Identify your customer pain points

Does your business routinely overlook customer pain points?

It's easy to get blasé about certain aspects of your business, and easy to overlook pain points that customers might experience when dealing with your company. Many business owners get so caught up in running their business that they don't stop to question their procedures or investigate ways to improve their customer's experience.

To illustrate the point, the Kepler Track in South Island's Fiordland National Park is one of New Zealand's great walks. I had the fortune to walk most of the 60km track over Christmas… meandering through leafy well-kept forest paths, dipping into cool clear lakes, climbing slopes and stairs to above the tree line, sidling along precipitous mountain tracks and descending through leafy tracks, fern-filled valleys and past magnificent waterfalls and rivers.

The scenery is nothing short of breathtaking, and well worth the aches and pains of previously desk-bound muscles – but there is one major detractor for most tourists along this track and other tracks in the region. 

The detractor is the diminutive 2-3mm black sandflies found in swarms almost everywhere along the track. The females of the species pack one of the itchiest bites I have yet to experience. 

These sandflies have small wings and can't fly fast – so trampers can (mostly) avoid being bitten as long as they keep moving. Stop for anything longer than 30 seconds and the first sandflies will appear, shortly followed by their mates, all with their homing devices set for any area of skin you might be thoughtful enough to expose.

The presence of sandflies forces trampers to march the day's trek – non-stop – from start to finish. The alternatives are to cover up all exposed areas or smother the body in nasty chemical (effective) or natural (not that effective) insect repellent to enjoy the views, let alone a lunch break.

Local Kiwis, however, seem to have developed an immunity to the itchy bites, and largely underestimate (and often totally fail to understand) the discomfort these creatures cause tourists. 

Similarly, tourists aren't enamoured with locals telling them to tough it out or stick to the cities – a classic case of overlooking a customer pain point. 

Are you overlooking any customer pain points?

Take a few minutes out to assess your business to make sure you don't have your own homebred sandfly swarm to irritate customers. 

  • Is it easy to find out product information and prices? 

  • Is your customer service prompt, friendly and efficient? 

  • What about after-sales service and product backup? 

  • Are there any difficulties you can eliminate, processes you can streamline or red tape you can remove?

Finally chat to your staff to see if they are aware of any customer pain points, and don't forget to talk to your customers as well to find out if there are ay buzzing nuisances you can eliminate.

This short business blog by Shaz was written for The Small Business Company in 2013.

Previous
Previous

Ticking off Kepler

Next
Next

The pros and cons of breaking into the Asian market