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The Ultimate Question: Driving Good Profits and True Growth (Hardcover)
by Fred Reichheld
Category:
Sales, Selling skills, Business, Business growth |
Market price: ¥ 288.00
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¥ 258.00
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Pre-order item, lead time 3-7 weeks upon payment [ COD term does not apply to pre-order items ] |
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MSL Pointer Review:
This surprising book offers a powerful message based on common sense: Companies that treat their customers ethically and honestly will build a dedicated client base, and thus grow steadily and earn "good profits. |
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Author: Fred Reichheld
Publisher: Harvard Business School Press; 1 edition
Pub. in: March, 2006
ISBN: 1591397839
Pages: 210
Measurements: 9.2 x 6.3 x 1 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BA01267
Other information: ISBN-13: 978-1591397830
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- MSL Picks -
Those who have already read Reichheld's two previous books, The Loyalty Effect and Loyalty Rules!, are already well-aware of his exceptional reasoning and writing skills. Throughout his business career, he has demonstrated those skills when rigorously examining one of the most important and yet least understood business subjects: loyalty. Now more than ever before, the success or failure of individual careers and even entire organizations has been determined by the presence (or absence) of loyalty in one form or another. Obviously, loyalty depends upon trust which must be earned over time but can quickly, sometimes permanently be lost.
In this volume, The Ultimate Question, Reichheld again examines various dimensions of loyalty while focusing on what I consider to be an especially important business issue: knowing what is most important to customers by accurately measuring the nature and extent of customers' satisfaction. As Reichheld explains,"What this book offers... is a wholly new kind of measurement, a measurement that can focus an entire organization on improving every customer's experience day in and day out. The process is both simple and radical. Companies need to ask just one question - the Ultimate Question - in a regular, systematic, and timely fashion."
After struggling with one issue, I have decided not to reveal the question itself but can assert that it is the one question which must be asked because the responses to it are needed to guide and inform efforts to achieve "good profits and true growth." Unlike bad profits which are earned at the expense of customer relationships, good profits are earned with customers' enthusiastic cooperation. "A company earns good profits when it so delights its customers that they are willing to come back for more - and not only that, they tell their friends and colleagues to do business with the company." True growth is based on good profits. It is real, verifiable, and sustainable.
Of course, most companies try to grow but only a few succeed. In Chapter 1, Reichheld cites this statistic: almost 80% of the world's firms failed to meet a true-growth threshold of 5% a year in real terms from 1994 to 2004. Why? "The reason is that growth and short-term profits are often antithetical. Most companies can boost their short-term profits simply by following the practices just mentioned [in Chapter Ten]. But no company can do that and achieve sustained growth, because its customers will resent the company and will leave at the earliest opportunity."
Hence the importance of formulating and then applying "a measurement that can focus an entire organization on improving every customer's experience day in and day out." Reichheld recommends what he calls the Net Promoter Score (NPS) which he explains in Chapter Three. Once again, I have decided not to provide any details. Both the Ultimate Question and NPS are best revealed within the context of Reichheld's lively narrative. But I can assert that for decision-makers in most (if not all organizations), what Reichheld has to say about both the Ultimate Question and NPS could well be the difference between success or failure.
Here's what I consider to be Reichheld's most valuable insight: there is a direct and practical link between NPS and profitable growth. Therefore, have customers determine your current NPS. Their responses to the Ultimate Question will suggest what must be done to increase your NPS. Moreover, by continuing to use what is indeed "a wholly new kind of measurement," your organization (regardless of its size or nature) can then sustain profitable growth which will increase in direct proportion to an ever-improving NPS.
Reichheld's latest book is a brilliant achievement. Bravo!
(From quoting Robert Morris, USA)
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Frederick Reichheld is a director of Bain & Company in Boston. He is the author of The Loyalty Effect (over 125,000 copies sold), as well as several articles in the "Harvard Business Review" and "The Wall Street Journal."
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From Publisher
CEOs regularly announce ambitious growth targets, then fail to achieve them. The reason? Their growing addiction to bad profits. These corporate steroids boost short-term earnings but alienate customers. They undermine growth by creating legions of detractors - customers who complain loudly about the company and switch to competitors at the earliest opportunity. Based on extensive research, The Ultimate Question shows how companies can rigorously measure Net Promoter statistics, help managers improve them, and create communities of passionate advocates that stimulate innovation. Vivid stories from leading-edge organizations illustrate the ideas in practice.
