What Is a Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT)?
Customers are the driving force behind any business, so keeping them satisfied is job number one. Here’s how to make sure you’re meeting their expectations.
Katie Muse
Customers are the driving force behind any business, so keeping them satisfied is job number one. Here’s how to make sure you’re meeting their expectations.
Katie Muse
With 48% of customers citing poor service experiences as their main reason for switching brands, it’s essential to get a clear view of how your customers feel about your business. That’s why customer satisfaction score (CSAT) is the most popular performance indicator among service professionals, with 88% of organisations using it to measure success.
But measuring CSAT — let alone improving it — isn’t quite as simple as it sounds. Let’s take a few minutes to review what this metric really means, how to capture it, and (perhaps most importantly) how to improve it and your customer service incident management.
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A customer satisfaction score is like a report card for your business, except your customers are the ones grading you. The scores are typically collected through surveys that ask your customers to rate your products or services on a numeric scale.
CSAT is a key measurement of customer loyalty. Happy customers are more likely to recommend your business, while unhappy customers can do major damage through bad word of mouth.
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To gauge customer satisfaction effectively, you can conduct surveys through any channel — including email, SMS, or social media. Following any customer interaction or purchase, you can ask straightforward questions like, “How satisfied are you with our product or service?” or “How satisfied are you with the customer service you received?” Your CSAT scores are commonly measured on a scale of 1 to 5, with 5 denoting the highest level of satisfaction.
A relatively simple CSAT formula is to divide the number of satisfied customers by the total number of customers who responded. For example, if you have 100 respondents and 80 of them rate themselves as either “satisfied” or “very satisfied,” your CSAT score would be 80%.
Typically, anything above 70% is considered a good customer satisfaction score, while a less-desirable score is anything below 50%. The average CSAT score across all industries is 78%, but that can vary widely depending on your industry, product, service, and customer base.
When considering CSAT scores, it’s also important to take into account additional metrics like Net Promoter Score (NPS) or customer effort score (CES). These provide different insights than what you’ve gathered from the CSAT survey, so combining them gives you a more complete view of the overall customer experience.
If your customer satisfaction score is low, the first thing you should do is determine why. Read through customer feedback, look at support tickets, and ask questions. Once you know the problem, make a plan to fix it. This may mean improving your product or service, changing how your customer support works, or providing better training for your employees.
Even if your CSAT score is high, there’s always room for improvement. Here are a few tips to keep customer satisfaction on the up-and-up:
Overall, CSAT is a useful tool for measuring customer satisfaction, but it’s not necessarily the best metric for all situations. Here’s a quick look at when it’s useful and when it’s not.
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Customer satisfaction score and Net Promoter Score each measure a different but equally important aspect of the customer experience. While CSAT measures how satisfied customers are with your product or service, NPS measures how likely they are to recommend your product or service to others.
NPS is typically measured by asking customers a single question: “How likely are you to recommend this product or service to a friend?” Customers are then grouped into three categories: promoters (9-10), passives (7-8), and detractors (0-6). NPS is calculated by subtracting the percentage of detractors from the percentage of promoters.
Survey questions will vary depending on your business, product, or service. But here are a few examples of questions you might ask in a customer satisfaction survey:
Your journey to great customer service doesn’t end with CSAT measurement. It’s an ongoing pursuit. By continuously assessing, adapting, and optimising your customer service strategy, you’ll find new insights into the customer experience — and new ways to keep them coming back for more.
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