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.
Przeczytaj pełny opis metody
Zaloguj się na bezpłatne konto, aby przeczytać tę sekcję.
Mapa metod
Sąsiedztwo pokrewnych metod — wybierz węzeł, aby je zgłębić.
Źródła
- 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 ↗
Jak cytować tę stronę
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Voice of Customer Analysis (Structured Customer-Needs Elicitation and QFD Linkage). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/pl/marketing-science/voice-of-customer-analysis
Która metoda?
Zestaw tę metodę z najbliższymi jej krewnymi i czytaj je obok siebie — biblioteka kładzie księgi na stole; wybór należy do Ciebie.
- Importance-Performance AnalysisMarketing Science↔ porównaj
- Kano ModelInterakcja człowiek–komputer↔ porównaj
- Perceptual MappingMarketing Science↔ porównaj
Cytowana przez
Podobne metody
Widzisz błąd na tej stronie? Zgłoś go lub zaproponuj poprawkę →