Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Fred Reichheld: Love Your Customers | Sales | E186
Episode Date: September 5, 2022When it comes to making customers happy, there is no one more knowledgeable than Fred Reichheld. Fred is one of the world’s leading experts on customer and employee loyalty. He created the Net Promo...ter Score, or NPS, which measures your customers’ experiences and satisfaction with your brand. NPS is used by two-thirds of the Fortune 1000. In this episode, Hala asks Fred about the Net Promoter Score and its three categories. They talk about how some of the biggest companies use NPS and how to encourage a customer-centered culture within your organization. They also talk about how to use customer referrals to innovate your product and the earned growth metric. Topics Include: - Why Fred has worked at Bain & Company since 1977 - Being successful without being an entrepreneur - Net Promoter Score - Qualities of the best companies - The Golden Rule - Loving your customers - Using referrals to innovate - Using top NPS scores to invest - The Flywheel Effect - Earned growth metric - Fred’s book, Winning On Purpose Fred Reichheld is the world’s leading expert on customer loyalty. He is the creator of the net promoter system, which was used by companies worldwide to increase their customer retention rate. He has been named ‘the high priest of customer loyalty’ by The Economist. He is a bestselling author of multiple books, including his most recent release, Winning On Purpose, which teaches leaders how to inspire customer love within their own teams. He has worked for Bain & Company since graduating from college in 1977. He founded Bain’s Loyalty principle, which helps companies achieve results by focusing on customer loyalty and improving customer retention levels. Sponsors: Indeed - Visit Indeed.com/YAP to start hiring now. Constant Contact - Go to constantcontact.com to get started for free today The Jordan Harbinger Show - Check out jordanharbinger.com/start for some episode recommendations Shopify - Go to shopify.com/profiting, for a FREE fourteen-day trial and get full access to Shopify’s entire suite of features Resources Mentioned: Fred’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/fredreichheld/ Bain & Company’s Website: https://www.bain.com/our-team/fred-reichheld/ Fred’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/FredReichheld Fred’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/people/Fred-Reichheld/100011364038688/ Fred’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reichheldfred/ His book, Winning On Purpose: https://www.facebook.com/people/Fred-Reichheld/100011364038688/ Net Promoter System’s website: https://www.netpromoter.com/know/ More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review - ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala Learn more about YAP Media Agency Services - yapmedia.io/ Join Hala's LinkedIn Masterclass - yapmedia.io/course
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You're listening to Yap, Young and Profiting Podcast, a place where you can listen, learn, and profit.
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Young and Profiting Podcast.
Today on YAP, we're chatting with Fred Reichelt, the creator of the Uber
popular open source market research metric, net promoter score or NPS, which helps companies gauge
customer loyalty.
Fred is one of the world's far most experts on customer satisfaction, so much so that
he was named by the economist as the high priest of customer loyalty.
Fred is also the bestselling author of four business books, and he is a fellow at Bain and
company and founder of Bain's loyalty practice. Fred frequently speaks at major business forums and
his work on loyalty and customer service has been covered in Harvard Business Review, the Wall
Street Journal, and the New York Times, to name a few. In this episode, Fred talks about his
entrepreneurship at Bain & Company over the past 20 plus years, and we'll get the origin story of his
widely used net promoter score. We'll discuss the value of customer referrals and customer-based
accounting, Fred shares the power of the golden rule, treat others the way you want to be
treated, and finally, we'll understand why it's crucial to love your customers and prioritize
them over everything and everyone else. If you want to learn how to level up your customer
satisfaction with one of the biggest marketing legends in the game, keep on listening to
my conversation with Fred Reicheld. Hey Fred, welcome to Young Improfiting Podcast.
Thank you. Great to be here. I am excited for this conversation.
Thanks for joining me.
And to quickly introduce you to my listeners, you are the world's leading expert on customer
loyalty, and you're the creator of the iconic net promoter system, which was used by companies
worldwide to increase their customer retention rate.
In fact, the economist named you the high priest of customer loyalty, and you are a household
name for marketers like me.
You have had an incredible and long career at Bain & Company, and you are the best-selling
author of a handful of books, including your most recent book, Winning on Purpose, which covers how
businesses can enrich the lives of their customers. So before we get into customer loyalty and what
it means to love your customer, I would love to back up. And I feel like a good place to start is right
after college. From my understanding, you've been working at your job, Bain and company since you graduated
in 1977. It's not often that somebody stays at the same company throughout their whole career these
days. So granted, you are half time now, but you still rep that organization. And to me,
it seems like you really took a different approach.
You were an entrepreneur within the organization.
You launched iconic products like NPS.
You've been speaking, writing books.
And I'm sure that kept things interesting for you.
So my first question is,
why did you stay so long at Bain & Company?
How have you kept it spicy all this time?
And why did you decide to stay there your entire career?
Great question.
And when I ask myself regularly,
I think the primary reason I've stayed at Bain all these years
is it's assembled a group of really special
people with values that I admire. The whole firm was committed to this idea that our primary
purpose is to help our clients succeed, to make our customers' lives better, solve their
problems. And that turns out to be a profitable strategy. It's commercially successful, but
it's more important. I think it's a life-enriching mission that when you serve others and get
recognized and rewarded when you help other people succeed, that actually inspired.
It's been financially great for me, but at this point in my life, we have more money than we'll
ever be able to spend. It's an energy and focus and what inspires you to keep working hard.
And it's that same idea that Bain is a platform that helps its partners do things that make them,
their families, and their communities proud. Yeah, and like I was telling you offline,
a lot of people think the only way to be massively successful is to be an entrepreneur,
But that's simply not the case. So I'd love for you to shed light on that of it.
Well, I think people who are most innovative are the ones who are going to be the most successful.
And there are certainly lots of examples of building your own firm, but there's plenty of examples of working within firms or within communities, whether it's universities or think tanks.
