Making Feedback Collection A Seamless Experience

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Summary

Making feedback collection a seamless experience means creating a smooth and efficient process for gathering, analyzing, and acting on feedback from customers or users. This approach ensures feedback is not only collected but also utilized to drive meaningful improvements and build stronger relationships with stakeholders.

  • Create accessible feedback channels: Ensure customers can easily share their thoughts through various platforms, such as in-app surveys, emails, or online forms.
  • Centralize and organize data: Consolidate feedback from multiple sources into a single system to simplify analysis and improve decision-making.
  • Close the feedback loop: Act on the feedback received, communicate updates to customers, and demonstrate how their input leads to improvements.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Bill Staikos
    Bill Staikos Bill Staikos is an Influencer

    Advisor | Consultant | Speaker | Be Customer Led helps companies stop guessing what customers want, start building around what customers actually do, and deliver real business outcomes.

    24,356 followers

    Generative AI surveys: where your feedback is interactive, valued, and promptly discarded. But hey, at least it’s efficient! Sorry, I know it’s a bit early to be snarky. Seriously though, closing the loop with your customers on their feedback - solicited or unsolicited - is a game changer. Start by integrating customer signals/data into a real-time analytics platform that not only surfaces key themes, but also flags specific issues requiring follow-up. This is no longer advanced tech. From there, create a workflow that assigns ownership for addressing the feedback, tracks resolution progress, and measures outcomes over time. With most tech having APIs for your CRM, also not a huge lift to set up. By linking feedback directly to improvement efforts, which still requires a human in the loop, and closing the loop by notifying customers when changes are made, you transform a simple data collection tool into a continuous improvement engine. Most companies are not taking these critical few steps though. Does it take time, effort, and money? Yes it does. Can it help you drive down costs and drive up revenue? Also, a hard yes. The beauty of actually closing the loop is that the outcomes can be quantified. How have you seen closing the loop - outer, inner, or both - impact your business? #cx #surveys #ceo

  • View profile for Thibaut Nyssens 🐣

    Sr. Solutions Engineer @ Atlassian | founding GTM @ Cycle (acq. by Atlassian) | Early-stage GTM Advisor

    9,042 followers

    I talked with 100+ product over the last months They all had the same set of problems Here's the solution (5 steps) Every product leader told me at least one of the following: "Our feedback is all over the place" "PMs have no single source of truth for feedback" "We'd like to back our prioritization with customer feedback" Here's a step-by-step guide to fix this 1/ Where is your most qualitative feedback coming from? What sources do you need to consolidate? - Make an exhaustive list of your feedback sources - Rank them by quality & importance - Find a way to access that data (API, Zapier, Make, scraping, csv exports, ...) 2/ Route all that feedback to a "database-like" tool, a table of records Multiple options here: Airtable, Notion, Google sheets and of course Cycle App -Tag feedback with their related properties: source, product area customer id or email, etc - Match customer properties to the feedback based on customer unique id or email 3/ Calibrate an AI model Teach the AI the following: - What do you want to extract from your raw feedback? - What type of feedback is the AI looking at and how should it process it? (an NPS survey should be treated differently than a user interview) - What features can be mapped to the relevant quotes inside the raw feedback Typically, this won't work out of the box. You need to give your model enough human-verified examples (calibrate it), so it can actually become accurate in finding the right features/discoveries to map. This part is tricky, but without this you'll never be able to process large volumes of feedback and unstructured data. 4/ Plug a BI tool like Google data studio or other on your feedback database - Start by listing your business questions and build charts answering them - Include customer attributes as filters in the dashboard so you can filter on specific customer segments. Every feedback is not equal. - Make sure these dashboards are shared/accessible to the entire product team 5/ Plug your product delivery on top of this At this point, you have a big database full of customer insights and a customer voice dashboard. But it's not actionable. - You want to convert discoveries into actual Jira epics or Linear projects & issues. - You need to have some notion of "status" sync, otherwise your feedback database won't clean itself and you won't be able to close feedback loops The diagram below gives you a clear overview of how to build your own system. Build or buy? Your choice

  • View profile for Oji Udezue

    AI Product Expert. Ex Chief Product Officer @ Typeform. Ex CPO @ Calendly. Ex Product Lead @ Twitter (Creators, Tweets, DMs, Spaces, Communities, B2B ads), @Atlassian, @ Microsoft. Boards.

    16,118 followers

    Closing the loop on customer feedback is an art — but a crucial one for driving product growth. Here's how to do it: 1. Open the channels Make it seamless for customers to submit feedback through your product, community, and other touchpoints. 2. Analyze and prioritize Identify the highest-impact issues across your feedback sources. Prioritize those areas accordingly. 3. Acknowledge receipt Even a simple, automated response goes a long way in making customers feel heard when they take the time to share thoughts. 4. Provide updates Keep the conversation going. Follow up with customers who submitted feedback to share how you're addressing their issue. 5. Implement and iterate Take action on the prioritized issues. Continuously improve based on renewed feedback. The bottom line: Customers who feel listened to are more invested in your success. Treat their feedback as a dialogue, not a monologue.

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