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Weekley Fine-Tunes Customer Satisfaction Measures
October 1, 1999
Professional Builder
When David Weekley Homes won the NHQ Award in 1993, the Houston-based firm set benchmarks for gathering data to measure the strength of customer relationships. Weekley was one of the first to survey buyers at different stages of the home sale process, asking the critical "would recommend" question to measure customer satisfaction. Today, Weekley has become even more cutting edge in its measurement methods.
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| Communication with buyers is key at David Weekley Homes. |
The surveys are still done by Weekley employees, by telephone, which allows them to achieve a 100% response rate. But Weekley has also added J.D. Power into its customer satisfaction measurement equation. "We brought Power in to do an independent survey, to verify our results and our methodology," says Weekley.
Several years ago, Weekley refined its key "would recommend" survey question to allow customers to register degrees of satisfaction rather than choosing simply "yes" or "no."
"We went to a four-point system culminating in ‘absolutely would recommend,’" says Weekley. "But we’ve now learned from J.D. Power that a five-point system is better.There’s quite a bit of difference between the enthusiasm of buyers in the top segment of a five-point survey than in the top of a four-point scale."
Also See:
Competitive Edge
© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.










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