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Effective Use of Marketing Data Chris Stiehl & Henry DeVries StiehlWorks & New Client Marketing Institute September 21, 2009

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Presentation on how to listen to customers and adapt your restaurant to better serve them.

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Page 1: Dine America

Effective Use of Marketing Data

Chris Stiehl & Henry DeVries

StiehlWorks & New Client Marketing Institute

September 21, 2009

Page 2: Dine America

What We’ll Cover Today

Why should we care about this topic? How do we uncover the “Voice of the

Diner”? What can we do with the “Voice of the

Diner” once we have it? What other “Voices” might we listen to? What examples of this type of work do we

have?

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Some of What You Will Learn

• Learn how to acquire the “Voice of the Diner” in their language, organized the way that they think.

• Learn how to develop metrics that predict success with your diners and prospects.

• Learn how to let your diners write your customer satisfaction surveys.

• Learn how to use all of that information to take the most impactful action.

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An Example of What We Already Know versus How We Think About Success

Let’s think about going to the movies…

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Movie Theater Example

• If you owned a movie theater and went to Europe on vacation, what would you want to know about your business while you are gone?

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Movie Theater – Part 2

• You no longer own the theater. Now, you’re at dinner and you are trying to select between two theaters (equal price, distance and start times). How would you decide?

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The Movie Theater Example

• Why don’t the lists agree? How did we know they wouldn’t?

• How would you characterize the two lists:- Looking forward versus backward- Bottom-line oriented versus customer-focused- Predictive versus reactive- Do the items on the list tell you what to do to get better if you are in europe?

• When you look at the customer list, what types of experiences do you think lead to what was said, positive ones, or negative ones (pain)?

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What Does This Mean to You?

• Should the lists agree? • How tough is it to think like a customer?• How does the “Voice of the Customer” in

the movie theater example relate to what you should measure to predict success with your diners and prospects?

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The model of knowing your customer so well that you anticipate their every need!

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Customer/Member -Driven Improvement Model

Voice of the Customer

External Measures

Internal MeasuresProcess Improvement

Qualitative Research

Quantitative ResearchProcess Metrics

Improvement Initiatives

Page 11: Dine America

How Does This Work?

Fresh Popcorn

Our Popcorn = OK Other Guy = Very Fresh

Number of Minutes in the Bin

Make Smaller Batches!

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Does Customer Satisfaction Matter?

0

25

50

75

100

Excellent Very Good Good Fair Poor

Retention after competitionFor AT&T based upon Satisfaction previously

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Your Diners and Six Sigma

• 266 of the largest 500 publicly held companies in the US as of 11/1/06 were implementing Six Sigma.

• The Design for Six Sigma Roadmap lists 35+ steps. Step #2 is “list all detailed customer and functional requirements of the product or service.”

Is that “enough said?”How do you get the “detailed requirements?”

Page 14: Dine America

Starting the Voice of the Diner Process

• Understand What You Are Trying to Accomplish:

1. Write down what we already know (your mission statement, for example)

2. Understand what “pains” we know in our dinership, if any

3. Market to the diners’ pain; work on what is painful to them.

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Knowing What Can/Cannot Be Said

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Learning How to Listen for Pain

The best approach is to use one-on-ones, but many use focus groups

Learn both “passive listening” and “active listening” techniques

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Efficiency of One-on-Ones

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 100.3

0.4

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0.9

1

Focus Groups vs. One-on-ones

Per

cen

tag

e o

f N

eed

s &

Pai

ns

Focus Groups

One-on-ones

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Voice of the Diner Process

Phase 1

Phase 2

Identify Issues

Write Interview Guide Test Interview Guide

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Collecting the “Voice” Requires Skill

• Techniques can be learned with practice, but not everyone is comfortable nor able to conduct good interviews

• Not everyone is capable of being a good respondent

• You need to learn how to write an interview guide, prepare, probe, develop needs statements, the “5 why’s”, etc.

• You must prepare and rehearse

…but,• Let’s get a feel for the process!

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Writing the Interview Guide• Start with the idea that

you are creating an encyclopedia of relevant issues.

• Arrange questions within a topic from the broadest to the narrowest.

• Group questions into a natural pattern or flow.

• Make the questions open-ended.

• Rarely will 50% of the interview guide be used in any one interview, but all of it will be used over the course of all of the interviews.

• Don’t think quantitatively about qualitative research.

• Gain familiarity with the guide so you will be comfortable skipping around – following their passions.

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10 Questions to Ask

• What are the three most important things that you are trying to accomplish when you dine out?

• What gets in the way of accomplishing those things?

• What do you spend most of your time doing when you dine out?

• What would you like to be spending most of your time doing?

• If you could change one thing about your typical dining experience, what would it be?

• If I said dining at ______ was a good value, what would that mean?

• What is the biggest pain about going out to eat?

• What things are a big help; i.e., what things have you experienced, no matter how small, that really work well?

• Describe for me the “ideal” dining experience.

• Describe for me a recent time that your dining experience was less than ideal.

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Voice of the Diner Process

Hundreds of phrases“Winnowin

g”

Attributes

Phase 2

Phase 3

Interviews Audio Recording Transcription

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Pros & Cons of “Passive Listening”

• Subtle but powerful behaviors• Lean forward• Engage your eyes• Sit at an angle• Use verbal & nonverbal cues• Don’t fill silences; so people

take longer to formulate their thoughts

• Tends to reduce introduction of biases

• You may not get as much detailed information, especially if the subject has trouble composing their thoughts

• You may get data that is subject to interpretation because it has not been explored enough

• You are required to have a “poker face” – not to respond to what the subject says in any way except, perhaps, to nod or say, “Uh huh.”

