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Increased Customer
Satisfaction Increases Stock Price
Research by
Sunil Mithas
AUDIO PODCAST

Most business managers understand
intuitively that satisfied customers are
the key to a business’ long term
success. Changes in a company’s customer
satisfaction should be a leading
indicator of changes in their expected
earnings, and changes in expected
earnings are immediately reflected in
stock prices. So if the stock market was
efficient, news about an improvement in
a company’s customer satisfaction scores
should immediately make that company’s
stock more attractive and increase its
price.
That is not the case, according to
recent findings by a team of researchers
led by Claes Fornell, Donald C. Cook
Professor of Business Administration at
the University of Michigan, that
included Sunil Mithas, assistant
professor of decision and information
technologies at the Smith School. In
their paper, “Customer Satisfaction and
Stock Prices: High Returns, Low Risk,”
the authors show that markets do not
react to news related to customer
satisfaction, making it is possible for
investors to generate high returns with
low risk by incorporating customer
satisfaction scores in their stock
trading strategy.
The paper describes two portfolios: a
hypothetical paper portfolio and an
actual stock portfolio. The trading
strategy employed to manage these
portfolios was based on customer
satisfaction of companies as measured by
the American Customer Satisfaction Index
(ACSI). Trading decisions such as long
and short positions were made based on
ACSI levels and changes. Long positions
were taken in companies with high and
increasing ACSI scores. Short positions
were taken in companies with low and
deteriorating ACSI scores. No other type
of data or additional information was
considered in developing these trading
strategies; they relied solely on
customer satisfaction information as
reported in the ACSI.
Both the paper portfolio and actual
stock portfolio outperformed the Dow
Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500
over a period of 4 to 6 years. Customer
satisfaction pays off in up-markets and
down-markets. When the stock market
grew, the stock prices of many firms
with very satisfied customers grew even
more; when the market dropped, customer
satisfaction seemed to provide a certain
amount of insulation.
If there is such a strong correlation
between customer satisfaction and market
equity, and if people intuitively
believe this to be so, why don’t more
investors make investment choices based
on customer satisfaction information? It
is possible that investors believe an
improvement in customer satisfaction
scores may actually be detrimental to
their interests, as a company could be
giving away too much for the price it is
charging its customers.
This research suggests that equity
analysts should look at customer
satisfaction scores while conducting
their research and ask marketing-related
questions during investor meetings and
conferences. They should also closely
study customer satisfaction trends for a
company and incorporate that information
into their research and recommendation
making process.
Apart from the obvious implications
for portfolio managers, these findings
have significant implications for
marketing managers and information
officers. In a previously published
paper Mithas and his co-authors showed
that customer relationship management
(CRM) applications increase a company’s
knowledge about its customers, and that
increased knowledge allows the company
to provide better services. This in turn
improves customer satisfaction. The
current paper has shown that increased
customer satisfaction is a leading
indicator of higher stock process. Thus,
investments in CRM applications have the
potential to positively impact a
company’s stock price. This is important
information for marketing managers and
information officers, who are always
under pressure to justify investments in
CRM applications from a return on
investment or bottom line perspective.
“These findings are really valuable
because they finally demonstrate that
intangible capital such as customer
satisfaction matters because it impacts
stocks prices,” says Mithas. “It is also
interesting that the market is
inefficient to some extent because it
ignores news related to customer
satisfaction.”
This research also suggests that IT
investments are valuable from a bottom
line perspective, since. He says that
his paper provides quantitative and
empirical evidence against arguments
often made against IT investments such
as Nicholas Carr’s Harvard Business
Review article “IT doesn’t matter”. Mithas has already started preparations
for more follow-up research. He is
especially interested in testing the
cross-selling effectiveness of CRM
applications.
This research offers a practical
trading strategy for small retail
investors. “When looking at a stock, you
should not look at only the
publicly-available financial
information. You should also pay close
attention to intangible capital such as
customer satisfaction, employee
satisfaction, and innovation,” says
Mithas.
The paper, “Customer Satisfaction and
Stock Prices: High Returns, Low Risk,”
by Claes Fornell, Donald C. Cook
Professor of Business Administration,
Stephen M. Ross School of Business,
University of Michigan; Sunil Mithas,
Forrest V. Morgeson III, research
scientist, University of Michigan; and
M. S. Krishnan, professor of business
information technology, University of
Michigan, was published in the January
2006 Journal of Marketing. For more
information, contact
smithas@rhsmith.umd.edu.
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