Customer satisfaction rises overall

Customer satisfaction drops as customer service agents more frequently use apologetic or polite vocabulary in a conversation, while customers benefit by being polite themselves, according to findings of the quarterly Zendesk Benchmark report released recently.

  • Thursday, 14th August 2014 Posted 10 years ago in by Phil Alsop

The special section of the second quarter 2014 report highlights metrics on behavioural cues in interactions between an agent and customer to better understand customer satisfaction beyond customary metrics. Overall, Global satisfaction increased by 2 points reaching 83 percent customer satisfaction.


“Our research shows that word choice and word frequency have a direct correlation with customer satisfaction,” said Sam Boonin, vice president of products at Zendesk and research lead on the Zendesk Benchmark report. “We’ve found there are triggers around the word ‘sorry’, and when used more than twice there is a problem brewing. This can be a helpful indicator for companies to know when to escalate a ticket, avoiding an unhappy customer.”


The Zendesk Benchmark report took a closer look at behavioural cues of customers and agents to better understand how these correlate with increased or decreased customer satisfaction. The report evaluated the effect of “sorry,” “please,” and “thank you” in public comments by agents on customer satisfaction. In all three cases, customer satisfaction decreases with increased use of these words. With increasing usage of “sorry,” satisfaction drops at a much faster rate versus using the expressions “thank you” or “please.” The increased usage may indicate interactions with those words require multiple back and forth steps, as well as longer resolution times.


Other Key Findings
· Valediction: Interactions with the sign off “Best Wishes,” in comparison to “Best Regards,” “Cheers” and “Yours Sincerely,” have a 11-14 percent lower customer satisfaction score.
· Word Count: A wordier request for help in an online form leads to lower customer satisfaction, but in email customers can be long-winded with little effect on their satisfaction. In a web form, customer requests with 150 to 200 words in the initial description end up with 10 percent lower satisfaction scores than those where the initial description is only 1 to 50 words. There is no significant difference between satisfaction and those word counts with email.
· Email Address: Users of Yahoo email provide the lowest customer satisfaction scores at 75.4%, significantly lower than .Mac users at 84.6%.


Customer Satisfaction by Country: Italy and Columbia Make List for the First Time, UK is 16th overall for customer satisfaction at 82.8%
For the first time, Italy and Columbia made the list, coming in at No. 4 and No. 30, respectively. New Zealand is steady in the No. 1 spot for the third consecutive quarter, with 93 percent customer satisfaction. Canada and Norway are tied at No. 2 for the second quarter in a row with 92 percent satisfaction. The U.K. is No. 16, with an increase of 2 percentage points to 85 percent.


Customer Satisfaction by Industry: Social Media Gains
The 2-point rebound in overall customer satisfaction comes as industries with historically poor ratings, including social media and retail, saw recent gains. While still among the most poorly performing industries, social media is no longer in last place and demonstrated the most improvement across all industries in the second quarter, gaining 9 percentage points to reach 78 percent. IT services and consultancy leads in industry rank unchanged at 94 percent customer satisfaction, while education has gained a percentage point. For the first time in three consecutive quarters, government and non-profit has dropped lower than No. 2 in the top industry category.