Practical and compelling, this is the one book - and the one tool - no growth-minded leader can afford to miss.
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View all 5 comments |
Publishers Weekly (MSL quote), USA
<2008-03-27 00:00>
Almost everyone appreciates the importance of customer satisfaction in business, but this book takes that idea to two extremes. First, it claims that customer satisfaction is more important than any business criterion except profits. Second, it argues that customer satisfaction is best measured by one simple question, "Would you recommend this business to a friend?" Pressure for financial performance tempts executives to seek "bad profits," that is, profits obtained at the expense of frustrating or disappointing customers. Such profits inflate short-term financial results, Reichheld writes, but kill longer-term growth. Only relentless focus on customer satisfaction can generate "good profits." One unambiguous question, with answers delivered promptly, can force organizational change, he claims. Reichheld makes a strong rhetorical case for his ideas, but is weaker on supporting evidence. The negative examples he gives are either well-known failures or generic entities like "monopolies," "cell phone service providers" and "cable companies." When presenting statistics on poor performers, the names are omitted "for obvious reasons." On the other hand, the positive examples are named, but described in unrealistically perfect terms. Believable comparisons of companies with both virtues and flaws would have been more instructive. (Mar.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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David Siegel (MSL quote), USA
<2008-03-27 00:00>
The key to this book's central idea is that you can REPLACE a large handful of other questions with this single question, so people will actually give you feedback. With a longer set of questions, you only get answers from people who enjoy filling out questionnaires! With this single powerful metric, you can watch your company go toward or away from customers. I plan on aiming part of my business in this exciting direction. |
David Laws (MSL quote), USA
<2008-03-27 00:00>
If it was author Fred Reichheld's intention to generate discussion and debate around the benefits of customer loyalty then this book has proven to be the ideal way to achieve that.
Look at the variety and range of perspectives offered by the reviews and articles this book has generated and the emotions attached.
So, if you want to understand the hype you have just got to read the book and make your own judgment. But it really depends on what perspective you bring to the opening pages.
I `buy in' to the argument that loyalty is great for business, so I found the book easy to read and understand and incredibly helpful. The argument is well crafted and supported, and with enough `detail' and case studies to support and reinforce my point of view. The underlying concept being that every organisation has both `detractors' and `promoters' and the objective of every company should be to grow the number of promoters whilst eliminating detractors. Those organisations with many more promoters than detractors tend to be more successful than others.
But many simply don't buy into the underlying premise that building customer loyalty is achievable, even desirable, in today's business environment. I'm not sure that this book will change their perspectives. Much of the data could be described by some, as `soft', `open to misinterpretation' even questionable but it is certainly an intriguing proposition.
Then of course, there is the whole concept that by merely asking one question - The Ultimate Question - will give you a useful insight into the health of your company. Is it really that simple?
Make your own judgment. For me though, The Net Promoter Score is a useful measure that has application in most industries and could be a terrific lead indicator. Would I `bet the farm' on this as the only measure? I don't think so!
Do I want to know the ratio of my company's Promoters to Detractors? You bet.
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Eric Bauswell (MSL quote), USA
<2008-03-27 00:00>
The Ultimate Question is compelling to read. Alright, so I listened to it. Then I went out and bought five more copies for the senior people on my team. This question (and the supporting elements) have already begun to ripple out and have an impact upon our organization. Would you refer us to your friend or family member? It places accountability upon the person being asked at a completely different level. Talk about amping it up.
The second, and in many way more important element, is tracking this effort with the same level of dilligence and seriousness of your accounting or financials. Actually making this a metric you track with results that work their way toward forecasted revenue is huge. It justifies the effort of trying to track it in the first place.
And of course at the end of the day we get to delight our customers which is why most of us started our businesses in the first place. We're learning what we can do better and reacting to it more quickly...probably because we respect the NPS system more than we ever did our customer satisfaction surveys.
I can only imagine how our organization and our work product will be over the long term.
An excellent cornerstone element! |
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