¶ Intro / Opening
Welcome to the RV Park Mastery Podcast, where you will learn the correct way to identify, evaluate, negotiate, perform due diligence on, renegotiate, find. Turn around and operate RV parks. And now, here is your host, the fifth largest owner of RV and mobile home parks in the U.S., Frank Ross.
¶ Harnessing Customer Feedback Through Surveys and Calls
Who has the most important say in your business? Is it you? Is it the manager? Is it your bank? No, it's your customer. This is Frank Roth, the RV Part Mastery Podcast. We're going to talk about harnessing customer feedback, really listening to what customers are saying so you can take action to make your business the best it can possibly be. So how do we hear from our customers?
What are the methods to find out what their needs and thoughts are about our performance? Well, the first way is surveys. Surveys have been around forever. I don't know who created the first survey. It was probably a thousand years ago. Now, a thousand years ago surveys only came in one style, of course, and that was written. Today you can have both written and online surveys. The problem is different people are happy and comfortable doing it in different methods.
Older Americans tend to like them in writing. They don't really feel that comfortable with computers, and so basically if you give them a questionnaire survey, they're typically more than happy to fill it out. Give'em the survey in a pen, little drop box to put the survey and they'll do that for you. People always people like to be heard. It's like it's like voting at an election.
So people are typically more than happy to go ahead and take the steps to get that done. But younger people, millennials, they like to do it more online. So also you want to have that option. The key to a successful survey is basically to give people both methods.
So that you can let all voices be heard. If you go with just online, you'll only get the response of younger people. If you do it just in writing, you might only get the response of older older people. What do you put on the survey? Well, typically you don't want to have more than about ten questions.
You want them to vote basically on a one to ten scale on a number of issues. Was the the check in successful? Were they treated correctly? Property condition fine. Anything you think is a key driver to that business. needs to be on that survey. We all take surveys everywhere I go, doesn't matter where you go, post office, Taco Bell, everyone's got surveys. It is not hard to go online and find the actual surveys for almost any business.
Don't have to be creative with it. Just take the surveys of other larger RV park owners if you'd like. The key item is have a survey. Start listening to what customers are saying about your business. That's the kind of real information that you need. The other thing you can do is you can capture the phone numbers of your customers in the RV park, and then later call them to get their opinion to see how their stay was. You see, not all people are going to fill out a survey.
There are certain people that will, and then there are other people who won't. But I want to get the information. I want to hear the voice of those who don't typically participate in surveys. Exit interviews, which is calling a customer after the fact, is a great way to tap into that market.
Not only will you get a lot of great information from a one to one encounter on the phone, you can hear a lot more than you can on a survey. You can hear a lot more detailed feedback from them on many, many items of their stay. But additionally it's a great affirmation to them that you really care.
I know myself when I get calls, for example, if I get my car repaired and then I get a call from the company that repaired the car to see how's the car doing and we really value as you as a customer, I am more likely to be more loyal to To that car dealership than I was before they did that. So exit interviews can be also be extremely beneficial to getting really good feedback on how your R V park is doing.
¶ Maximizing Positive Social Media Reviews
But perhaps the most important of all ways to harness customer feedback is social media reviews. Now what's a social media review? Well I know that everyone in America at this point knows what I'm talking about. We all select restaurants, we all select destinations, we all select everything today by what others tell us is good from what is bad.
Many a time I've been going down the road thinking I'm gonna stop for lunch, and I look at the social media reviews of the various restaurants in the town, and then I suddenly won't go to that Mexican restaurant right there that I typically would. Because it has terrible reviews. One star review, worst food ever, don't go there. I got food poisoning going there, and so I don't go. Everyone does the same. Social media reviews have come become such a powerful force
and marketing, it's almost scary. They came out of nowhere. These didn't exist prior to the internet. And now suddenly everyone is fixated on them. And of course your customers are no different. So how do we get good social media reviews? Well that's a very thorny issue. There are some laws on it. The FTC has laws in which you are and are not allowed to do in social media reviews. What you're not allowed to do is to request a five-star review. You're only allowed to ask people to make.
