Net Promoter Score (NPS)

Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a metric that measures customer loyalty based on how likely customers are to recommend a brand to others.

What it is

It is calculated from responses to a single question, typically “How likely are you to recommend us?”, rated on a scale from 0 to 10. Customers are grouped into Promoters, Passives, and Detractors, providing a simple way to gauge overall sentiment and loyalty.

It is widely used within systems like an Autonomous Customer Experience (CX) platform to track and improve customer perception over time.

How it works

NPS measurement systems:

  • Collect customer responses through surveys across touchpoints
  • Categorize respondents into Promoters (9–10), Passives (7–8), and Detractors (0–6)
  • Calculate NPS by subtracting the percentage of Detractors from Promoters
  • Analyze feedback to identify drivers of loyalty or dissatisfaction

Example

Calculating Net Promoter Score:

  1. Brand sends an NPS survey after a purchase or interaction
  2. Customers rate likelihood to recommend on a scale of 0–10
  3. Responses are grouped into Promoters, Passives, and Detractors
  4. NPS is calculated (e.g. 60% Promoters – 20% Detractors = +40 NPS)

Why it matters

NPS provides a clear, standardized way to measure customer loyalty and overall brand perception. Without it, it is harder to quantify how customers feel and track improvements over time. It also helps identify areas for improvement and plays a key role in optimizing experiences within Autonomous Customer Experience systems.

Key distinction

Net Promoter Score differs from broader satisfaction metrics by focusing specifically on customer loyalty and likelihood to recommend, rather than overall experience alone.

How Emplifi approaches this

Emplifi helps brands track and act on Net Promoter Score within its Autonomous Customer Experience platform, connecting feedback with real-time insights to improve customer satisfaction and loyalty.

Turn customer feedback into growth

Track and act on NPS insights to improve loyalty and strengthen customer relationships.

A good NPS varies by industry, but generally a score above 0 is considered positive, above 30 is strong, and above 50 is excellent. Context matters, so it’s best compared against industry benchmarks.

NPS is calculated by subtracting the percentage of Detractors (scores 0–6) from the percentage of Promoters (scores 9–10). Passives (scores 7–8) are not included in the calculation.

NPS is important because it provides a simple, standardized way to measure customer loyalty and sentiment. It helps brands identify strengths, uncover issues, and track improvements in customer experience over time.

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