- IT leaders lack information to help inform and prioritize where improvements are most needed.
- The service desk relies only on traditional metrics such as time to respond or percentage of SLAs met, but no measures of customer satisfaction with the service they receive.
- There are signs of dissatisfied users, but no mechanism in place to formally capture those perceptions in order to address them.
- Even if transactional (ticket) surveys are in use, often nothing is done with the data collected or there is a low response rate, and no broader satisfaction survey is in place.
Our Advice
Critical Insight
- If customer satisfaction is not being measured, it’s often because service desk leaders don’t know how to design customer satisfaction surveys, don’t have a mechanism in place to collect feedback, or lack the resources to take accountability for a customer feedback program.
- If customer satisfaction surveys are in place, it can be difficult to get full value out of them if there is a low response rate due to poor survey design or administration, or if leadership doesn’t understand the value of / know how to analyze the data.
- It can actually be worse to ask your customers for feedback and do nothing with it than not asking for feedback at all. Customers may end up more dissatisfied if they take the time to provide value then see nothing done with it.
Impact and Result
- Understand how to ask the right questions to avoid survey fatigue.
- Design and implement two complementary satisfaction surveys: a transactional survey to capture satisfaction with individual ticket experiences and inform immediate improvements, and a relationship survey to capture broader satisfaction among the entire user base and inform longer-term improvements.
- Build a plan and assign accountability for customer feedback management, including analyzing feedback, prioritizing customer satisfaction insights and using them to improve performance, and communicating the results back to your users and stakeholders.
Member Testimonials
After each Info-Tech experience, we ask our members to quantify the real-time savings, monetary impact, and project improvements our research helped them achieve. See our top member experiences for this blueprint and what our clients have to say.
10.0/10
Overall Impact
$27,500
Average $ Saved
110
Average Days Saved
Client
Experience
Impact
$ Saved
Days Saved
Clearwater Seafoods Incorporated
Guided Implementation
10/10
$27,500
110
always amazing working with Emily!
Take Action on Service Desk Customer Feedback
Drive up CSAT scores by asking the right questions and effectively responding to user feedback.
EXECUTIVE BRIEF
Analyst Perspective
Collecting feedback is only half the equation.
Natalie Sansone, PhD
Info-Tech Research Group |
Often when we ask service desk leaders where they need to improve and if they’re measuring customer satisfaction, they either aren’t measuring it at all, or their ticket surveys are turned on but they get very few responses (or only positive responses). They fail to see the value of collecting feedback when this is their experience with it. Feedback is important because traditional service desk metrics can only tell us so much. We often see what’s called the “watermelon effect”: metrics appear “green”, but under the surface they’re “red” because customers are in fact dissatisfied for reasons unmeasured by standard internal IT metrics. Customer satisfaction should always be the goal of service delivery, and directly measuring satisfaction in addition to traditional metrics will help you get a clearer picture of your strengths and weaknesses, and where to prioritize improvements. It’s not as simple as asking customers if they were satisfied with their ticket, however. There are two steps necessary for success. The first is collecting feedback, which should be done purposefully, with clear goals in mind in order to maximize the response rate and value of responses received. The second – and most critical – is acting on that feedback. Use it to inform improvements and communicate those improvements. Doing so will not only make your service desk better, increasing satisfaction through better service delivery, but also will make your customers feel heard and valued, which alone increases satisfaction. |
Emily Sugerman, PhD
Info-Tech Research Group |
Executive Summary
Your Challenge |
Common Obstacles |
Info-Tech’s Approach |
---|---|---|
|
|
|
Info-Tech Insight
Asking your customers for feedback then doing nothing with it is worse than not asking for feedback at all. Your customers may end up more dissatisfied than they were before, if their opinion is sought out and then ignored. It’s valuable to collect feedback, but the true value for both IT and its customers comes from acting on that feedback and communicating those actions back to your users.
Traditional service desk metrics can be misleading
The watermelon effect
When a service desk appears to hit all its targets according to the metrics it tracks, but service delivery is poor and customer satisfaction is low, this is known as the “watermelon effect”. Service metrics appear green on the outside, but under the surface (unmeasured), they’re red because customers are dissatisfied.
Traditional SLAs and service desk metrics (such as time to respond, average resolution time, percentage of SLAs met) can help you understand service desk performance internally to prioritize your work and identify process improvements. However, they don’t tell you how customers perceive the service or how satisfied they are.
Providing good service to your customers should be your end goal. Failing to measure, monitor, and act on customer feedback means you don’t have the whole picture of how your service desk is performing and whether or where improvements are needed to maximize satisfaction.
