Customer Satisfaction

What is Net Promoter Score (NPS)?

Net Promoter Score (NPS) measures customer loyalty based on their likelihood to recommend a brand. It helps gauge overall customer sentiment.

Full FormNet Promoter Score
CategoryCustomer Satisfaction
UnitScore (points)
Higher IsBetter
FORMULA

How to Calculate Net Promoter Score (NPS)

Net Promoter Score (NPS) measures how likely customers are to recommend a brand, reflecting overall customer sentiment. Higher scores indicate strong loyalty, helping identify promoters and detractors. It supports experience improvement.

Net Promoter Score (NPS) Formula
Net Promoter Score (NPS)=
%Promoters − %Detractors

Simple Example

If 320 promoters and 80 detractors responded to 500 surveys:

NPS = 320 − 80 = 240
320
Promoters
80
Detractors
NPS
240

Marketing Platforms that supports Net Promoter Score (NPS)

These platforms provide the data needed to measure or calculate Net Promoter Score (NPS) in Two Minute Reports.

Frequently Asked Questions

Net Promoter Score (NPS) measures customer loyalty and satisfaction by asking: 'How likely are you to recommend us to a friend or colleague?' on a 0-10 scale. Respondents are categorized: Promoters (9-10) are loyal enthusiasts, Passives (7-8) are satisfied but unenthusiastic, Detractors (0-6) are unhappy and may damage your brand. Calculate NPS as: % Promoters - % Detractors. If 50% are Promoters, 10% Detractors, and 40% Passives, NPS is 40 (50-10). NPS ranges from -100 to +100. This metric predicts growth potential since Promoters drive referrals and expansion while Detractors cause churn and negative word-of-mouth.
NPS and Customer Satisfaction (CSAT) measure different aspects of customer sentiment. NPS measures loyalty and likelihood to recommend, predicting future behavior and organic growth potential. It asks about recommendation likelihood using one standardized question. CSAT measures satisfaction with specific interactions or experiences, asking 'How satisfied were you?' rated 1-5. CSAT provides immediate feedback on particular touchpoints while NPS captures overall relationship health. CSAT responds quickly to service improvements, while NPS reflects long-term brand perception. Use CSAT for operational improvements and specific journey optimization. Use NPS for strategic direction and growth prediction. Both metrics complement each other—high CSAT without high NPS suggests good experiences that don't build loyalty.
NPS interpretation varies by industry, but general guidelines help contextualize scores. Scores above 50 are excellent, indicating far more Promoters than Detractors. 30-50 is good, showing strong customer satisfaction. 0-30 suggests room for improvement with as many Detractors as Promoters. Below 0 is problematic, indicating more Detractors than Promoters. SaaS companies average 30-40 NPS. Retail and e-commerce average 40-50. Apple and Tesla achieve 70+. Rather than obsessing over absolute scores, track trends over time and compare to your own baseline. Focus on converting Passives to Promoters and understanding Detractor feedback to address root issues. Follow up with respondents, especially Detractors, to understand specific concerns.
Improving NPS requires addressing Detractor concerns and creating Promoter experiences. Follow up with Detractors immediately to understand specific issues and resolve them—this can convert detractors into promoters. Analyze detractor feedback to identify systemic problems requiring fixes. Focus on converting Passives to Promoters since they're closest to advocacy—understand what would delight versus merely satisfy them. Deliver consistent, exceptional experiences across all touchpoints. Exceed expectations rather than just meeting them. Reduce friction in customer journeys making interactions effortless. Build emotional connections through personalization and genuine care. Empower frontline teams to wow customers without bureaucracy. Close the feedback loop by showing customers you acted on their input. Make it easy and rewarding for Promoters to refer friends. Track NPS by customer segment, journey stage, and touchpoint to identify specific improvement opportunities.