You have a broad range. However, you need the leverage of an organization to really have an impact in the world.
And the key is to make sure that you choose wisely, an organization that fits your values and is full of people who aspire to similar life goals that are worthy of your loyalty.
And then make sure you help them succeed.
It's not so much about you succeeding.
You've got to play a big role in helping that organization succeed and fulfill its mission.
Yeah, I couldn't agree more.
So let's talk about the origin story behind that promoter score.
Talk to us about the genesis of this idea and where you got it from.
Well, I was an economics major, and the thing that caught my eye early in my career were
organizations, both small and large, that were outperforming any understanding of business
strategy or financial accounting that I learned in business school.
And we saw this common thread was that they were treating their, they treated people right.
They earned the loyalty of their customers and employees.
And the right kind of loyalty, this loyalty that is, it's self-referralia.
sacrifice. It's committing yourself to the success of an organization because of the mission
and the principles it lives by, but it wasn't measured. And so initially, I looked at an incredible
leverage of retention rates of people that kept their customers a little bit longer,
doubled, tripled their profits. And no one knew that. But over the years, it's transitioned.
I think the economics is the reward is one of the benefits. But the real root cause are organizations
that are committed to making their customers' lives better.
Because it's more than a commercial mission.
Everyone talks about making the world a better place.
I'd say, let's get serious about making the world a better place
and start with the customers, the people whose responsibility you have to serve
and solve problems for it.
Yeah, and I'd love to stick on that a bit.
Why do you think the greatest companies are the ones that enrich their customers' lives?
Well, in my youth, I just saw their financial results were extraordinary.
I think what makes them truly extraordinary, and the reason their financials are extraordinary is they're committed to a purpose that's worthy of loyalty, this purpose of enriching lives, this net promoter score that you mentioned I invented 20 years ago.
As I was toying with names for it, I was thinking, well, it's really net lives enriched, because every time you touch a person's life, whether you're individual, a team, or company, you're either going to enrich that life or diminish it.
and we need to keep track of that instead of just talk about it as an airy-fairy idea.
And so this idea of how likely it would recommend us to a friend as the best way to know if you
enrich the life, I mean, the logic is pretty clear.
When you have your life enriched as a customer and you want to share that with a friend or a
loved one, that referral is an act of love.
It means you want to enrich the life that the person you know you care about.
And so it's a signal that an organization has indeed enriched a love.
life. So, you know, Net Lives Enrich just seemed a little too soft and theoretical, I suppose,
philosophical. And Net Promoter had a business ring promoters, our customers who go out and
they refer their friends, they buy more from you, they're your assets. And so Net Promoter Score
became the name. I suppose in some settings, I wish I'd left it at Net Lives Enriched.
No, I think you made a good choice, honestly, because it's, like you said, it has a little business
string to it. Net Lives and Rich sounds a little bit fluffy. So it turns out you actually hated surveys
before you started MPS and you ended up launching a survey. But from my understanding, it just has two
questions or at least started with two questions. You alluded to one of them. What were the two
questions and why did you choose those? I'm so sick of surveys and these long market research
things that, oh, we'll just take a minute of your time and 80 questions later. If I had to have a
survey at all, because I do think surveys take people's time. It's friction. So I wanted one question,
and the question that was the best predictor of loyalty behaviors turned out to be likelihood to
recommend. How likely would you recommend us to a friend? So zero through 10, we asked that question,
that score lets you know if you've created a promoter or enriched a life or a detractor or diminished a
life. Then we have an open text verbatim follow-up to tell us why. In the customer's own words,
they can explain why you enrich the life or how you diminish their life. And people have to take the
time to read that. Don't get artificial intelligence and delegate it to the statistics department or
some computer. Read it. And the people who read it should feel the emotion of an enriched life
or diminished life. And good people care about that. Then my daughter convinced me. My daughter,
Jenny, said, Dad, we're using three questions, not two. And I've seen great, question inflation has
been a real issue. They 12 becomes 20 becomes 100. But oh, Jenny, you can't do this to me.
But she convinced me she had a question that deserves to be part of the canon. So she said,
our promoters, they tell us why they love us in that verbatim text. But if we ask them,
is there anything else we could have done to make your experience better? They tell you good
ideas that can make you, can innovate and make you even stronger. And remember, your
promoters, they're your biggest fans. They want you to succeed. You're a part of their personal
brand because when you refer someone, you're sharing your personal identity, your reputation,
with the brand. It's a big deal. And those people care about you and they want you to succeed.
So give them an option to give you their best ideas. But don't go past three. There are just no way
that customers should be answering five or ten questions. Yeah, I totally agree. I feel like you lose
people at that point. So I know you were inspired by Andy Taylor, who was the founder of Enterprise
Rent a Car. So I'd love to hear that story. What did you find so innovative and interesting when you
had a conversation with him? Yeah, Andy, he's been a supporter over the years and taught me a lot.
When I first met him, it was in, for my first book, I was trying to explain how his organization had
grown from a tiny little leasing business in St. Louis, Missouri, into the largest car rental company,
on Earth as a private company. Talk about entrepreneurial success. You never had to go to Wall Street
and get funny money and play that game. And he said, well, Fred, there's no magic. And he and I are both
from the Midwest. So he's speaking in that real plain language of you got to treat your customers
so they come back for more and bring their friends. And that simple idea, first of all, he inspired
the net promoter score because he had a two-question survey he was using with his branches in the
rental car business, and I saw how powerful it could be. But the even more powerful thing was
these words, back for more and bring their friends. Accounting does not measure that. Generally
accepted accounting principles just gloss over it. They look at total revenue. What Andy is saying,
you have to look customer my customer, are they expanding, are they repeat purchasing,
expanding their purchases, and are they referring their friends? And because we don't measure those
with accounting, which is the yardstick we all use. And, you know, without intending it,
entrepreneurs sort of take the mindset of accountants because they're using that measurement
system for their major decisions and paying people. And suddenly, you have a worldview of
accountants, which is how much money I can extract from a customer's wallet, as opposed to,
how can I treat them so well they come back for more and bring their friends.