There is a shift in ITSM to focus more on customer experience metrics over traditional ones
The Service Desk Institute (SDI) suggests that customer satisfaction is the most important indicator of service desk success, and that traditional metrics around SLA targets – currently the most common way to measure service desk performance – may become less valuable or even obsolete in the future as customer experience-focused targets become more popular. (Service Desk Institute, 2021)
SDI conducted a Customer Experience survey of service desk professionals from a range of organizations, both public and private, from January to March 2018. The majority of respondents said that customer experience is more important than other metrics such as speed of service or adherence to SLAs, and that customer satisfaction is more valuable than traditional metrics. (SDI, 2018).
However, many service desk leaders aren’t effectively measuring customer feedback
Not only is it important to measure customer experience and satisfaction levels, but it’s equally important to act on that data and feed it into a service improvement program. However, many IT leaders are neglecting either one or both of those components.
Obstacles to collecting feedback |
Obstacles to acting on collected feedback |
---|---|
|
|
A strong customer feedback program brings many benefits to IT and the business
Insight into customer experience |
Gather insight into both the overall customer relationship with the service desk and individual transactions to get a holistic picture of the customer experience. |
---|---|
Data to inform decisions |
Collect data to inform decisions about where to spend limited resources or time on improvement, rather than guessing or wasting effort on the wrong thing. |
Identification of areas for improvement |
Better understand your strengths and weaknesses from the customer’s point of view to help you identify gaps and priorities for improvement. |
Customers feel valued |
Make customers feel heard and valued; this will improve your relationship and their satisfaction. |
Ability to monitor trends over time |
Use the same annual relationship survey to be able to monitor trends and progress in making improvements by comparing data year over year. |
Foresight to prevent problems from occurring |
Understand where potential problems may occur so you can address and prevent them, or who is at risk of becoming a detractor so you can repair the relationship. |
IT staff coaching and engagement opportunities |
Turn negative survey feedback into coaching and improvement opportunities and use positive feedback to boost morale and engagement. |
Take Action on Service Desk Customer Feedback
Info-Tech’s methodology for measuring and acting on service desk customer feedback
Phase |
1. Understand how to measure customer satisfaction |
2. Design and implement transactional surveys |
3. Design and implement relationship surveys |
4. Analyze and act on feedback |
---|---|---|---|---|
Phase outcomes |
Understand the main types of customer satisfaction surveys, principles for survey design, and best practices for surveying your users. |
Learn why and how to design a simple survey to assess satisfaction with individual service desk transactions (tickets) and a methodology for survey delivery that will improve response rates. |
Understand why and how to design a survey to assess overall satisfaction with the service desk across your organization, or use Info-Tech’s diagnostic. |
Measure and analyze the results of both surveys and build a plan to act on both positive and negative feedback and communicate the results with the organization. |
Insight Summary
Key Insight:
Asking your customers for feedback then doing nothing with it is worse than not asking for feedback at all. Your customers may end up more dissatisfied than they were before if they’re asked for their opinion then see nothing done with it. It’s valuable to collect feedback, but the true value for both IT and its customers comes from acting on that feedback and communicating those actions back to your users.
Additional insights:
Insight 1 |
Take the time to define the goals of your transactional survey program before launching it – it’s not as simple as just deploying the default survey of your ITSM tool out of the box. The objectives of the survey – including whether you want to keep a pulse on average satisfaction or immediately act on any negative experiences – will influence a range of key decisions about the survey configuration. |
---|---|
Insight 2 |
While transactional surveys provide useful indicators of customer satisfaction with specific tickets and interactions, they tend to have low response rates and can leave out many users who may rarely or never contact the service desk, but still have helpful feedback. Include a relationship survey in your customer feedback program to capture a more holistic picture of what your overall user base thinks about the service desk and where you most need to improve. |
Insight 3 |
Satisfaction scores provide valuable data about how your customers feel, but don’t tell you why they feel that way. Don’t neglect the qualitative data you can gather from open-ended comments and questions in both types of satisfaction surveys. Take the time to read through these responses and categorize them in at least a basic way to gain deeper insight and determine where to prioritize your efforts. |
Understand how to measure customer satisfaction
Phase 1
Understand the main types of customer satisfaction surveys, principles for survey design, and best practices for surveying your users.
Phase 1: |
Phase 2: |
Phase 3: |
Phase 4: |
---|---|---|---|
Understand how to measure customer satisfaction |
Design and implement transactional surveys |
Design and implement relationship surveys |
Analyze and act on feedback |
Three methods of surveying your customers
Transactional |
Relationship |
One-off |
|
---|---|---|---|
Also known as |
Ticket surveys, incident follow-up surveys, on-going surveys |
Annual, semi-annual, periodic, comprehensive, relational |
One-time, single, targeted |
Definition |
|
|
|