Startup to Scale Up Logo

Beyond NPS: How Relentless Customer Obsession Builds Startup Empires

Published September 17, 2023

Core Takeaway

True customer obsession transcends metrics like NPS and becomes the foundational DNA of an empire-building startup. It's not a tactic but a mindset that shapes every decision, touchpoint, and strategic direction.

TLDR

  • Customer obsession isn't just a metric or tactic - it's the foundational DNA that transforms startups into empires, placing customer happiness at the center of every decision.
  • Make no decision that doesn't positively impact your customer experience - this single principle transforms how you approach product, operations, hiring, and strategy.
  • As you scale, maintaining customer focus becomes harder but even more critical - the moment you deprioritize customers is when the countdown to failure begins.

Newsletter

"Obsess over customers, not competitors." - Jeff Bezos

Hey Reader,

Startup success is measured by adaptability and revenue growth. Empire builders forge their legacy on relentless customer obsession, tracked but not defined by NPS.

NPS isn't the protagonist. It's a flawed indicator, imperfect but invaluable. It can be gamed, but does serve as a genuine feedback loop. Look past the score, the truth isn't in the number but understanding why that number is what it is. When used with rigor and skepticism, NPS is an asset in your customer-centricity strategy. Its efficacy depends on the craftsman, not the tool itself.

Relentless customer obsession isn't a tactic, it's in the DNA of success; Amazon's "Day One" mindset, Chewy's thoughtfulness, and Zappos' happiness hustle show customer obsession isn't fluff. Comcast, on the other hand, a quasi-monopoly has skated by with the worst service. As cord-cutting grows and alternative internet emerges, expect Comcast to pivot haaaaaard.

Think of revenue and growth as the scaffolding, not the skyscraper. An empire is built when customer sentiment is so profound it's etched in stone, not just inked on monthly board reports.

Before a prospect even becomes a customer, your actions set the tone for your relationship. How you market, how you communicate, and your response time to initial inquiries. The first three dates with customer obsession.

The mantra for customer obsession: Engage to earn trust, love to fuel loyalty, listen to drive innovation, shadow to decode needs, celebrate to spark advocacy, deliver to secure excellence.

...which kind of converts to 8 Core Principles: Trust = Revenue, Loyalty = Renewal, Innovation = Referrals, Understanding = Resonance, Advocacy = Re-engagement, Excellence = Recognition.

You don't know your product until your customers do. You know your solution; they live the problems. Their feedback is more than a data point, it's a blueprint. Be the customer champion, be their voice relentlessly within your organization.

Ask yourself: does this decision enhance the customer experience? Perhaps a step further: make no decision that doesn't positively impact your customer (accretive value to CTQ). "Happy customers solve everything" because a satisfied customer isn't the goal; an evangelist is.

Looking for a nothing example with monumental results? Add live chat to your site (marketing and solution), staff it 24/7 with real people behind the AI, and watch everything change. Chat isn't a feature; it's a hotline to your customer's reality. Manned correctly, it changes everything, literally in real-time.

Your obsession should be borderline stupid, the founder who finally hires a support human, but still, in the thick of fundraising, juggling a million tasks, manages to find the only Zendesk ticket that wasn't great, and questions how it was handled in a @channel slack message. Good. It's not misplaced focus; it's the bull's eye.

As you scale, your touch points with the customer will diminish, but your focus shouldn't. The second you deprioritize the customer is the second the crumble countdown starts, it's inevitable.

Heard this gem but can't find the source: As a StartUp CEO, your time split is simple: 50% recruiting, 50% on customers and prospects, and 50% on everything else!!

Your super power this week? The ability to stay customer-centric despite the chaos. Burn this into your brain: Every internal metric is a proxy for customer happiness. KPIs are important, but they're derivatives, not fundamentals.

Second-order revenue, recommendations from ex-customers in their new gigs, they're not metrics; they're a sign that you are resonating on a level past the transactional.

The question is simple: Is your customer happier today than yesterday? That's literally it.

Don't blink. Even for a moment.

-- James

Thanks for reading!

More Newsletters

Continue Your Founder Journey

Explore all the resources available to help you build and scale your startup

Startup Frameworks Library

A comprehensive collection of frameworks, tools, and templates to help you build and scale your startup. Each framework is designed to address a specific challenge in your founder journey.

Subscribe to the Newsletter

Join 140,000+ founders getting exclusive strategies, frameworks, and founder stories every Sunday.

Get instant access to the 50-Step Founder Playbook downloaded over 1M times

Presented by

Microsoft 365
Microsoft 365
Empower your team with Microsoft 365, the comprehensive platform for productivity, collaboration, and innovation.
Microsoft 365 for Business

About the Author

James Sinclair

James Sinclair

Founder Coach

3x Exited Founder and Founder Coach helping entrepreneurs navigate the startup journey.