I love that. Let's hold that thought for a second. I really want to dig into that a bit
later. But first I want to set some more context. So I want to talk about the three main parts of
NPS in terms of how you evaluate customers. So there's promoters, there's passives, and detractors.
Could you define that for us? Yeah, we found that just in our early research, when you ask
customers on a scale from zero to ten, how likely to recommend us to a friend, those who score you
a nine or a ten, they tend to be the promoters who actually do refer you. They buy more stuff.
they're your assets. Sevens and eights, they got what they paid for. They're passively satisfied.
You didn't enrich their life. They got what they paid for. That's sort of a, you know, quid pro quo,
nothing magic there. And then zero through six, you've diminished their life. Something was wrong.
They won't recommend you. They'll actually tend to say bad things about you and feel like the
instant there's an alternative, they'll jump on it and go to a competitor. So promoters, passive detractors
became this simple categorization of success, foul tip, and failure.
And when you keep track of that and get to the root cause of why, it lets organizations start
to measure the right thing. Are we treating people in a way that enriches their life?
And what do we need to do differently to improve our results?
Yeah. And what would you say the telltale signs of a promoter are?
Oh, they put a smile on your face. A very successful entrepreneur, Truitt Kathy, now deceased,
but built Chick-fil-A into a powerhouse of a business.
Same as Andy Taylor, by the way.
They didn't need to go public to build this monster,
I think they're the number two or three restaurant chain in North America,
maybe more.
So wildly successful economically.
And Truit and I didn't have completely congruent points of view
on some social issues and religious issues,
but we were respectful, I think, of each other.
And what I respected was he lived this notion of the golden rule,
love thy neighbor as thyself. He, uh, is Southern Baptist, I'm told, have a, their life's mission
oftenly is captured in a biblical verse. And his was Proverbs 22, 11. A good name is worth more than
silver or gold, essentially. And so your reputation is everything. And I think in his mind,
he said, putting smiles on people's faces, making them happy is how you build a reputation, how you
live up to the Golden Rule. And that was the formula that has created this monster success that
continues to, and you know, run against these great companies like McDonald's and Burger King
and, but Chick-fil-I just blasts through them, just the same way Enterprise Rent a car blasted
through Hertz and Amos and the others. There is a flywheel of once you get customers coming
back from one bringing their friends, that's the economic engine that drives prosperity,
even though it's pretty much invisible to accountants except in the rearview mirror.
Yeah, I totally agree. I have a social media agency, YAP media, and we haven't gotten any funding. It's been bootstrapped. And it's all because of this flywheel effect of referrals. It's like, my clients have a good experience. They tell their other, like, you know, very successful friends. And it just helps us become the preeminent social media and podcast agency. Have you ever heard of Jay Abraham? No, and I don't think so.
He is a very famous marketer. He's a former YAP guest. And he talks about this strategy of preeminent.
And basically what it means is if you treat your customers well, if you've got the best reputation in the industry, you are like the preeminent business.
You're the number one hands down best choice.
And you'll never have a problem getting customers.
And he learned from one of his mentees, Tony Robbins, that you have to fall in love with your customers, not your products and your services.
So I'd love for you to talk to us about loving your customers.
You talk about loving your customers.
It's a pretty rare word to use in business.
So what are the ways that companies can love their customers and drive?
more promoters, more customer loyalty.
Yeah, love was a radical word to use, and especially for a bainee like me, it's pretty
much, you know, everybody's an MBA and rational kind of people.
Love is for home life.
But no, I think if you step back and think carefully about what love means, it is your
happiness is the result of making your partners happy.
So if you love someone, most of your happiness comes out.
of you creating happiness in them. And that kind of love, which is golden rule, love thy neighbor
as thyself, or maybe out of religious term outside that, you say, you want to treat people
the way you'd want a loved one treated. That's what makes the world a better place. That love is at the
core. Love breeds loyalty. When customers feel loved, they come back for more and bring their friends.
That's what starts this economic flywheel. Love is hard to measure, but loyalty is pretty easy to
if you're serious about it.
Because in this digital age, you can watch how many of customers are repeating,
how many are referring their friends.
I mean, one of my recent investments is in a company that has a technology platform
to help give and receive referrals.
And I think that's what the world needs to do is referrals are everything.
Instead of doing it on a survey, how likely you to recommend, let's keep track of real referrals
because that's where the economic value is.
And that's where the reputation is.
So to your point, great businesses.
I agree with Robbins and Abraham.
It's just that's where, that's the fusion right there that energizes success.
And I think rather than kidding around with surveys, let's keep track of referrals.
Yeah.
And to your point, love is so important.
When you love someone, you're going to recommend the company that gave you that great service, that gave you that a great experience.
So it's not necessarily that they love your company.
They love their friends and family so much that they're going to recommend.
commend your company.
Absolutely.
People say they love their Apple computer.
I think this is, but they also see they love their dachshone.
They love their favorite ice cream.
The love that actually energizes and inspires is this notion of enriching the lives you
touch and your happiness deriving from that success.
And people who live that life live a pretty good life, even if they don't make a ton of money,
that they have made a difference in the world and will die proud. The notion that love is also behind
business success, I think is the radical proposition that I make in winning on purpose. And the evidence
is, it's really overwhelming. People don't read books anymore much, but this one has the evidence that
the company who has earned the loyalty of their customers using NPS as a good proxy for that,
of measuring it, the highest NPS company in every industry have looked at has the highest total
shareholder return over the decade. And that's been a huge moneymaker for me as an investor.
