Temkin Group
Insight
Report
2014 Temkin Experience
Ratings
H.E.B. and Trader Joe’s Top Ratings of 268 U.S.
Companies Across 19 Industries
By Bruce Temkin
Customer Experience Transformist
& Managing Partner
Temkin Group
March 2014
Temkin Group
[email protected]
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Executive Summary
In our 2014 Temkin Experience Ratings, H.E.B. earned the top spot, followed by Trader
Joe’s, Chick-‐fil-‐A, and Publix. This cluster of grocers and fast food chains at the top of the list
exemplifies the dominance of these two industries in our ratings; they together claim 15 of
the top 21 spots. We asked 10,000 U.S. consumers to rate their recent interactions with 268
companies across 19 industries. Consumers evaluated their experiences with these firms
across three dimensions: functional, accessible, and emotional. On an industry level, grocery
chains, fast food chains, parcel delivery services, retailers, and banks all earned “good”
ratings on average, whereas TV service providers, health plans, Internet service providers,
and rental car companies received “poor” ratings on average. We also compared individual
companies to their industry averages and found that Kaiser Permanente, USAA (insurance),
A credit union, Southwest Airlines, and Regions all outperformed their peers by more than
10 percentage points. Meanwhile, DHL, HSBC (credit cards), Chrysler, US Cellular, Coventry
Health Care, and HSBC (bank) each fell 15 percentage points or more below their
competitors. Between 2013 and 2014, credit card issuers increased their rating the most
dramatically, while hotel chains decreased their ratings most steeply. Of all companies,
EarthLink, Regions, and Humana improved the most over the past year.
H.E.B and Trader Joe’s Earn the Top Spots in 2014 Temkin Experience Ratings
To evaluate the quality of the experiences that U.S companies deliver to their customers, we surveyed 10,000 U.S. consumers about their recent interactions with organizations.1 We then usedthis consumer feedback to create our fourth annual Temkin Experience Ratings by: Examining three elements of the experience. We asked consumers to rate their
experiences with different companies over the past 60 days. These questions—evaluated on a seven-‐point scale—covered the three components of an experience: functional, accessible, and emotional (see Figure 1).
Only analyzing data from companies with more than 100 respondents. Although
consumers rated a multitude of companies for our survey, we only analyzed those that received at least 100 consumer responses. Ultimately, we examined data from 268 companies across 19 industries (see Figure 2).
Calculating the component ratings. We developed ratings for each of the three
components of experience—functional, accessible, and emotional—by subtracting the percentage of consumers who rated a company poorly from the percentage of consumers who gave the company a high rating.2
Calculating the overall ratings. We found the Temkin Group Rating for each company by
averaging the ratings of the three experience components.
1
Data come from the Temkin Group Q1 2014 Consumer Benchmark Survey—an online study of 10,000 U.S. consumers completed during January 2014. Survey respondents were representative of the U.S. Census based
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Food Services Dominate the Top of the Ratings
We examined the Temkin Experience Ratings for 268 companies from 19 industries and found that: H.E.B and Trader Joe’s lead the pack of grocers and fast food chains. Grocers and fast
food chains dominate the Temkin Experience Ratings, with H.E.B and Trader Joe’s claiming the top two spots and Chick-‐fil-‐A and Publix coming in closely behind (see Figures 3 and 4). Overall, grocery chains fill eight of the top 21 spots, while fast food chains fill seven of the top spots. Four banks and two retailers account for the rest of the top companies. Health plans receive the lowest ratings. Health plans took the bottom four spots with
Coventry Health Care, Empire (BCBS), Highmark (BCBS), and Medicaid. Overall, five of the bottom 18 companies are health plans, four are hotels, three are TV service providers, and a mixture of other industries account for the rest.
Customer experience is staying relatively steady. We compared this year’s results with
survey responses from the past three years and found that—like in 2013—37% of
companies earned a “good” or “excellent” rating (see Figure 5). Compared with 2013, today more companies deliver “excellent” customer experience, but fewer companies deliver “good” customer experience. Across the three components, companies decreased a little bit in both the functional and accesible categories, but increased slightly in the emotional area.
Grocery Chains are the Top Industry and TV Services are the Bottom Industry
We assessed the Temkin Experience Ratings of 19 industries and uncovered that:
Five industries are “good.” Although the individual company scores vary widely, overall
grocery chains earned the highest average industry rating (see Figure 6). Fast food chains, parcel delivery services, retailers, and banks each also received an average industry rating of “good.” At the other end of the spectrum, TV service providers, health plans, Internet service providers, and rental cars all have “poor” average ratings.
USAA leads in two industries. We examined the best and worst companies in each
industry and found that USAA earned the highest ratings in two industries: credit card issuers and insurance carriers (see Figure 7). Additionally of note, the lowest-‐rated fast food company—Orange Julius—still recieved higher marks than most of the other industries’ top companies.
