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Net Promoter Score (NPS)

Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a customer loyalty and satisfaction metric that measures the likelihood of customers recommending a company’s product or service to others. Developed by Fred Reichheld, Bain & Company, and Satmetrix in 2003 and introduced in the Harvard Business Review article “The One Number You Need to Grow,” NPS has become one of the most widely used customer experience metrics in the world. It is employed across industries ranging from SaaS and financial services to retail, healthcare, and hospitality as a proxy for overall customer sentiment, loyalty, and long-term growth potential.

The appeal of NPS lies in its simplicity. A single survey question — “How likely are you to recommend [Company/Product] to a friend or colleague?” — yields a score that correlates strongly with customer retention, revenue growth, and word-of-mouth acquisition. Despite its simplicity, NPS is a powerful leading indicator: companies with consistently high NPS scores tend to grow faster than their competitors, as satisfied customers drive organic referrals that reduce Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) and accelerate top-line growth.


The Core Question

The NPS survey asks respondents to answer the following question on an 11-point scale from 0 to 10:

“On a scale of 0 to 10, how likely are you to recommend [Company / Product / Service] to a friend or colleague?”

Respondents are then segmented into three categories based on their score:

Score Segment Description
9 – 10
Promoters
Loyal enthusiasts who will keep buying and actively refer others. They fuel growth through word-of-mouth.
7 – 8
Passives
Satisfied but unenthusiastic customers. Vulnerable to competitive offerings. Not counted in the NPS calculation.
0 – 6
Detractors
Unhappy customers who can damage the brand through negative word-of-mouth and are at high risk of churning.

Formula

NPS = % Promoters − % Detractors

NPS is expressed as a whole number between −100 and +100. Passives are excluded from the calculation entirely — they dilute neither the positive nor the negative signal.

Example

Variable Value
Total respondents
500
Promoters (scored 9–10)
250 (50%)
Passives (scored 7–8)
150 (30%)
Detractors (scored 0–6)
100 (20%)
NPS
50 − 20 = +30

Interpreting NPS Scores

NPS Range Interpretation
Above +70
Exceptional. World-class loyalty. Rare and highly coveted.
+50 to +70
Excellent. Strong customer loyalty and advocacy.
+30 to +50
Good. Solid performance with room for improvement.
+1 to +30
Average. More Promoters than Detractors, but meaningful dissatisfaction exists.
0
Neutral. Promoters exactly offset Detractors.
Below 0
Concerning. More Detractors than Promoters — active brand damage likely occurring.

Note: NPS scores should always be interpreted in the context of industry benchmarks. A score of +30 may be excellent in one industry and below average in another.


Industry Benchmarks

Industry Average NPS Notes
Technology / SaaS
+35 to +45
Wide variance; enterprise SaaS typically scores higher
Financial Services / Banking
+30 to +40
Loyalty programs and digital experience are key drivers
Insurance
+20 to +35
Claims handling experience strongly influences score
Retail / E-commerce
+40 to +55
Post-purchase experience and returns policy are critical
Healthcare
+25 to +40
Patient experience and outcomes drive sentiment
Telecommunications
+10 to +25
Historically low due to service issues and billing disputes
Airlines
+15 to +35
Highly variable; affected by punctuality and cabin experience
Hospitality / Hotels
+40 to +60
Service quality and loyalty programmes drive high scores
Consumer Electronics
+45 to +65
Apple consistently scores among the highest globally

Types of NPS

1. Relationship NPS (rNPS)

Relationship NPS measures the overall relationship a customer has with a company at a point in time. It is typically surveyed on a scheduled basis — quarterly or annually — and captures the cumulative sentiment built up over the entire customer journey. rNPS is useful for tracking long-term loyalty trends, identifying at-risk customer segments, and benchmarking against competitors. It is the form most commonly cited in investor presentations and industry reports.

2. Transactional NPS (tNPS)

Transactional NPS is triggered by a specific interaction — a support ticket resolution, a product delivery, an onboarding call, or a billing event. It captures immediate sentiment at a specific touchpoint rather than the overall relationship. tNPS is more granular and actionable than rNPS, allowing teams to identify which specific moments in the customer journey are driving satisfaction or dissatisfaction. It is particularly valuable for customer success, support, and product teams who need real-time feedback loops.