But I think it's even more, the companies and boards of directors, investors, they've got to see
the facts here. This flywheel we talked about, it's the only flywheel that keeps spinning through
time, sustainable. Yeah, 100%. And to that point, COVID hit a black swan event. We had no idea
what the economic impact would be. Nobody saw it coming. And these things can happen. They happen every
several years. So talk to us about how customer loyalty and having a high NPS score can kind of
mitigate these Black Swan events. Black Swans have been going on for a long time. It feels like we have
a flock of them landing in the last few years. But that's how the world works. And the companies who
have the financial mindset that's very common today running themselves in the financing,
the accounting, and remember, accounting solves for profits. So very quickly, if you use
generally accepted accounting principles to run your business, which big companies almost have to,
then you are teaching your people the purpose of your business is profits.
And that's not a good purpose.
That goes back to how much can we extract from our customers' wallets, as long as it's legal.
That destroys energy.
Good people don't commit themselves to that.
Then if you can make loving your customers, this idea of making their lives better,
and keep track of progress there,
and recognize and reward people for earning tens,
real tens, not begging for tens,
then I think you can manage your way to success.
But I suppose the biggest challenge,
almost every entrepreneur gets this intuitively.
They can't succeed.
They can't afford expensive advertising
and crazy marketing promotions and big sales forces.
They have to turn their customers into their sales force.
But as they get bigger,
most companies flip over to the dark side,
where accounting rules the day and the purpose becomes profits.
Hold tight, everyone.
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I think we should do a rebranding of NPS and call it net love score.
What do you think about that?
I even toyed with that in its early days.
And that was a step too far for me.
Even using the word love and business, I thought was a stretch until, you mean, think about
as a customer.
If you had an organization or a team who was always watching out for your best interests
and innovating and striving to put a smile on your face and make your life better,
of course you would go there all the,
you'd give them all the business you had
and you refer your friends.
So it's feeling the love as a customer
that inspires loyalty
and starts the flywheel spinning.
Okay, so my next question is
how we can turn passives and detractors
into promoters.
What are the ways that you've seen work in the past?
Probably the earliest successes
in the net promoter movement
were built around fixing detractors
and the early adopters.
NPS is an open source system.
I felt like bigger chance of changing the world, a better chance, if we made it free,
everyone can use it, experiment with it.
And because of that, companies like Apple grabbed it, Lego, IBMs, just thousands of
companies experimented and helped it get better.
And the mindset that clicked first was, gosh, when I see a detractor, I've got a quality
problem.
I have a defect.
So zero defactions, total quality management, let's close the loop with that customer, get to the root cause, fix it, do it at the right level of the organization.
You know, don't do it at the headquarters, do it at the branch or the product where this issue occurred.
So the learning is in the right place in the organization.
That was phase one.
Where we are now is what innovations not only keep customers delighted, but raise the game so they are nines or tens, and they're referring 10s,
10 friends, not just two. So it's innovation. And yes, passives, when you talk to a passive and you say,
what could we do better? They go, I don't know. I'm happy. I got what I paid for. You have to be the
innovator and get your promoters to give you interesting ideas. And think about the companies that you
buy from for whom you're a promoter and what they did that was so remarkable that turned you into a
a referring engine and experiment. And the cool thing about NPS as a survey is you can run these
experiments without putting it out for the whole population. You can see what works. Amazon's very
good at this. They run experiments. If it doesn't work, kill it. If it creates a lot of tens and
repeat purchases, roll it out around the world. That innovation, I think, needs to be energized.
step one, go find out when people are referring you, what is that they're saying about you?
Get a real clear sense of what is remarkable and then teach your organization that you can't rest on
your laurels. Yeah, do more of that, but you have to come up with additional stuff.
Amazon, great example. They did so many things right with the easy purchase and shopping card and one click.
But a few years ago, they said, oh, and when you want to return something, you don't have to put it back in its box
and get the label, just take the thing and bring it to the UPS store and we'll take care of all that
stuff and credit your money right away. That kind of innovation is why they still have a crazy
net promoter score high and why they continue to grow and prosper. People have legitimate issues,
how they treat their people, all this waste in packaging. But at the core, Amazon's purpose
is to make customers' lives better. And if their customers started saying stop packing, you know,
stop the cardboard wastage, they've responded very much.
quickly to it. Their customers now say we want it in one day. And yeah, we don't like that
packaging, but we wanted it in one day. Thank you. Yeah. Amazon's logo is a smile for a reason,
right? Brilliant. Yes. Yeah. So I want to take a sidetrack really quick because you brought
something up that I meant to bring up in the beginning of the conversation, but we didn't talk about it.
And that's the fact that you launched MPS as an open source software, which to me was just so
interesting and I think pretty innovative back then when you did it. So talk to us about why
you decided to launch it as open source. For those who may not know, some of my listeners are on the
younger side, what is an open source software? What are the pros and cons of launching something like
that? Well, the classic open source software would be a Google's Android and Wikipedia, right?
Wikipedia is a lovely example. These companies build themselves and let others innovate and build
on top of them. And while there is a commercial model, there are people who package that,
software make it easy to use and easy to understand, Red Hat is a classic example of a firm
that has found out how to have a profitable commercial overlay, the core software itself,
the core ideas, the IP, are there for everyone to share. And in the case of Net Promoter,
you have to have a license if you're using Net Promoter in your business. So if you're a survey
firm and you're calculating net promoter scores and using that, you have to pay Bayne a small
license fee, but the license fee is so modest, it's not a moneymaker. It just makes it clear that
when you say net promoter, when you ask it, zero through 10, these things are constant and the brand
gets protected. But for users who are just businesses that want to get feedback from their customer,
it's free. You might want to hire somebody who has software to do that really in an elegant way.
You might want to call people or send them a survey yourself. And I did it because at that point in my life,
do you want to be a gillionaire or a quadruple gillionaire?
That's sort of stupid.
Do you want to have a major impact on the world?
That's what seemed energizing to me.
And I thought we would have a bigger impact if we let everyone try it for free.
Yeah.
And from my understanding, you've done a lot of investments based on NPS score.
