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From Voices to Results -  Voice of Customer Questions, Tools and Analysis

You're reading from  From Voices to Results - Voice of Customer Questions, Tools and Analysis

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783001446
Pages 218 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
Robert Coppenhaver Robert Coppenhaver
Profile icon Robert Coppenhaver
Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters close

From Voices to Results – Voice of Customer Questions, Tools, and Analysis
Credits
About the Author
Preface
1. Solving Problems and Driving Value with VoC 2. VoC in the Product Development Process 3. Laying the Groundwork 4. Gathering the Customer Needs for Your Product 5. The Interview Process – Preparation 6. The Interview Process – The Interview 7. Understanding the Customer's Voice 8. Validating the Customer's Voice 9. Completing the Circle – Using the Customer's Voice in Your Organization Epilogue

Competitive analysis


We have already discussed competition when we spoke of the Porter Five forces model, but before embarking on a customer VoC, I would encourage you to dive deeper into your competitive landscape and truly understand who your competitors are, how they are positioned, and what their relative strengths and weaknesses are. Like all the tools presented in this chapter, understanding your competitors positioning, capabilities, strengths, and weaknesses will allow you to assimilate and process more information more rapidly from the VoC's you undertake.

Does this sound familiar? Hopefully it does, as the one of the first steps in performing a competitive analysis is to do a SWOT or each of your major competitors, but before we can do that, we need to understand who our competitors really are. It would seem a simple task for a company to identify its competitors. GM knows that Toyota is a major competitor, Apple knows that Samsung is its major competitor, and Coke executives go...

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