3. Employee NPS (eNPS)

Employee Net Promoter Score applies the same methodology internally to measure how likely employees are to recommend their employer as a place to work. The question becomes: “How likely are you to recommend [Company] as a place to work to a friend or colleague?” eNPS is widely used in HR and people analytics as a proxy for employee engagement, culture health, and retention risk. Low eNPS scores often precede increases in staff turnover and can be an early warning signal for operational disruption.


The Follow-Up Question

The numeric NPS score alone tells you what customers feel but not why. Best practice is to always follow the rating question with an open-ended qualitative question such as:

“What is the primary reason for your score?”

The verbatim responses from this follow-up are often the most actionable output of the entire NPS programme. They reveal specific product gaps, support failures, pricing concerns, and competitive threats that the numeric score alone cannot surface. Text analysis and sentiment categorisation of these responses — increasingly automated using natural language processing (NLP) tools — allows companies to identify recurring themes and prioritise improvements systematically.


NPS as a Leading Indicator

NPS is classified as a leading indicator of business performance — it predicts future behaviour (retention, referrals, expansion purchases) rather than simply recording past results. Research by Bain & Company found that in most industries, NPS leaders grow at more than twice the rate of their competitors. The mechanism is straightforward: Promoters are more likely to renew, more likely to expand their spend, and more likely to refer new customers — all of which improve MRR, reduce CAC, and lower churn simultaneously.

Conversely, Detractors are not merely at risk of churning — they actively create negative brand sentiment through social media, review platforms, and word-of-mouth. A single highly vocal Detractor can influence the purchasing decisions of dozens of potential customers, making the cost of a poor NPS score substantially higher than the direct revenue loss from a single cancellation.


NPS and Business Metrics

Business Metric Relationship to NPS
Churn Rate
Detractors churn at significantly higher rates than Promoters; NPS predicts future churn cohorts
Customer Lifetime Value (LTV)
Promoters have longer lifetimes and higher expansion revenue; higher NPS correlates with higher LTV
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
Promoters generate organic referrals, reducing paid acquisition dependency and lowering effective CAC
Net Revenue Retention (NRR)
Promoters are more likely to expand; NPS improvement often precedes NRR improvement
Revenue Growth
NPS leaders consistently outgrow NPS laggards in most industries
MRR
Promoter-driven referrals add new MRR at lower cost; Detractor churn reduces MRR

How to Run an Effective NPS Programme

1. Define the Measurement Cadence

Decide whether you need relationship NPS (periodic), transactional NPS (event-triggered), or both. For most businesses, a combination is ideal: a quarterly rNPS to track overall loyalty trends, and tNPS surveys triggered at key touchpoints such as onboarding completion, support ticket closure, and renewal.

2. Segment Your Respondents

Aggregate NPS scores hide important variance. Always analyse NPS by customer segment — by plan tier, industry vertical, company size, geography, tenure, and acquisition channel. A company with an overall NPS of +35 may have enterprise customers scoring +65 and SMB customers scoring +10 — two entirely different stories requiring entirely different responses.

3. Close the Loop

Closing the loop means following up with respondents after they complete the survey — particularly Detractors. Reaching out personally to a Detractor within 24–48 hours of their survey response to acknowledge their frustration, understand their specific issue, and offer a resolution is one of the highest-ROI activities in customer success. Studies show that Detractors who receive a meaningful response and resolution frequently become Passives or even Promoters, dramatically improving both retention and the NPS score itself.

4. Avoid Survey Fatigue

Sending NPS surveys too frequently to the same customers depresses response rates and introduces bias toward respondents with strong opinions. Best practice is to limit rNPS surveys to once per quarter per customer and to ensure transactional surveys are triggered selectively — not after every minor interaction. Response rates above 20–30% are considered strong for B2B NPS programmes; B2C programmes often achieve lower rates but benefit from larger sample sizes.

5. Act on the Data Systematically

NPS data is only as valuable as the actions it drives. Establish a clear process for routing Detractor feedback to relevant product, support, and account management teams. Track whether interventions improve scores over subsequent survey cycles. Report NPS trends at the executive level alongside financial KPIs to ensure customer loyalty receives the same strategic attention as revenue and cost metrics.