And the companies that are doing it right, and we'll get into that later on in terms of
the right in the wrong way, right?
But the customers that are doing right, you tend to invest in those companies.
is there a way for other people to find out what companies have a true, high, accurate NPS score?
If you're the target customer, you're the right age group and the right socioeconomic segment.
If you and your friends are just going crazy and referring it, chances are it's a very high net promoter score.
That's just a common sense way.
I've had a little bit of an advantage because at Bain, as more and more of the organization,
at Bain has seen the power of net promoter and how difficult it is for individual companies
to get net promoter scores that are comparable apples to apples. Because the instant you are the one
asking for feedback, it biases which of your customers bother responding and what they say.
So we've created Bain Prism. NPS Prism is a classic, monstrously large panel for, I guess,
probably a dozen different industries now that gets really accurate, really comprehensive.
comparable NPS scores for every brand in the industry.
And with that advantage, I invest in the leader.
And if you take the companies that had the highest NPS in my previous book,
The Ultimate Question 2.0, I wrote with Rob Markey, I invested in those companies.
My total shareholder returns over the decade after the book was published were higher than any
mutual fund or ETF tracked by Morningstar, higher than the lion's share of private equity
firms and I had the liquidity and the low risk of just investing in public companies. The insight
being, I could shine a light on the flywheel of each competitor in an industry and see which one
had the best flywheel spinning, customers coming back from Warren, bringing their friends.
And that has been, you know, it's tens of millions of dollars for me personally. And it's available
to everyone. But shockingly, there is not yet a big movement to get on accurate NPS scores. The
world is still in such an accounting mindset that there's still just a tiny minority of investors
who see the power here. That's why I was shocked because I was like, well, why isn't there's
some sort of like tracker that everybody knows about like top NPS scores? And since there isn't,
we've got like the godfather here. What are the top ones? What should we be investing in?
What are you investing in? NPS Prism, the most recent industry that they added was the grocery
business and the top score was a regional grocer called H.E.B. down in Texas, but it's private.
On the other hand, even though if you can't invest, you know where you want to have your kids go at work.
And Chick-fil-A has the highest NPS. They're a private company. But I'd say then relatives who
feel like entrepreneurs and want to be a store manager, and that's a wonderful career path.
The Trader Joe's is one of the top handful, but that too is owned by the next one.
NPS as Aldi, private still, then you get Costco.
All of these are at superstar levels.
Costco's a public company.
It's so interesting that so when you're private, it just goes to show that if you've got
the flywheel effect, you don't need to take on investors, but keep going.
Sorry for interrupting you.
Yeah, so Costco is a public firm.
I invested in Costco, the instant I saw that they were top in NPS because my personal
experience has been so positive.
I use them heavily as an example in winning on purpose, this last book.
Their philosophy is customers come first, and they act in a way that makes it clear that they live their philosophy.
There's a lot of stories about Costco that I really advise entrepreneurs to read.
They're one of the larger companies in the world today, and their formula works in China.
It works everywhere, every kind of town.
They're just crushing it.
And they make people's lives better.
I'll give a comparison.
I bought a expensive Mercedes-Benz.
Great.
Just lovely car, except on my first trip to the airport, and I was a little late, I was rushing,
it threw its windshield wiper.
And so I'm driving, trying to look through the passenger window to get to the airport without having an accident.
I was very frustrated.
And then when I went to get it fixed, they said it's my fault.
I must have gone to one of those car washes that dislodges the rubber blade.
And I'm thinking, what?
And I had to, not just one, I had to buy two because these windshield wipers come in packs of two.
$200.
And Mercedes uses NPS.
They think they do.
They're begging for scores and pleading.
And, you know, if you can't give us a 10, call us.
Then I go Costco.
And I had a shaver, electric shaver, forget the brand.
But it stopped working after nine months.
I said, that's not right.
This was expensive shavers.
So I took it back to the Costco store, not even the one I bought it at.
And I said, listen, it's not working.
Can you do anything for me? They scanned my membership card, and they said, your account's been credited.
I said, wow, no questions about what went wrong. They said, no, customer like you, if you're not happy
with it, it's not right. And I thought, oh my gosh, there are quite a few billionaires that I know,
personally, and one of the early ones was Scott Cook, the founder of Intuit, who's TurboTax and
QuickBooks and so forth. And his philosophy, he started at Bain about when I did, and then he left
to found into it. He was the first adopter outside of Bain of net promoter. And he says, my philosophy
is, we don't deserve a dollar of profit until our customer's happy. Think about what a high-minded
philosophy that is. But it worked in software. That's why he's still got a successful software firm.
98% of the others success stories back in his day, they're gone. Costco has the same philosophy.
You're a good customer, and they have my track record as a customer. They know we buy a lot.
you are unhappy with that product, then we don't deserve it. And the manufacturer doesn't
discern any profit. What an amazing common sense way to run a business. Yeah, for sure. I mean,
it's so important to have customer loyalty. So I have a story to share. The biggest blip that I
ever made with Yap Media, my social agency. So I have a business partner. He owns 10%, and he's totally
the numbers guy. He's all financial, super smart guy, very successful. I'm very much like the
relationship person. Most of my clients are actually former guests that become my clients,
and then they become my mentors and my friends and everything like that. My business partner is
very much about the numbers, and we've been growing really fast, and our rates keep getting
higher and higher, and we have legacy clients that pay a lot less than our clients now. And so
the biggest blip that I ever made of my company was when my executive team convinced me to reach
out to all my legacy customers and try to raise the rates. And it messed up some of my relationships.
