The Secret Lives of Customers: A Detective Story About Solving the Mystery of Customer Behavior

The Secret Lives of Customers: A Detective Story About Solving the Mystery of Customer Behavior

  • Downloads:7988
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-05-31 08:51:23
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:David S Duncan
  • ISBN:1541774493
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

A "detective story" that delivers key insights for any businessperson asking the questions: who really are our customers, why do we lose them, how do we regain them?

Customers can be a mystery。 Despite the availability of more data than ever before, everyone, from the CEO to salespeople in the field, struggles to understand who their customers really are, what they want, why they lose them, and how to regain them。

To crack the case, start thinking like a market detective。

David Scott Duncan shows how in his entertaining story of Tazza, a fictional chain of cafes with declining sales and leaders urgently seeking to understand why。 The vivid characters of Tazza’s market detective force come to their aha moment when they finally understand why their most loyal customers walked out the door—and how they can get them back。

The core of the Tazza story is a simple, powerful idea that upends how most businesses view their customers。 Customers have “jobs to be done。” They “hire” companies to solve a problem or fulfill a need and “fire” them when unhappy。 Duncan’s fresh way of thinking about how to understand your customers’ secret lives provides an innovative path for solving whatever market mysteries you face。

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Reviews

Jure

I enjoyed it because it showed in a very plastic way how to conduct field interviews。

ManOfLaBook。com

For more reviews and bookish posts please visit: https://www。ManOfLaBook。comThe Secret Lives of Customers: A Detective Story About Solving the Mystery of Customer Behavior by David S Duncan is a business book with a unique way of thinking about tailoring your business to its customers and not the other way around。 Mr。 Duncan is a senior partner, executive, and advisor on strategy and growth。This is a short book which follows around a “detective” hired to find out why a business is losing custome For more reviews and bookish posts please visit: https://www。ManOfLaBook。comThe Secret Lives of Customers: A Detective Story About Solving the Mystery of Customer Behavior by David S Duncan is a business book with a unique way of thinking about tailoring your business to its customers and not the other way around。 Mr。 Duncan is a senior partner, executive, and advisor on strategy and growth。This is a short book which follows around a “detective” hired to find out why a business is losing customers。 The author shows how his ideas can be implemented through an alter-ego consultant hired by a small chain of cafes。 Tazza has been losing customers and don’t know why, but they’re going to find out。It was interesting that one of the lessons is that people want to feel as being a part of a community。 After all, COVID this has been more prominent than before。 From some reason I’ve been seeing this front and center and many articles。Above all, through its story, shows the reader how to ask the right questions。 Accordingly, one needs get the answers, and sometimes they’re not necessarily the ones you want。 The author created several characters (consultant, data mining genius, owner, new executive, etc。) to illustrate multiple angles of an issue。 The different roles also play into the discussion, with questions that might arise from the findings as pertaining to their own agenda。The Secret Lives of Customers: A Detective Story About Solving the Mystery of Customer Behavior by David S Duncan finishes with the author reiterating, clarifying, and explain his method to elicit answers, and more importantly, figure out what the problem is in the first place。The book was a lot more entertaining than I thought it would be。 The parable of Tazza’s issues worked very well to bring across the author’s ideas and system。 There is even a “Market Detective” website – https://marketdetective。com/。I learned several things from this book, most importantly it reminded me to keep an open mind, as well as to try and think differently。 Another key point, as in almost all industries, finding the root cause of the problem is the most difficult part,。 Afterwards, the solution usually presents itself afterwards。Extra bonus points for the Sherlock Holmes quotations throughout。 。。。more

Keith Martin

The The Secret Lives of Customers is divided into two sections: a short "novel" illustrating the application of Clayton Christensen's Jobs-To-Be-Done (JTBD) framework through a fictionalized case study about a coffee shop chain trying to expand its business, plus a brief coda summarizing the techniques illustrated by the story。 David Duncan was a coauthor of Christensen's Competing Against Luck, which is the primary reference on JTBD theory, and he has actively worked in this space for a long ti The The Secret Lives of Customers is divided into two sections: a short "novel" illustrating the application of Clayton Christensen's Jobs-To-Be-Done (JTBD) framework through a fictionalized case study about a coffee shop chain trying to expand its business, plus a brief coda summarizing the techniques illustrated by the story。 David Duncan was a coauthor of Christensen's Competing Against Luck, which is the primary reference on JTBD theory, and he has actively worked in this space for a long time, so I expected a pragmatic guide to this topic。For those who are new to JTBD theory, The Secret Lives of Customers is a very gentle introduction to the theory, as well as to the "light ethnography" needed to implement it。 If you've read Competing Against Luck, or if you've ever worked closely with Innosight, IDEO, Continuum, or any of the dozens of design firms that use these techniques, you won't find much new here, although the book's coda more or less stands on its own as a refresher。Having read the original source, and having participated in many dozens of hours of customer interviews over the years, I didn't personally get much out of The Secret Lives of Customers, but I hesitate to send readers who are new to this area straight to Competing Against Luck。 I think JTBD theory needs a book somewhere between these two--one that fleshes out a half-dozen case studies with description of how the insights were uncovered from customer interviews, ideally with somewhat less corny dialog than is found here。 In the coda, Duncan lists six intriguing bullet points from his career--expanding on those might be the book that's needed in this space。I requested and received a temporary digital Advance Reader Copy of this book from #NetGalley, the publisher and the author in exchange for an honest review。 。。。more