Kaiser Permanente outperforms its competitors. We compared the scores of individual
companies to the average scores of their industries and found that Kaiser Permanente earned ratings 11 percentage points higher than the average health plan (see Figure 8). USAA for insurance carriers, A credit union and Regions for banks, and Southwest Airlines for airlines each also received ratings 10 percentage points higher than their industry norms.
DHL falls far behind its peers. DHL lags 20 percentage points behind the parcel delivery
industry average, while HSBC for credit cards issuers, Chrysler for auto dealers, US Cellular for wireless carriers, Coventry Health Care for health plans, and HSBC for banks all fall 15 percentage points or more below their respective industry averages.
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Examining Functional, Accessible, and Emotional Experience Ratings
We examined the three components of the Temkin Experience Ratings—functional, accessible, and
emotional—for each company and discovered that:
Emotional experience is the weakest component. Across all 19 industries, the scores of
the emotional experience fall well below the scores of both the functional and accessible components (see Figure 9). In fact, grocery chains and fast food chains are the only industries in which the emotional experience comes even close to approaching an “okay” rating. And just seven of the nineteen industries—banks, credit card issuers, fast food chains, grocers, insurance carriers, parcel delivery services, and retailers—have both
accessible and functional scores that are “okay” or better.
H.E.B. and Regions offer the top functional experience. Led by H.E.B. and Regions, 57
companies earned “excellent” ratings (80% or above) for the functional component of their experiences (see Figure 10). In contrast, Coventry Health Care received the only “very poor” rating (below 50%) for functional experience, while 27 other companies earned “poor” ratings (between 50% and 60%).
H.E.B. provides the most accessible experience. Of the 61 companies that received an
“excellent” rating for the accessible component of their experience, H.E.B. earned the top spot (see Figure 11). Medicaid had the lowest accessible rating and is joined on the bottom by seven other “very poor” performers: Empire (BCBS), Coventry Health Care, Highmark (BCBS), Motel 6, Super 8, Residence Inn, and Hitachi. Thirty-‐four other companies scored “poor” ratings on their accessible experience.
H.E.B. delivers the best emotional experience. H.E.B. is the only company to earn an
“excellent” rating for its emotional experience (see Figure 12). Trader Joe’s followed closely behind as one of the 15 companies that earned a “good” rating for this component. At the bottom of the list, Empire (BCBS) lead the 48 companies with “very poor” ratings, while another 110 companies scored “poor” ratings in this area.
How the Results Changed Between 2011 and 2014
We examined how company ratings changed for the 243 organizations that appeared in both the 2013 and 2014 Temkin Experience Ratings. We also compared the ratings of the 12 industries that have been represented in our findings every year since the inception of our Temkin Experience Ratings in 2011. We found that:
Credit card issuers improved, while hotels declined. Of the 19 industries that appeared
in both the 2013 and the 2014 Temkin Experience Ratings, the scores of 15 of them increased from last year to this year (see Figure 13). Credit card issuers gained the most percentage points over the past year with an average increase of 4.1 points. Meanwhile, hotel chains dropped a significant 5.4 percentage points, the largest decline of the four companies whose scores decreased. Of the 12 industries that we have analyzed every year for the past four years, five of them have made steady gains each year: banks, computer makers, credit card issuers, health plans, and insurance carriers.
EarthLink, Regions, and Humana improved the most. Of the 243 companies that were
Under Embargo Until March 4, 2014
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their scores at least slightly (see Figure 14). EarthLink, Regions, and Humana most
significantly increased their ratings, but Morgan Stanley Smith Barney and Capital One also saw double-‐digit improvements to their scores over the past year (see Figure 15).
Coventry Health Care declined dramatically. Coventry Health Care’s rating decreased by
18 percentage points, the most of any company. US Cellular, Marriott, Fifth Third, and Chrysler’s scores all decreased by more than 10 points since 2013.
Calculating the Temkin Experience Ratings
We calculated the Temkin Experience Ratings for each company by (see Figure 16):
First, for each separate component (functional, accessible, and emotional), we analyzed the percentage of consumers who gave the company a good score (“6” or “7”) and the percent who gave the company a bad score (“1,” “2,” or “3”).
Second, within each individual component, we subtracted the percentage of bad scores from the percentage of good scores, which resulted in three separate ratings for each company. Finally, we averaged these three component scores for each company to generate that firm’s
Temkin Experience Rating.
The Path to Customer Experience Excellence
The Temkin Experience Ratings show that most companies have a long way to go before they reach the highest levels of customer experience maturity (see Figure 17). Although any company can improve narrow segments of its customer experience, creating lasting differentiation requires more than just strong ambitions and superficial changes. Our research shows that long-‐term success requires companies to build and sustain four customer experience competencies:3
Purposeful Leadership: Operate consistently with a clear set of values.
Employee Engagement: Align employees with the goals of the organization.
Compelling Brand Values: Deliver on your brand promises to customers.
Customer Connectedness: Infuse customer insight across the organization.