Pros/Behaviors Cons

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Pros & Cons of “Active Listening”

• Make speakers feel acknowledged and heard; therefore, likely to share more

• Clarifies meaning; if there was a misunderstanding, it can get cleared up

• Creates easy summaries and transitions

• Provides another tool to surface needs and pain, besides probing

• Allows time for thoughts to be organized

• Ask for stories and interact, encourage

• You may interrupt a speaker’s train of thought or reduce their enthusiasm for discussion

• You may interject your own interpretation of the issue through paraphrasing

• You may incorrectly mislead the respondent into thinking the topics that are paraphrased are more important than those that were not paraphrased

• If not done well, can confuse the issue of who is being interviewed

Pros/Behaviors Cons

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Learn what to listen for…

• Listen for Growth Opportunities/Pains/Changes• Listen for Product/Service Quality (rework)• Listen for Problem Correction (make it right)• Listen to Foster Customer Loyalty (repeat business)• Listen to Improve Brand Management (str. & weak.)• Listen for Market Research (trends in real time)• Listen for Competitive Advantage (possibilities)• Listen for Context (identify exact likes and dislikes)

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Learn to Recognize Needs and Pains:Consider a Cup of Coffee

• “I’d like a hot cup of coffee”

– too vague; probe what hot means

• “I’d like my coffee in a styrofoam cup” – a solution; probe why

• “I’d like my coffee to be 105 degrees”- a target value; probe why

• “Hot coffee tastes better”- an opinion; probe why

• “I want my coffee to stay hot all the way to work” - a need statement we can

design to; probe for distance, time, target values.

Listen for Needs and Pains!

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Voice of the Diner Process

Phase 3

Structure of Customer Needs

Data AnalysisCard Sort Focus Group

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The Hierarchy of Needs

• Written in the language of the member

• Written to describe the ideal (translate negatives into a description of the ideal)

• The hierarchy represents how the diners think, not necessarily how staff thinks

• One or more focus groups of 4 to 6 diners organize the needs in an interactive process

• They are instructed to put things together that go together and name the categories

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Hierarchy of needs derived from member card sorts. A description of the ideal conference.

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Customer/Diner -Driven Improvement Model

Voice of the Customer

External Measures

Internal MeasuresProcess Improvement

Qualitative Research

Quantitative ResearchProcess Metrics

Improvement Initiatives

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What are the Key Criteria

for a Good Metric?

1. Must be internal and predictive of meeting a need

2. Must be measurable (I can get a number)

3. Must be controllable (I can make the number change by taking action)

4. Targets are known (What score do I want to hit?)

5. Interactions are known (What else is impacted by moving this number)

6. It is repeatable (If I measure twice, I’ll get the same number)

7. It is easily implemented

Remember the “fresh popcorn” example? How did we measure “freshness?”

Page 33: Dine America

Predictive Diner Metrics

What metrics predict how your diners would respond to a survey question about the

“responsiveness of the restaurant staff?”

Time to be seated

Time to take order

Time from order taken until food is served

Attitude when serving

Temperature of food when served

Page 34: Dine America

Measuring Time• We have measured how diners think about time

and how restaurant staff measure time.

• How much time do you think each group thinks elapsed when exactly 60 seconds go by?

Staff - 25 to 35 seconds, on averageDiners - 2 to 3 minutes, on average

• Diners and Staff have a different sense of time!

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Do Your Metrics Predict Success?

• It is tough to come up with predictive metrics.

• By the time you get a survey result, the damage has been done. This has been described as driving down the road while looking in the rearview mirror.

• You should never be surprised by a survey result.

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Customer/Diner -Driven Improvement Model

Voice of the Customer

External Measures

Internal MeasuresProcess Improvement

Qualitative Research

Quantitative ResearchProcess Metrics

Improvement Initiatives

Page 37: Dine America

Writing Good Survey Questions

Page 38: Dine America

Hierarchy of needs derived from member card sorts. A description of the ideal conference.

Page 39: Dine America

Survey Questions Diners Want to Answer

• Use the categories from the hierarchy that they created.

• When you get a survey result, you know what they are talking about.

• Surveys designed this way get much higher response rates.

• The surveys are shorter and address issues than diners care about.

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Always Ask About Importance

• You want to work on issues where your score is not as high as you’d like, that are also important to your diners.

• If all you know is “satisfaction,” that is not enough. You must also know how important the issue is.

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Customer/Diner -Driven Improvement Model

Voice of the Customer

External Measures

Internal MeasuresProcess Improvement

Qualitative Research

Quantitative ResearchProcess Metrics

Improvement Initiatives

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Taking Action

What metrics predict that a prospective diner will come back to your restaurant for lunch?

Convenience of location

Quality of service

Cost (hint: what cost is there besides money?)

Having quick quality choices for lunch

Having the right industry diners already

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Managing for Success

• Learn how to listen!• Create predictive internal

metrics!• Ask the diners how you are

doing.• Create staff teams to resolve

issues and improve the metrics.• Follow the customer-driven

model; always have the diners’ voice in the room!

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A Model of Customer/Diner-Driven

Improvement

Pain (Voice) of the Customer

External Measures

Internal MeasuresProcess Improvement

Qualitative Research

Quantitative Research Process

MetricsImprovement Initiatives

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For More Information

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Thank you for your participation!

Chris Stiehl & Henry DeVriesStiehlWorks & New Client Marketing Institute

Phone: 619-516-2864 & 619-540-3031E-mail: [email protected] &

[email protected]

Web site: www.painkillermarketing.com