Voice of Customer Analysis
Voice of Customer (VoC) analysis is a structured method for hearing what customers actually need, in their own words, and turning that into a prioritized, organized set of requirements for product development. Abbie Griffin and John Hauser established its modern foundations in their 1993 Marketing Science article, which examined the customer-needs component of Quality Function Deployment and answered practical questions: how many customers to interview, how to extract needs from verbatims, how to structure them, and whether one-on-one interviews or focus groups are more efficient. Their key empirical findings — that needs accumulate toward saturation, that a modest number of interviews uncovers most needs, and that one-on-one interviews are at least as productive per dollar as focus groups — turned VoC from an art into a repeatable research process. The method distills raw customer statements into solution-free need statements, organizes them into a primary-secondary-tertiary hierarchy through customer sorting, and assigns importance weights using survey priorities, an idea closely tied to importance-performance thinking. Those weighted, structured needs then feed Quality Function Deployment, where they are mapped onto engineering attributes to drive design decisions.
出典記録
引用は手法の出典記録からそのままコピーされています。それらからレベルごとの検証は推論されません。
- Griffin, A., & Hauser, J. R. (1993). The Voice of the Customer. Marketing Science, 12(1), 1-27. · DOI 10.1287/mksc.12.1.1
- Martilla, J. A., & James, J. C. (1977). Importance-Performance Analysis. Journal of Marketing, 41(1), 77-79. · DOI 10.1177/002224297704100112
キュレーションされた主張
主張は証拠台帳に永続化され、それぞれが独自の評価を持っています。
このビューは、台帳に主張評価がない場合、主張評価を生成しません。
関連手法
手法グラフから生成され、機械が提案した関係として表示されます — 証拠主張は推論されません。