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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

The five whys


The five whys is an effective tool in helping you to move your customer down the ladder of abstraction. The five whys is a simple approach for exploring root causes and instilling a "find the root cause, not the symptom" mentality. Invented by Japanese industrialist Sakichi Toyoda, the idea is to keep asking "why?" until the root cause is arrived at. The number five is a general guideline for the number of whys required to reach the root cause level, but asking "why?" five times versus three, four, or six times is not a rigid requirement.

Of course, we don't want to just keep asking the customer "why, why, why" for fear we will sound like a three-year-old child. Instead, we can find other ways to continue to drive down from the stock answer by peeling away layers of information until we get to the valuable insights about the customer's problem or unarticulated need by asking things such as "Can you tell me more?" or "Why is that?" You can also use the customer's last answer...

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