social media reviews. So obviously what you want to do is you want to capture customers who are happy. When you see someone who's happy, if you say how was your stay and they say, Oh, it's fantastic, then you might say, Could you give me a social media review? Great way to go ahead and capture the positive energy right there at the moment. Because the problem is if you don't capture
That happy customer with a happy review. You'll soon find the real people who like to post on social media are the people who are unhappy. That Mexican restaurant that I passed up because it had a one star review. Well, it only had one review. Yeah, that was an unhappy person and it probably had the best food in the whole town. And I missed out on it because I was swayed by the negative opinion of just one person. You see, a lot of time the problem is the RV parkour doesn't ask people to post.
And as a result, what happens is only the really unhappy people who really hate your guts are gonna post anything on there and everyone else is not. So there's nothing to dilute what they do. In the case of the Mexican restaurant, having just the one person with the one star review They would have been lost if you had a hundred people with five star reviews. You would have ended up at a nearly perfect score.
So you've got to dilute those negative reviews with an a correspondingly large number of positive reviews. You also need to go back on the people who have negative reviews and see if you can solve it. You might extend out to them some kind of discount if they'll come back or explain what happened.
Social media experts tell you the worst thing you can humanly do on a negative review is to leave it unchallenged. Don't post something that that gives it a a different perspective. We all know there's two sides to every story. Everyone who sees reads those negative view reviews kinda in the back of their mind thinks, well, that customer probably just hates their guts for some other reason, or that's probably a competitor of theirs who wrote the negative review just to screw them over.
So when you have a negative review, you've got to counter that, give the opposing viewpoint, reach out, try to make them happy. But most of all, you've got to dilute those negative reviews with a ton of positive reviews.
¶ Implementing Feedback for Business Improvement
And what do you do when you gather all these reviews? Put them in a drawer, throw them in the trash? No, people often lose track. The whole point of surveying, of getting that customer feedback is to harness that power to make your RV park better. Tabulate the results. Look at those statistics on a quantum level. When you get in a hundred reviews, that is such valuable information.
Now you're not getting just the errant thoughts of one or two customers. You're getting to get some really good data. Note that during the political season, you ever look at those polls they have over you know, which Republican or which Democrat is in the lead. Those surveys, which sometimes represent cities You know, let's say it's a mayoral contest, a city of three million people. The survey is based on only calling a thousand people.
So if you can get in a hundred responses on a survey, well, you're getting a better, more accurate presentation than someone trying to figure out who the next mayor of Baltimore might be. So take the information and act upon it. Remember that you gotta go for the average. Some customers hate everything like that Mexican restaurant. And others just put a straight ten all the way down because they're lazy and don't even want to think about the survey.
But when you get to the average of that, you're getting some really, really powerful thought. And don't forget on social media reviews, the problem is that not only are you getting powerful feedback, but But it's right there in your face for all the world to see. You've got to take action. If you have negative reviews, you've got to solve whatever that problem is. If they say that the the the the chips are aren't fresh at the Mexican restaurant,
The number one thing the Mexican restaurant has to do is work on getting better chips. Otherwise all that energy is lost. If you don't take action when people tell you their thoughts, there's no purpose to getting the thoughts, and you'll never improve as an RV park. The bottom line is that customers are the key. No RV part can succeed without happy customers.
But it's your job, like a Sherpa, to guide your RV park to the happy zone where every customer feels like they're getting their money's worth, that they're being listened to. that they're being affirmed they made the right decision to stop by. And when you can provide that, you will become a very, very successful RV park owner. This is Frank Roth, the RV Park Mastery Podcast. Hope you enjoyed this. Talk to you again soon.
Thank you for listening to the RV Park Mastery Podcast. Be sure to visit us at www.rvparkmastery.com, where you can learn the correct way to identify, evaluate, Negotiate, perform due diligence on, renegotiate, Turn around and operate in RV Parks.
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