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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.
Forrester’s overall verdict for the PC makers? “Poor.”
“While customer experience is important for PC makers to cultivate loyal customers, they aren’t 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 Solve 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.
“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.
“[Don’t] give customers a reason to regret their purchase and share those thoughts with their friends,” states the report.
• Remember that it’s 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 all 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).
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