Criticisms and Limitations of NPS

Despite its widespread adoption, NPS is not without controversy. Critics and researchers have raised several important limitations that users of the metric should be aware of:

Criticism Detail
Single-question reductionism
A single question cannot fully capture the complexity of the customer relationship or distinguish between product, support, price, and brand satisfaction
Cultural response bias
Customers in different countries interpret the 0–10 scale differently; a score of 8 may represent enthusiasm in one culture and dissatisfaction in another, making cross-country comparisons unreliable
Sampling bias
Customers who respond to NPS surveys are not always representative of the broader base; highly satisfied and highly dissatisfied customers are more likely to respond than Passives
Weak predictive validity in some industries
Academic research has challenged Reichheld’s original claim that NPS is the single best predictor of growth in all industries; results vary significantly by sector
Manipulation risk
When NPS is tied to employee performance incentives, teams may “teach to the test” — coaching customers to give 9s and 10s rather than genuinely improving the experience
No actionability without follow-up
The score alone does not explain why customers feel the way they do; without qualitative follow-up, NPS data cannot drive meaningful improvement

NPS in Investor and Financial Analysis

NPS has migrated from a purely operational metric into the domain of investor analysis and equity research. Publicly traded consumer and technology companies increasingly disclose NPS or equivalent customer satisfaction scores in their investor relations materials, recognising that customer loyalty is a leading indicator of revenue quality and long-term growth durability.

Private equity and venture capital investors routinely conduct NPS surveys on portfolio companies’ customer bases as part of due diligence and ongoing value creation monitoring. A declining NPS trend — particularly one not yet reflected in revenue figures — can be an early warning sign of an emerging churn problem or competitive threat that will eventually manifest in financial results. Conversely, a rising NPS trend can provide forward-looking confidence in revenue retention and growth projections ahead of a financing round or exit.

Company Ticker NPS Context
Apple
AAPL
Consistently among the highest in consumer electronics; cited as a driver of ecosystem loyalty and repeat purchase rates
Amazon
AMZN
High NPS for Prime membership; customer obsession is a stated core value and NPS-related metrics inform product development
Tesla
TSLA
Historically very high NPS among EV manufacturers; driven by product innovation and brand advocacy
Netflix
NFLX
NPS varies by content cycle; used internally to assess content investment ROI and subscriber retention
Salesforce
CRM
Discloses customer satisfaction metrics; NPS informs customer success investment and renewal forecasting

NPS Survey Tools

Tool Best For Key Features
SMB and mid-market
Simple setup, multi-channel surveys, real-time dashboard
General purpose
Flexible survey builder, NPS templates, broad integrations
Enterprise
Advanced analytics, text analysis, CRM integration, closed-loop workflows
Enterprise CX programmes
Real-time feedback, AI-driven insights, omnichannel collection
B2B SaaS customer success
NPS integrated with health scores, CSM workflows, and renewal forecasting
Branded, conversational surveys
High response rates, clean UX, logic branching for follow-up questions

Related Terms

  • Churn Rate — Percentage of customers lost in a period; Detractors are at highest churn risk
  • Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT) — Transactional satisfaction metric typically scored 1–5 or 1–10 after a specific interaction
  • Customer Effort Score (CES) — Measures ease of completing a task or resolving an issue; complements NPS by capturing friction
  • Customer Lifetime Value (CLV / LTV) — Promoters typically generate higher LTV through longer tenure and expansion revenue
  • Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) — Promoter referrals reduce effective CAC through organic word-of-mouth growth
  • Retention Rate — Positively correlated with NPS; Promoters retain at higher rates than Detractors
  • Net Revenue Retention (NRR) — Promoters drive expansion revenue; NPS improvement often precedes NRR improvement
  • Employee NPS (eNPS) — Internal application of NPS methodology to measure employee advocacy and engagement
  • Voice of the Customer (VoC) — Broader framework for capturing customer feedback across all channels, of which NPS is one component
  • Leading Indicator — NPS is a leading indicator; it predicts future retention and growth before results appear in financial statements

External Resources


Disclaimer

The information provided on this page is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or business advice. NPS benchmarks and interpretations are generalised and may not reflect the specific circumstances of any individual company or industry segment. Always consult qualified advisors before making strategic or investment decisions based on customer experience metrics.

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