We're fine now. But like, it took a while to get it back on track. And it just goes to show that
when you have legacy customers, these were, these were clients that were with me for a couple
years. They referred all their friends. They were like my number one advocates. And for a period of
time, they were mad at me for trying to raise the rates on them, right? Because they felt like
they were loyal. And so there is a problem with the way that people think in terms of like the
accounting practices and just only looking at the numbers and the profits and not actually evaluating
customer relationships. Because I send these finance meetings and I get so frustrated, they're like,
oh, like, you know, like if it's like some sort of like a negative forecast and I'm like,
but you guys don't know about all the conversations I'm having. And like there's so much bubbling up
that's just not calculated. So I'd love for you to talk about what needs to change in terms of
accounting practices and how entrepreneurs can avoid making them mistake of
not measuring their customer loyalty?
It's an excellent question, and I've wrestled with that for a long time.
I see people misusing net promoter the way car dealers do, begging for scores.
But with surveys, unless you have a big panel with double-blind research, you can't get
honest, accurate, comparable scores.
What do we measure that really gets to the heart of customer love?
In winning on purpose, I introduce a new metric that I think it deserves to be.
the equal of net promoter, maybe someday it's slight superior. It's called earned growth. And it just,
it takes the point of view that you have, with every customer, you have to keep track of, are they
buying more or less or defecting? And are they referring friends? And so your earned growth is your
total growth, the business generates in revenue that comes from existing customers being happy
and buying more and the friends they refer. Great companies will have earned.
growth rates, 130, 140, 150%, so you think about their resting growth rate with no sales
and marketing, they're just growing like crazy. I think for entrepreneurs and for the serious
numbers people, force them to start measuring your earned growth rate and your earned growth
component for every customer, and you'll start focusing on the right things. Instead of aggregate's
like total revenue, which can lead you down the wrong path, if your customer is not buying more,
coming back for more and bringing their friends, there's something wrong that needs attention.
But if they are growing 150% a year, don't screw up the decision making by countowing to the accounting mindset.
Now, of course, you have to have cash flow to keep the business healthy.
And so finance is vital.
But it's not the purpose.
And in too many businesses, finance because we can measure it more rigorously and report it.
and the regulatory system sort of gives it an edge.
We give it way too much power in our thought process.
100%.
And I would argue, like that little blip, that story that I was telling you about when I went to go raise the rates with my customer,
we were trying to raise the rates so minimally 20%.
And I always tell my partners now, like, look, we did that and we lost so many referrals.
We could have grown, you know, we're doing amazing, so don't get the wrong picture.
But like, we could have grown even faster had we not lost all those.
referrals for that point in time while my customers were upset with me. So it's just such a cool
tool. What's the actual formula behind earned growth rate? There's two components to earn growth.
The first one is the back for more, which encapsulates both retention. Because if somebody
diminishes their business or defects, that nets out against it and customers that expand their
purchases when netting those things, there is an existing accounting metric called net revenue retention.
that's the biggest component for most companies.
And then you add the revenue from customers who came primarily as a result of referrals
from existing customers.
That set of revenue, that's earned growth.
And if you are well above 100%, that means you've got the flywheel spinning in the right direction.
So if I've never done any paid ads, no marketing, and everything is referral, then that means
I have a high earned growth rate?
Yeah, well, the great companies, if they take, just take the new customers and you asked
and what's the primary reason you came?
The very best customer companies I've found have 70, 80, even 90% of their new customers
are coming on referral primarily.
That doesn't mean they don't advertise at all.
There's a lot of reinforcing publicity and advertising.
But yes, your customer, what's the primary reason you came aboard?
If they say referral from a friend, or if you have a tech platform that actually,
it's clear our friend referred them and keeps track of it, those are the best kind of business
you can possibly have.
Those are the assets, the accountants.
don't measure it today, they send you down the wrong path because of that.
100%. I feel like this is so educational and interesting and helpful for all the entrepreneurs that
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So a question for you, something like a podcast, right?
Nowadays, podcast can be a lead generation tool for people.
Similarly, like having like a webinar where you invite potential clients,
would you consider that being referral-based business or would you consider that
being more of like paid promotion?
It's on the edge.
If you're educating people about what you're staying.
for and what your philosophy is, it's a way of communicating the truth to them. It's not quite as good
as an existing customer who really knows you and isn't, it's not what you say about you. It's
what their experience has been and what they say about you. That's the highest form of positive
marketing. But I think this, what you're describing with podcasts and building community,
it's the next best thing. Yeah, I agree. I feel like it's like slightly right under is like having
like a social media platform where you're known as a thought leader and you're giving away
free advice or a podcast where you're building trust with someone. It's not quite paid promotion.
It's sort of like the gray area, right?
If you could get really honest reviews on these sites and curated a little bit, so it's the
customers that you care about. But it's even Amazon who is so strong, it's sloppy.
When you go in there, star ratings, they don't make much difference because that what, half
of those are paid in some way or cheating. So yeah, you can read the verbatims and sort of figure out
who thinks like me and you can get benefit. But if people really cared about review sites, they could
be so much better than they are today. And a really smart, somebody who runs one of the biggest
retailers in the world, said, Fred, when we, we don't get the best insights from our NPS surveys.
They're good. They know they're talking to us. So there's social barriers about telemarking.
telling the truth and not hurting our feelings, or maybe they're negotiating with us.
You know, it's a lot of biases there. The way we get to the truth is to listen to our
customers talking to other customers or people they're referring on Facebook groups or
in some third-party platform. So the real truth is listening in on what people are saying
about you in a way that's not creepy and inappropriate. But if you can have an honest way
of listening to that, boy, you can learn a lot.