To see and sort through the
data for all Temkin Ratings,
visit www.TemkinRatings.com
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2014 Temkin Experience Ratings (TxR), Bottom 51 Organizations
Rank Company Industry TxR
268 Coventry Health Care Health Plans 41%
267 Empire (BCBS) Health Plans 42%
266 Highmark (BCBS) Health Plans 44%
265 Medicaid Health Plans 45%
264 US Cellular Wireless Carriers 46%
260 Comcast TV Service 47%
260 Comcast Internet
Service 47%
260 Motel 6 Hotels 47%
260 Super 8 Hotels 47%
258 Charter Comm. TV Service 48%
258 CareFirst (BCBS) Health Plans 48%
256 Crowne Plaza Hotels 50%
256 Chrysler Auto Dealers 50%
254 HSBC Credit Cards 51%
254 Days Inn Hotels 51%
251 Time Warner Cable TV Service 52%
251 US Airways Airlines 52%
251 Hitachi Appliances Major 52%
246 Qwest Internet Service 53%
246 DHL Delivery Parcel 53%
246 Anthem (BCBS) Health Plans 53%
246 AT&T TV Service 53%
246 Residence Inn Hotels 53%
241 Verizon TV Service 54%
241 CIGNA Health Plans 54%
241 Dollar Rental Cars 54%
Copyright ©2014 Temkin Group. All rights reserved. Base: 10,000 U.S. consumers
Source: Temkin Group Q1 2014 Consumer Benchmark Survey
Rank Company Industry TxR
241 Blackboard Software 54%
241 Westin Hotels 54%
232 Time Warner Internet Service 55%
232 Charter Communications Internet Service 55%
232 Dodge Auto Dealers 55%
232 21st Century Insurance Carriers 55%
232 Sony Computers 55%
232 MSN Internet Service 55%
232 Compaq Computers 55%
232 Health Net Health Plans 55%
232 Haier Appliances Major 55%
226 Optimum (iO)/Cablevision TV Service 56%
226 HSBC Banks 56%
226 American Family Insurance Carriers 56%
226 Hertz Rental Cars 56%
226 AirTran Airways Airlines 56%
226 Fujitsu Appliances Major 56%
218 Sprint Wireless Carriers 57%
218 AT&T Internet Service 57%
218 Verizon Internet Service 57%
218 Aetna Health Plans 57%
218 Avis Rental Cars 57%
218 Adobe Software 57%
218 Kia Auto Dealers 57%
218 Activision Software 57%
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About the Author, Bruce Temkin
Bruce Temkin is a Customer Experience Transformist & Managing Partner of Temkin Group. He is also the co-‐founder and Chair of the Customer Experience Professionals Association (cxpa.org). Bruce is widely viewed as a leading expert in how organizations build differentiation through customer experience. He has worked with hundreds of large organizations on the strategies, operational processes, organizational structures, leadership, and culture required to sustain superior customer relationships.
Bruce’s research focuses on identifying current and emerging best practices. He has published seminal reports, such as The ROI of Customer Experience, The Future of Customer Experience, and
The Four Customer Experience Core Competencies. He uses this insight to advise companies on their
customer experience journeys, identifying opportunities for sustainable breakthrough performance.
Bruce is the author of the popular blog Customer Experience Matters® where he regularly posts
insights on topics such as customer experience, branding, leadership, and employee engagement. His eBook—Six Laws of Customer Experience—which is available for free on the blog, has been downloaded by tens of thousands of people around the world.4
Prior to forming Temkin Group, Bruce was Vice President & Principal Analyst with Forrester Research. During his 12 years with Forrester, he led the company's business-‐to-‐business, financial services, e-‐business, and customer experience practices. Bruce was Forrester’s most-‐read analyst for 13 consecutive quarters and remains one of the most respected analysts in the industry. Bruce authored several of Forrester’s most popular research reports, including Experience-Based
Differentiation, The Customer Experience Journey, and Voice Of The Customer: The Next Generation.
He created Forrester’s Customer Experience Index and Voice of the Customer Award and also led the creation and expansion of many of Forrester’s experience evaluation methodologies and training workshops.
Prior to Forrester, Bruce co-‐founded and led a couple of Internet start-‐ups. He also held management positions with GE, Stratus Computers, and Fidelity Investments.
Bruce has been widely quoted in the press, including media outlets such as The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Business Week.
Bruce is a highly demanded public speaker who combines deep expertise with an engaging,
entertaining style. He has delivered keynote speeches at hundreds of industry and corporate events and is often recognized as one of the top speakers.
Bruce holds a master’s degree from the MIT Sloan School of Management, where he concentrated in business strategy and operations. He also holds an undergraduate degree in mechanical
engineering from Union College.
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CX CORE COMPETENCIES
Purposeful Leadership Do your leaders consistently
operate with a clear, well-articulated
set of values?
Compelling Brand Values Are your brand attributes driving decisions about how
you treat customers and other stakeholders?
Customer Connectedness Is customer feedback and insight deeply integrated throughout your internal
processes?
Employee Engagement Are employees fully committed to the goals
of your organization?