4 Reasons You Should Gather Employee Feedback to Boost Your Marketing
It’s a sad reality that most employees don’t feel connected to their
companies. One Gallup survey found that engaged workers comprise less than one-third of the workforce.
And a 2015 survey
of nearly 900 employees found that 61 percent of them had considered
looking for new jobs in the previous year. Of those, nearly 60 percent
felt underappreciated for their efforts at the office.
These are
pretty bleak numbers, and they have far-reaching consequences. Your
customer-facing employees, after all, are some of your best
word-of-mouth marketing machines. If they don’t feel invested in your
company, they’ll likely send the wrong message -- tanking your brand
reputation in the process.
Time and again, you’ve heard that
gathering real-time customer feedback is an effective way to keep your
customers engaged and your marketing fresh. So why not point that
strategy inward? When you create an internal culture built on a
foundation of employee feedback, you establish a brand that’s centered
on cultivating trust. Customers pay attention to the way employees get
treated; and when they see that you invest in communication and
transparency, they’ll invest in you.
Here are four reasons you should gather real-time employee feedback:
1. Employees see workplace problems first and firsthand.
Workplace
troubles eventually trickle down to your customers if you don’t address
them. Fortunately, no one is more aware of these problems than your
employees. Not only do they see problems unravel around them, but they
often are the ones to pinpoint them before they explode.
Your
employees are, in fact, filters and funnels for workplace issues. When
you provide them with open lines of feedback, you’ll get the opportunity
to address problems before they make their way into your customer
shopping and buying processes.
2. All employees want a voice.
When conducting surveys, many employers limit participation to their marketing departments. However, all employees
should be invested in marketing your company, and they probably have
great ideas you haven’t thought of. Lower-level employees working on the
production line or on logistics might have ideas that can help you land
a profitable client, but you’ll never know if you don’t invite
feedback.
3. Employees understand your products better than anyone else.
If
you want to build a better product, start by asking your employees for
their feedback. Not only do your employees understand the ins and outs
of your products or services, but they also work with vendors,
distributors and suppliers -- all of whom can help take your business to
the next level.
Your employees can provide deep insights that
your C-suite is blind to. And when you have their insights documented
via surveys and feedback forms, you can create a gold mine for improving
your products and your marketing processes.
4. Employees perform better when they feel heard.
Employees who love their jobs perform at their highest levels of productivity,
increasing overall profit levels. And when a company has higher levels
of profit, it can devote more funds to marketing -- increasing customer
count and profits even more.
When it comes to stepping up your
marketing efforts, start by looking right under your nose. These
frontline workers understand customers the best. Their helpful insights
can pave the way to new marketing techniques that the marketing
department may have never thought of.
If your company is looking
to improve its marketing endeavors -- and it should be -- make sure
you’re looking within your company first. Your employees are paid to do
what they do, but they’re also an inexhaustible platform for attracting
new customers through their feedback.
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