Let's move on to your latest book, Winning on Purpose. You ended up writing it after you got diagnosed with cancer. So I'd love to understand why you were inspired to write this book. And we've covered a few topics that are in it. But tell us about what people can find in this book. Yeah, when you don't know how many months you've got to live. And when I got the diagnosis, it was one of those. You'll probably make it, Fred, but there's a 20 or 30% chance. You won't be around in another year or two. And so you think, what do I need to get?
accomplished while I've and for me there were so many people misusing net promoter two
thirds more two at least two thirds of the world's large companies use net promoter or say they do but
they're using it the wrong way they don't understand this philosophy it's just it's a kPI like a handful
of others and i had to get across this idea that no no it's it's much it's a whole philosophy
it's go back to the the days of the world thought of uh it was an earth-centered solar system and he had all these
crazy theories about the sun rotating around the earth. And then Copernicus and a handful of others
said, no, the sun is the center and proved it. I believe the customer is the center of the solar
system. Most people don't agree with that yet. And so winning on purpose said, no, the winning
purpose, the only winning purpose is to commit your organization to making your customers' lives
better and loving customers. So only 10% of businesses, big businesses believe that today.
So it's a radical proposition.
But Copernicus was a radical proposition.
He was right.
I think I'm right.
But time will tell.
Will most business people come over to this point of view that customers, you know,
it's not just all stakeholders.
It's not maximize shareholder value.
The purpose of the business is to make my customers lives better.
And if I do that, then I can make my employees happy because they have a life of meaning
and purpose.
And they're part of the flywheel that generates superior economics.
and of course our investors are better off because of that.
But, man, customers have to come first.
And whether it's Apple or Costco or Lego or Bain & Company,
every great business I know has customer front and center
and systems to reinforce that
because you know you're fighting against the current of financial accounting,
which points you in a different direction.
I want to go deep on one aspect of this
because I feel like a lot of people are under the mindset
that employees is where it starts.
Right. Employees are the priority. Happy employees equals happy customers. We hear this all the time.
Why do you feel like it starts like the purpose of business is to enrich the lives of the customer and not necessarily that it starts first with employees?
There's a lot of things that make employees happy that make customers very unhappy. I don't want to work long hours. I don't want to take on the tough camp.
If I see a grumpy customer coming in the store, I'll go to the bathroom and let somebody else take care of it.
And if you don't have your employees inspired to find ways to delight customers and make their life better,
not only will it be financially unsuccessful, but you're putting them in a position of being selfish.
And great leaders show the power of love.
So the leader's primary responsibility isn't to make the customers happy.
It's to inspire their teams to take on that mission, embrace that mission of loving customers and help them succeed.
and when they do, make sure they get the appropriate recognition and rewards.
Don't create a compensation system that makes salesmen rich for overpromising and selling a lot of new business
that never turns into customer promoters who come back for more and bring their friends
and therefore never become a true asset to the business.
See, you've got to really rethink compensation, hiring, promotion at Bain.
You can't.
It's very hard to get promoted at Bain unless your team thinks you live the values of the company
and make our clients succeed.
We have built systems that reinforce that.
And if you just look at, Bain is always on the top.
Whether you pick glass door, fortune, you know, pick your list,
Bain has been at the top.
Why?
Because all of the reinforcing systems of who we hire,
how we train, how we run huddles on a weekly basis,
how you get promoted, it has customer value first.
And I think no leader is doing their employees of faith.
favor if they don't help them understand that their happiness, their employee's happiness,
is based on making a meaningful contribution that the team values in making customers lives better.
Yeah.
Well, Fred, this was such an awesome conversation to kind of round this out.
And I have a couple last questions that I ask at the end that I ask all my guests.
But to round out this portion of the conversation, you know, you've been doing NPS for 20 years.
You've had the privilege of studying so many really well-known businesses.
what are the top business lessons that you've learned in your career?
Well, at the end of the book, I sort of pull back the curtain and make it clear that this is actually a life advice that I'm trying to give to my grandchildren who are too young to read the book at this point.
But if you believe this mindset and you want to make the world a better place, it's really hard to do that on your own.
You have to team up with others who have similar values, principles, and team up and find a world.
way to help them succeed in living that mission and making it the truth and making it the common
practice. So choose the people you hang with really carefully. Don't just hire them because they'll
make you money. Make sure these are people who are going to be contributing to teams who are
committed to enriching customer lives and who feel like this golden rule idea of love thy neighbor
is the center of a well-lived life and purpose. Those lawyers, those lawyers,
They just define your legacy, and they certainly shape your life. Be thoughtful and be loyal.
When you found that, you know, why I'm at Bain 50, not quite 50 years, but it's a group that I feel is helping make the world better.
And there's nothing better you can do with your life than being connected to those kinds of teams and those organizations.
and don't take crappy profit-based purpose as a customer, as an investor.
You know, there's so much talk about environmental investing and, you know, pollution has to stop.
But seriously, the worst kind of pollution are people mistreating each other and abusing each other in the name of profits.
I completely agree.
So I asked some questions at the end of each episode and we do some fun stuff at the end of the year with them.
So the first question is, what is one actionable thing that are young?
improfitters can do today to be more profiting tomorrow.
Get a sample of your new customers and ask them why they came on board.
And for those that said it's a referral, find out who referred them, what it was about what
they said that make that referral so impactful, and then go talk to the person who referred
and understand what made them so confident in you that they would co-brand their reputation.
Get a root cause set of conversations there.
I think that's the most important thing to do.
and then make sure your teams feel the responsibility to be remarkable.
Their job isn't just to get somebody off the phone on time
or to make them sort of happy enough to not be a problem.
The job is to do something remarkable
that they're going to talk about with their friends.
And that's a high standard,
but then your people have to help put pressure back on you
to let you know what they need in terms of systems
and resources and support training tools.
that once you get your employees feeling like our job is to enrich the lives we touch and we measure our
success that way, wonderful things can happen.
I am going to make this mandatory listening for all of my 60 employees and my executive team
so that they know what our priorities here are at.
This book, rather than just listening to the podcast, see if you can use the podcast to get them to read.
And one of the companies that I am on the board of invested in who lives this philosophy,
it's called Built, B-I-L-T.
Built gives the book to every prospective employee and ask them to read it.
And before they will hire them, they want to make sure that they understand and embrace the ideas in it.
Because you want new employees who think this way, and you want your existing employees,
have a discussion group around each chapter and think, are we doing this?
