IT-Effect only discovered unhappy customers when they were already heading for the exit. In an industry built on relationships and referrals, that was a strategic risk they couldn't afford.
From gut feeling to data: IT-Effect went from discovering unhappy customers too late to acting proactively before problems escalate
Feedback is linked to individual project managers - that makes data actionable, not abstract
CEO Brian Busk has made CSAT a standing item on leadership meetings. It's not a side project, it's strategic
In construction IT, you live on relationships and referrals. Documented customer satisfaction is a competitive advantage
IT-Effect is a Microsoft Dynamics partner specialising in the construction industry. 25+ employees, headquartered in Silkeborg, Denmark. 25 years of experience. Their customers first go through an implementation process spanning months, then transition into ongoing operations and support.
The relationships are close. Personal. Built on trust between individual consultants and the customer's key people. And that's precisely the problem.
When relationships are personal, there's no systemic overview. Feedback came sporadically - typically only when something had gone wrong. Happy customers rarely said anything. And when a customer chose to leave, it came as a surprise, because the early signals had never been captured.
CEO Brian Busk put it simply: we knew whether the individual consultant thought things were going well. But we didn't know whether the customer agreed.
No structured measurement after completed projects. The support experience wasn't evaluated. Satisfaction was something you sensed, not something you measured. And in an industry where word-of-mouth referrals are the primary growth engine, that was a strategic risk.
It's like running a restaurant without ever asking guests whether the food is good. You can see whether they come back - but when they don't, you don't know why.
We built a programme with two layers, tailored to the project-driven reality.
CSAT after every project and support interaction. Short survey - under two minutes. Measures professional quality, communication, and overall experience. Open comment field for those who want to elaborate. Timing matters: we send it while the experience is still fresh, typically within a week of project completion.
Biannual relational measurement. Captures overall satisfaction with the collaboration. Here it's not about the individual project, but the whole picture: Does the customer feel prioritised? Is support fast enough? Does IT-Effect live up to expectations as a long-term partner?
Customer Success Manager as driving force. Heidi Sonne Godiksen became the internal engine. She ensures data isn't just collected but used. Project managers gain insight into their customers' experiences. Low scores trigger follow-up. Praise is shared internally.
CEO on the front line. Brian Busk has made customer satisfaction a standing item on leadership meetings. CSAT data is reviewed monthly. Insights feed into decisions about resource allocation, competency development, and process improvements.
Feedback in a small company is personal. When the score is tied to your project manager, it can feel like an assessment of the person, not the project. We addressed it by making praise just as visible as criticism, and by focusing on patterns rather than individual scores. A low score after one project is a conversation. A pattern of low scores is a competency development need. That distinction is crucial.
Key Points:
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