Ell

I thought this book would be useful, especially since many of us small business owners have taken a financial hit in the days of the COVID-19 pandemic。 Competition can get stiff when there are less customers and clients shopping for services than there were a year ago。 Growth may slow and even backslide for some entrepreneurs。 The book starts out conversational and provocative from page one and invites us to take a look at why customers are driven to choose as they do。 It’s a quick light read wi I thought this book would be useful, especially since many of us small business owners have taken a financial hit in the days of the COVID-19 pandemic。 Competition can get stiff when there are less customers and clients shopping for services than there were a year ago。 Growth may slow and even backslide for some entrepreneurs。 The book starts out conversational and provocative from page one and invites us to take a look at why customers are driven to choose as they do。 It’s a quick light read with several practical tips to help business owners continue to orient themselves toward customers’ evolving desires and demands。 。。。more

Janet

Date reviewed/posted: January 1, 2021Publication date: May 4, 2021When life for the entire universe and planet has turned on its end, you are continuing to #maskup to be in #COVID19 #socialisolation as the #secondwave is upon us, AND the worst sciatica attack in your life means you MIGHT sleep 3 hours a night, superspeed readers like me can read 300+ pages/hour, so yes, I have read the book … and many more today。I requested and received a temporary digital Advance Reader Copy of this book from # Date reviewed/posted: January 1, 2021Publication date: May 4, 2021When life for the entire universe and planet has turned on its end, you are continuing to #maskup to be in #COVID19 #socialisolation as the #secondwave is upon us, AND the worst sciatica attack in your life means you MIGHT sleep 3 hours a night, superspeed readers like me can read 300+ pages/hour, so yes, I have read the book … and many more today。I requested and received a temporary digital Advance Reader Copy of this book from #NetGalley, the publisher and the author in exchange for an honest review。 From the publisher, as I do not repeat the contents or story of books in reviews, I let them do it as they do it better than I do 😸。A "detective story" that delivers key insights for any businessperson asking the questions: who really are our customers, why do we lose them, how do we regain them?Mogul William Goldman's zinger about the movie business - "nobody knows nothing" - can easily be said today about companies and their customers。 Despite big data and a mind-boggling array of analytical tools, companies still grasp at straws when trying to understand who their customers are; why they buy their products and services - or don't; why they lose them; and how to regain them。In an entertaining detective story, David Scott Duncan tells the tale of Tazza, a fictional regional chain of Boston-based cafes trying to go big time。 The only problem: sales are declining at several key stores and they can't figure out why。 The cast of characters includes Cate Forrest, Tazza's CEO, Alex Baker, a "market detective," Jordan Sims, a young computer whiz at Tazza, and Ed Amato, the "Mayor" of Tazza-their most loyal customer-who has stopped visiting their stores。 Eventually, Jordan discovers why the "Mayor" has fired Tazza, a revelation that leads to the "a-ha moment" that enables the company to get its ship in order。Through this parable, Duncan shows that until a company understands why customers "hire" and "fire" them, they literally know nothing。 Ending with practical tools to help anyone learn the craft of understanding customers, The Secret Life of Customers will help anyone get in tune with what customers want, today and in the future。This was an enticing and entertaining read as I strangely find myself allured by business books that are about customers and what entices them in: trust me, I get a zillion emails daily from companies trying to urge me to their website and some work and some do not。。。trust me, I am a tricky customer。 It is well written and kept my attention and is a great tale of how to get, engage and keep your customers: it even works for libraries!As always, I try to find a reason to not rate with stars as I simply adore emojis (outside of their incessant use by "🙏-ed Social Influencer Millennials/#BachelorNation survivors/Tik-Tok and YouTube Millionaires/snowflakes / literally-like-overusers etc。 " on Instagram and Twitter。。。 Get a real job, people!) so let's give it ☕☕☕☕ 。。。more