What do we need to change?
what are we doing that's spot on and we need to do more of. But don't make it a book report that's
over in a month. Take a chapter a month and make it a conversation that continues. And it built,
they start next year and go through each chapter. And I think built is a wonderful example for
you entrepreneurs. It's a great idea. It's going to change the world, getting rid of paper
instructions and putting in it free T-CAD designs. But it's not the technology that is special. It's
the philosophy behind it of helping their customers and their clients have happier customers.
I love that advice. I think I'm going to take it. So what is your secret to profiting in life?
Have grandchildren and have them visit a lot. Oh, that's cute. And where can our listeners go to
learn more about you and everything that you do? Net promoter system is a website that has a lot of
tools and resources and just search on winning on purpose and you'll start seeing the things
that we're developing, because I still do have this open source philosophy that I want more people
to understand this purpose and to put it in practice. And today, it's still a radical philosophy.
So go to those two sites. And LinkedIn, there's a newsletter I do on LinkedIn called Customer Obsession
that I think is a pretty good dose. I'd like to see teams talking about that one each month
to see what lessons there are for them.
Awesome. Well, I'm a big fan of LinkedIn. I'll make sure I follow you on there. We're going to
stick all your links in the show notes, your book, all your social sites, your websites.
Thank you so much, Fred.
This was an awesome conversation.
It was my pleasure.
Thank you.
Oh, boy, I need to be sending this episode to every single entrepreneur and entrepreneur
that I know because your customers are really the heart of your business, no matter your
industry.
If they stop coming to you, you cease to exist.
Like Fred said, one of the reasons why a lot of business owners fail is because they've
their customers not as people, but as potential profits, they adopt an accountant's mindset of
money, money, money. And that couldn't be farther from the truth when it comes to having a
successful business. All the best companies out there are crushing their competition because they
care most about putting a smile on their customers' faces. And let's talk a little bit about the
importance of loyalty before we close. First, a definition. Loyalty is the willingness of someone,
whether that's a customer, an employee, or a friend to make an investment or personal sacrifice
in order to strengthen a relationship.
So loyalty doesn't just mean buying over and over again.
It means actually making a personal sacrifice in order to strengthen the relationship with
the brand.
So for a customer, that could mean something like sticking with a vendor who treats them
really good and gives them good value over the long run, even if that vendor doesn't actually
offer the best price in the market.
So they could get it for cheaper, maybe even faster, but they're going to go with you because they
value the relationship and they see the long-term potential.
Therefore, it's a sacrifice to stay with you and it's proving customer loyalty.
Again, customer loyalty is much more than just repeat purchases because somebody who buys
again and again from the same brand may not necessarily be loyal to that brand.
It may be just inertia, right, why they're not changing their brand.
They may just be used to it.
they may be indifferent.
Or that brand is simply the most convenient for the time being.
So for example, let's say you regularly take the same airline to a city,
but only because it's the airline that offers the most flights to that city.
So it's the most convenient, not necessarily your favorite airline.
True loyalty impacts profitability greatly.
And we are young in profiting here at Yap, so we care about profitability.
Having loyal customers lowers your customer acquisition costs.
It drives top line growth.
and you can't scale very fast if your customer bucket is leaky.
Loyalty helps close those leaks.
It helps eliminate that outflow.
In fact, loyal customers can raise the water level in your proverbial bucket.
Customers who are truly loyal tend to buy more over time.
And most importantly, they tell their friends.
And these referrals and recommendations are one of the best indicators of loyalty
because it actually shows customer sacrifice in making that referral.
because when a customer acts as a reference, they actually are putting their own reputations out
on the line. And so they're going to risk their reputations only if they feel intense loyalty.
Loyal customers are like having a free marketing department. Figuring out a way to accurately
measure customer loyalty and satisfaction is extremely important. The MPS score can help companies
big and small do this. It is a very, very popular tool that most Fortune 500 companies are using
and also a lot of small companies are using it too.
And it's just a couple of questions.
The most important question being,
how likely is it that you would recommend company X to a friend or a colleague?
Right?
Because recommendations is what shows and proves customer loyalty.
And like we said in this interview,
this market research metric NPS may as well be called net love score.
And yeah, fam, you want to infuse this feeling of love for your customer
into your company culture.
Every employee should know that they are there to enrich the lives of your customers by tending to them with kindness, respect, and enthusiasm.
And using this golden rule should be the minimum when interacting with a customer.
Create people the way that you want to be treated.
Put the customer in the center of every decision.
Always put yourself in their shoes and anticipate how you can enrich their lives to help grow their businesses.
That is how you build a loyal customer base young improfitors.
And according to Bain and company's research, just 10% of corporate leaders believe that their
firm's primary purpose is customer happiness and success. So chances are you out there need to be
better prioritizing your customers. And if you can't tell you're doing a good enough job,
don't forget to ask feedback. Use something like an NPS survey and start tracking your referrals.
I mean, I certainly am at Yap Media. We're going to start tracking an earned growth rate in our
reporting. Referrals are super important and understanding who your biggest advocates are can help
you make better decisions in the long run, better gauge the true health of your business,
and not just look at everything from a black and white numbers perspective. And guys, I'm going to
leave all the resources for NPS in the show notes. I've linked it all there for you, for you to
flip around and see how you can leverage it for your business, whether you're an entrepreneur or
an entrepreneur, I think you'll find it valuable. Thanks so much for tuning in to another
episode of a young and profiting podcast. If you haven't yet, make sure you follow me on social.
I'm on Instagram, TikTok, and Twitter at Yap, Y-A-P with H-A-L-A. You guys can also find me on
LinkedIn. You can search for my name. It's Halitaha. You can't really miss me on there.
And thank you so much to my amazing Yap team. I couldn't do this without you guys. Thanks so much for
all your hard work. I really appreciate it day in and day out. This is your host,
Halitaha, signing off.
