
Technology has produced huge breakthroughs in design. A product can be ideated, prototyped and finalized with little more than a keyboard and code. But the ingenuity of modern design often leads to product teams neglecting the basics.
https://techcrunch.com/2017/01/20/in-a-tech-saturated-world-customer-feedback-is-everything/