ABSTRACTMany individual companies and some industries monitor customer satisfaction on a continual basis, but Sweden is the first country to do so on a national level. The annual Customer Satisfaction Barometer (CSB) measures customer satisfaction in more than 30 industries and for more than 100 corporations. The new index is intended to be complementary to productivity measures. Whereas productivity basically reflects quantity of output, CSB measures quality of output (as experienced by the buyer). The author reports the results of a large-scale Swedish effort to measure quality of the total consumption process as customer satisfaction. The significance of customer satisfaction and its place within the overall strategy of the firm are discussed.
An implication from examining the relationship between market share and customer satisfaction by a location model is that satisfaction should be lower in industries where supply is homogeneous and demand heterogeneous. Satisfaction should be higher when the heterogeneity/homogeneity of demand is matched by the supply. Empirical support is found for that proposition in monopolies as well as in competitive market structures. Likewise, industries in general are found to have a high level of customer satisfaction if they are highly dependent on satisfaction for repeat business. The opposite is found for industries in which companies have more captive markets. For Sweden, the 1991 results show a slight increase in CSB, which should have a positive effect on the general economic climate.
INTRODUCTIONIn an effort to promote quality and make its industry more competitive and market oriented, Sweden has become the first country to establish a national economic indicator reflecting customer satisfaction. The extent to which the business firm is able to satisfy its customers is an indication of its general health and prospects for the future. The Customer Satisfaction Barometer (CSB) is an index based on annual survey data from customers of about 100 leading companies in some 30 industries. It is a weighted composite that rates the level of customer satisfaction in the included industries and companies. In addition, the relationship of CSB to customer loyalty as well as product (service) performance is estimated.
Because customer satisfaction has a direct impact on the primary source oi future revenue streams for most companies, the new index is expected to be an important complement to traditional measures of economic performance, providing useful information not only to the firms themselves, but also to shareholders and investors, government regulators, and buyers. Not surprisingly, efforts to measure customer satisfaction on a nationwide basis are now underway in several other countries. For example, the United States is establishing a national quality index very similar to the Swedish model. Efforts are also underway in Japan, Singapore, and the EC countries.
This article reports the CSB development and industry results from the first three years in Sweden. Background and a brief description of some of the macroeconomic issues involved are followed by a discussion of how customer satisfaction relates to the overall strategy of the firm. That is the context within which the validity of CSB is examined.
ABOUT THE AUTHORClaes Fornell is the Donald C. Cook Professor of Business Administration and Director of the Office for Customer Satisfaction Research, School of Business Administration, University of Michigan.
Claes Fornell
Journal of Marketing, January 1992, Vol. 56 (January 1992), 6-21